Mountain Stage Recognized with Governor’s Arts Award for Lifetime Achievement

Mountain Stage with Larry Groce, the long-running live event and radio program produced by West Virginia Public Broadcasting and distributed by NPR Music, was recognized with the Governor’s Arts Award for Lifetime Achievement at a ceremony held at the Culture Center Theater Wednesday, March 7.

Founded in 1983 by Groce, producer Andy Ridenour and engineer Francis Fisher, Mountain Stage is currently in its 35th season of live performance radio. The show is heard on over 240 public radio stations across the country each week and is also a popular podcast.

Credit Steve Brightwell/WV Division of Culture and History
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Chief of Staff for Governor Jim Justice, Mike Hall, with Executive Producer Adam Harris at the Governor’s Arts Awards.

Chief of Staff for Governor Jim Justice, Mike Hall, presented the award which was accepted on behalf of Mountain Stage by the program’s Executive Producer Adam Harris, who came into his current role when co-founder Ridenour retired in August 2012. The awards were hosted by Commissioner of the WV Division of Culture and History Randall Reid-Smith.

“Mountain Stage has worked under eight Governors since 1983, and many Arts Commissioners since Arch Moore,” said the program’s host and artistic director Larry Groce, who was visiting family in Texas on the day of the ceremony. “We appreciate the support and are grateful to the legislature for continuing to be a part of the funding equation for Mountain Stage. I want to thank West Virginia Public Broadcasting and its members, anyone who has ever picked up a ticket, our many underwriters and supporters. Most of all we thank our radio listeners, for always having the desire to hear a show like ours. It’s a wonderful honor to receive the Lifetime Achievement recognition, and I share it with the folks who have helped us make the show and those who continue to work to keep it going.”

Credit Steve Brightwell/WV Division of Culture and History
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Mountain Stage Executive Producer Adam Harris, Cabinet Secretary of the Office of Education and the Arts Gayle Manchin, and Commissioner of the WV Division of Culture and History Randall Reid-Smith.

Mountain Stage is the longest running radio program of its kind. Each week nearly 200,000 listeners tune in for the show on public radio stations across the country. In 2017 Larry Groce was named a Southerner of the Year by Southern Living Magazine and in January 2018 Mountain Stage was named a Best WV Attraction in the 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards from USA Today.

For a list of stations that carry Mountain Stage click here. Visit our Live Show Schedule for a list of upcoming performances.

Gala Set for W.Va. Arts Awards on Thursday

West Virginia is celebrating some of its best artists and art supporters.
 
The 2014 Governor’s Arts Awards ceremony is scheduled for Thursday night at the Culture Center in Charleston.

The Division of Culture and History and the West Virginia Commission on the Arts say the awards honor those who have made significant contributions to the state’s culture.
 
The honors include: the Arts in Education Award, the Distinguished Service Award to the Arts, the Leadership in the Arts Award, the Artist of the Year Award, and the Governor’s Arts Award for Lifetime Achievement.
 
This year’s event made news after a student’s plan to recite a poem about the Upper Big Branch mine explosion at the event was denied.
 
Officials blamed miscommunication and the student will be allowed to recite the poem.
 

Student Allowed to Read Poem, State Officials Cite Miscommunication on Prior Denial

State officials blame miscommunication for denying a student’s plan to recite a poem about the Upper Big Branch mine explosion at a state event.
 
Hurricane High School student Grace Pritt selected “Black Diamonds” by Crystal Good to recite at the Governor’s Arts Awards on Thursday in Charleston.
 
A grant coordinator with the Division of Culture and History sent an email to Pritt telling her that she couldn’t read the poem because it dealt with coal, and state representatives would be attending the event.
 
The division drew criticism after an image of the email appeared on social media sites.
 
Culture and History deputy commissioner Caryn Gresham says the incident was a miscommunication. She says Pritt will be allowed to recite the poem.
 
 

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