‘A House In The Clouds’ Documentary Highlights Life Of LGBTQ Artist In West Virginia

Douglas Imbrogno and Bobby Messer’s Film “A House In The Clouds: The Artistic Life of Robert Singleton” is a documentary about the life of Robert Singleton — a gay man who grew up in Appalachia and survived loss, discrimination, and trauma to ultimately become an award winning artitst. Imbrogno said it’s not a story of a superhuman, but a story of a life well lived, despite hardships. 

Douglas Imbrogno and Bobby Messer’s Film “A House In The Clouds: The Artistic Life of Robert Singleton” is a documentary about the life of Robert Singleton — a gay man who grew up in Appalachia and survived loss, discrimination, and trauma to ultimately become an award-winning artist. Imbrogno said it’s not a story of a superhuman, but a story of a life well lived, despite hardships. 

“This creative soul has been, has been battered, and had many losses in his life has found his way to equilibrium. And I describe him as a jovial soul,” Imbrogno said. 

Imbrogno says it’s important that these kinds of West Virginia stories are told, because often there is a lot of bad news coming out of the state. 

“I think that’s quite an inspirational thing to share, because so much of the news is filled with bad actors and human beings behaving badly. Here’s an example of how life can be well lived,” he said. 

Imbrogno and Messer said the film also comments on the attempts to brand trans youth as damaged souls with parallels in the film to what many trans people face today. Imbrogno says he wants to take viewers to the beauty Singleton reflects in his painting and his home in the mountains of West Virginia. 

“I want them to feel the mountains. I want them to be up in the clouds with Robert’s artwork, to see his development as an artist from landscapes to abstraction to these spiritual ethereal paintings that he’s doing these days,” said Imbrogno. 

The film premieres at 7 p.m. on Sunday at the Juliet Art Museum inside The Clay Center in Charleston. Tickets are available at the Clay Center box office. There are two showings in October in Thomas, West Virginia. Streaming is not yet available for the film.

Dolly Parton Speaks Exclusively With WVPB

WVPB Executive Producer Suzanne Higgins spoke with Dolly Parton about her global reading program and its expansion in West Virginia, before a private celebration event at the Clay Center.

Acclaimed singer, songwriter, actress, and advocate Dolly Parton visited Charleston, West Virginia this week to celebrate the state’s full participation in the early childhood literacy program she started in 1995.

Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library provides a free book each month to participating children aged birth to five. West Virginia’s children have received 3.7 million books to-date, at no charge to their families.

WVPB Executive Producer Suzanne Higgins was thrilled to speak to Dolly about her global reading program and its expansion in West Virginia, before a private celebration event at the Clay Center.

Dolly Parton Speaks Exclusively To WVPB

The Imagination Library program is administered through a partnership between Marshall University’s June Harless Center and the West Virginia Department of Education.

For more information about Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, visit imaginationlibrary.com.

StoryCorps Came, Listened and Got Some Great Stories

The StoryCorps MobileBooth just departed Charleston and is headed to its next destination in Athens, Georgia. Fortunately, the StoryCorps team left behind a sizeable collection of great stories for WVPB to share with audiences.

For a terrific sampling of the voices of Charleston, West Virginia, click the link below to hear a montage of interview excerpts prepared by StoryCorps facilitator Jacqueline Van Meter for a special listening party at the Clay Center for the Arts and Sciences in early October.

Van Meter featured the following people in the montage: Bettijane Burger with daughter Renee Frymyer; William Laird with sons Liam and Conrad; Brothers Lorenzo and Miguel Caranungan; Covenant House colleagues Ellen Allen and Phil Hainen; Cousins Donteako “Don” Wilson and Dural Miller; Andre Leo Linsky with wife Maggie Linsky; Elizabeth Dinkins with friend and fellow river guide Kathy Zerkle; Paul Lauer with daughter Kate Lauer; friends Tim Albee and Danny McNeely; and Henry “Mac” M. McLeod with daughter Margaret McLeod Leef.

Tune in to our Inside Appalachia broadcast or podcast, watch our social media accounts and check out storycorps.org in the coming months to hear more great stories from a diverse group of West Virginians who talked of life and death, love and loss, family and friends, as well as challenges and triumphs during their StoryCorps recording sessions.

LIVE SHOW NEWS: Emily Saliers of Indigo Girls to Appear On Mountain Stage Oct. 22, On Sale Now.

Two Mountain Stage events in Charleston this October are on sale to the public now.

Last week we announced that Mountain Stage will welcome Tony winner and West Virginia native Michael Cerveris as special guest-host on October 22 when the show is part of FestivALL Fall.

We’re excited to announce that Emily Saliers, well known as one-half of the Indigo Girls, will make her first solo appearance on Mountain Stage October 22 in support of  “Murmuration Nation,” her first release under her own name, due for release on August 11. Click to pre-order.

“It was so freeing to pursue the kind of music I truly wanted to make without regard to what I’d done before or who I’m expected to be,” says Saliers. “I hope that this record can take  people  who  think  they  know  me  already  on  a  journey  that’ll  really  surprise them.”

This show is also on sale to the public now. You can click here, call 877.987.6487, or stop by Taylor Books in downtown Charleston. Tickets are only $20 until August 31, at which point they will be $30.

Also appearing is the indie-pop duo Overcoats, who we first met in 2016 when they made their first appearance on Mountain Stage. You can hear their set via NPR Music and watch some of it courtesy of our VuHaus Channel.

On-line sales began today for Sunday, October 8 when Larry Groce welcomes The Drive-By Truckers, Paul Kelly and Daniel Norgren to The Clay Center.  Tickets are available now online, and available by phone- 304-561-3570- or box office walk-up, starting Monday, July 31.

Credit Courtesey of the Artist
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Australia’s Paul Kelly, whose new album “Life Is Fine” is due Aug. 11, stops by Mountain Stage Oct. 8 as part of his first full-band tour of North America in 13 years.

Don’t’ forget you can join us THIS SUNDAY via VuHaus as we stream our sold-out show featuring St. Paul & The Broken Bones, Mac McAnally, The Wild Reeds, Sarah Siskind and Chastity Brown. Just point your browser to MountainStage.org at 7pm EST and enjoy!

Did you know that Mountain Stage Members get exclusive pre-sale access to all our Culture Center shows, plus periodic discounts, updates and playlists from Mountain Stage staff? Click here for more information.

For all the latest, sign-up for our e-mail newsletter, follow on Twitter and Instagram, and be sure to “like” our page on Facebook.

Garrison Keillor Returns to the Clay Center

Garrison Keillor returns to the Clay Center on September 10 at 7 p.m. as part of “The Prairie Home Love and Comedy Tour.”  The show promises over two hours of stories and many of the characters Keillor made famous on his long running radio program.

The show will also feature program regular, Heather Masse, sound effects man Fred Newman and bandleader Richard Dworsky with the Road Hounds band.  For tickets and information, visit http://www.theclaycenter.org/

Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion featured celebrity guests, skits, songs, fictitious commercials and stories about a fictional Minnesota town called Lake Wobegon. More than three million listeners tuned in nationwide on nearly 700 public radio stations each week.  After entertaining public radio audiences for 42 years, Garrison Keillor bid farewell as host of the program in July 2016.  In October Keillor began producing the program with Chris Thile as the new host.  Chris is best known for his musical groups, Nickel Creek and the Punch Brothers.

The 75-year-old Grammy award winning Mid-westerner has published several books.  He still hosts The Writer’s Almanac heard daily on many public radio stations, including West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn, The Del McCoury Band to Perform on Mountain Stage

Mountain Stage with Larry Groce is proud to announce the return of Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn and The Del McCoury Band to Charleston, West Virginia.

On Sunday, May 14, Mountain Stage will celebrate its 34th season of live performance radio at The Clay Center in Charleston, West Virginia, with the unofficial “First Family of the Banjo” Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn. The duo are widely credited with reinventing the sound and image of the banjo — Fleck through the three-finger Scruggs style and Washburn via the traditional clawhammer approach. A fifteen-time Grammy winner, Béla has devoted time away from his genre-busting ensemble Béla Fleck and the Flecktones to a staggeringly broad array of musical experiments, from writing a concerto for the Nashville Symphony to exploring the banjo’s African roots to jazz duos with Chick Corea, while Washburn has drawn critical acclaim for her solo albums, done fascinating work in folk musical diplomacy in China, presented an original theatrical production, contributed to singular side groups Uncle Earl and The Wu-Force and become quite a live draw in her own right.

The show will also feature the return of The Del McCoury Band. One of the most respected and beloved performers in bluegrass music, Del McCoury began working as a musician in the ’60s, touring and playing as a singer and guitarist with various groups, including Bill Monroe’s famous Bluegrass Boys. He made his first trip to Mountain Stage in 1989, backing legendary mandolin player David Grisman. It was also around this time that he began spending more time with his own band, which included his young sons Ronnie on mandolin and Robbie on banjo. The band’s popularity has continued to rise over the years, and they remain one of the few groups capable of headlining both traditional bluegrass festivals and jam band shows with equal success and adoration. 

More acts for this show will be announced in the coming weeks.

Tickets are already available for Clay Center subscribers. Single tickets go on sale for the general public online and at the Clay Center Box Office on Friday, January 6, and are $25 in advance and $40 day of show. All tickets are assigned seating for this May 14 show, with doors opening at 6:30pm and the show promptly starting at 7pm.

Stay up to date on Mountain Stage show news and ticket deals by following us on FacebookTwitter & Instagram and signing up for our e-mail newsletter. And if you’re looking for a new soundtrack between now and then, listen back to our favorite performances of 2016 and subscribe to the Mountain Stage podcast on iTunes.

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