Press Advance
Fisher Poets Gathering
Feb. 23 to 25, 2007
Astoria OR
Contact: Florence Sage
503-338-2469
fsage@clatsopcc.edu
www.clatsopcc.edu/fisherpoets
2007 Event is Tenth Year for FPG
Dated: January 18, 2007
Detailed program and updates are posted on the website during February
as they become available: www.clatsopcc.edu/fisherpoets.A Tenth-Year
Tribute to Fisher Poets Gathering (FPG) at Astoria's Liberty Theater
opens this year's event on Friday, Feb. 23. This "Opener with Mug-up" runs
from 4 to 6 p.m. Doors open to the lobby at 3:30 p.m. to begin the "mug
up" of afternoon coffee, with wine and hors d'oeuvres available.
The stage event begins at 4 with tributes to FPG. Several fisher poets
who have appeared at the gathering over all or most of its ten years
have been invited to read and play music in short sets. These include
local favorites, event founder Jon Broderick of Cannon Beach, Smitty
Smith of Long Beach WA, Geno Leech of Chinook WA, Dave Densmore and Hobe
Kytr of Astoria. This is a button-entry event, planned to bring readers
together early, and to offer the local audience a chance to sample the
overall live event.
More audience space is available this year. "We're making 1,000
buttons, 200 more than usual," said Florence Sage of Astoria, a
10-year FPG producer. "We think it's worth coming out for the live
ambiance, and we know everyone couldn't or wouldn't crowd in, in the
past, so, thanks to The Liberty and Columbian Theaters, we're adding
seats."
Evening reading venues for 2007 are The Wet Dog Cafe, foot of 11th
St., in its tenth year as an FPG venue, the VooDoo Lounge in its
eighth year,
and a new addition, the Columbian Theater stage, both in the same
building at 11th and Marine Dr.
Event buttons are available Friday and Saturday from 3:30 p.m. through
both evenings at the Columbian Theater box office, 11th and Marine
Drive; during the Saturday morning workshops at Baked Alaska, foot
of 12th Street;
Friday and Saturday afternoons during the events at the Liberty Theater,
14th and Commercial.
Buttons are $10 for the weekend, or $5 for one day. Any level of
button gets audience into the Sunday morning "Readers' Farewell Mike," planned
again for The River Theater. Last reading at Cannon Beach Arts Association
gallery Sunday afternoon is free. Enamel patron pins bearing the FPG
logo are a new way to donate to FPG this year.
Saturday morning's ten workshops begin at 9:30 a.m. at Baked Alaska
restaurant and the Columbian Theater, and end by 2 p.m. with a salmon-filleting
demonstration. Workshop choices are expected to include sessions
on the
making of documentaries, various aspects of writing, fishing industry
issues, and a visit to "Dangerous Dave" Densmore's fishing
boat, The Coldstream, moored at Astoria's east end.
The Liberty Theater also hosts the Saturday afternoon events this
year, from 3 p.m.: the very popular story circle of "never-written adventures" from
the memories of "old hands," followed by the poetry open mike,
which allows audience members five minutes to read their writing on related
topics. Both events have outgrown their previous venues. "People
have been standing in the halls, straining to hear. I haven't been able
to get in for two years," Sage said.
For the evening program, about 40 readers and singer/songwriters
from commercial fishing and related industries or fishing families,
and
several music groups are again expected from Alaska, B.C., Washington,
Oregon,
California, Florida and Maryland. New faces anticipated in 2007 include
Ken Kingma, said to be "Bristol Bay's finest poet." Other new
readers and storytellers are invited from places like Juneau AK, Nanaimo
BC, Seattle WA, and Chesapeake Bay, MD.
A live auction runs onsite between sets through the evenings, featuring
certificates for special area lodgings.
FPG events close by noon in Astoria with the Readers' Farewell Mike,
and a Sunday afternoon reading by several poets at Cannon Beach Arts
Association gallery completes the gathering.
Information about the Astoria area and lodging is provided by the
Astoria-Warrenton Chamber of Commerce: 503-325-6311, www.oldoregon.com.
"
Fisher Poetry" comes from experiences living and working in the
industry, and ranges from fast-moving rhyming couplets and crafted free
verse to include songs, short stories, personal memoirs and essays.
All donations from buttons, CDs, books, gear, other memorabilia and
grants support on-site audio costs and small travel stipends for
readers and
musicians.
Some local ventures have plans underway for related events: a Saturday
morning breakfast at Coffee Girl at Pier 39 with tour of the cannery
exhibit; a Saturday evening poetry event at Astoria Visual Arts Center;
a late Sunday afternoon "Last Early Mess" ticketed dinner for
30 at The Banker's Suite, hosted by Fulio's Peter Roscoe, with a celebrity
guest chef and two places at the table for the gathering's 2007 onsite
poem contest winner. Clatsop Community College's annual Rain magazine
is including a section of fisher poetry as a 10th-year tribute in its
spring 2007 edition.
The Fisher Poets Gathering has been an annual event in the last full
weekend of February since 1998. The gathering has been given substantial
support every year by Clatsop Community College, with contributions
of services, goods and panel members from several local organizations
and
businesses as noted in the annual program. But otherwise it is a
community venture put together by a small committee of volunteers.
The 2007 committee
consists of: Jon Broderick of Cannon Beach, David Campiche of Seaview
WA, Nancy Cook of Astoria, Lorrie Haight of Long Beach WA, Hobe Kytr
and Florence Sage of Astoria, and Jay Speakman of Gearhart. All venues
are donated. Major grantors have included Cannon Beach Arts Association
and the Patricia Freeland Fund of the Oregon Community Foundation.
This popular event has grown in audience and fame over the years.
It has been designated a Library of Congress Local Legacies project,
and
been the subject of many local, regional and national news articles
and productions, including NBC's Today Show and the Smithsonian magazine.
It is the subject of a documentary filmed over several years of the
gathering
by New York documentary filmmaker Jen Winston, called "Fisher Poets," which
has shown by invitation at several film festivals. "Fisher Poets" will
be shown during the event.
KMUN-FM has broadcast the Friday and Saturday evening program from
the Wet Dog Cafe all ten years of the gathering. For last year and
this,
that includes "streaming live" over the web around the world.
Sage commented, "We're happy that KMUN makes FPG available "word
for word" to our many local listeners, and now to all fishing and
like-minded people with the equipment to pick it up."