Bringing out the bards
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Danette Goulet
It is a craft like no other. It is free and flowing and often without
rules or boundaries.
Poetry, although rarely mainstream, has drawn talent and audiences for
as long as the written word has existed. It is what songs, prayers and
children’s rhymes are made of.
This week, the many who share a passion for this timeless art are
sharing it at the first ever Orange County Poetry Festival.
“I’m really thrilled that Orange County will have a poetry festival --
its really needed,” said Barbara Hauk, who has lived and written poetry
in Huntington Beach for 26 years. “A lot of people think poetry is
old-fashioned or inaccessible -- that you can’t understand it -- and I
think [the festival] will help people understand that you can understand
[poetry].”
Hauk is one several poets, from Orange County and abroad, invited to
share her work at the festival.
The festival is funded by a nonprofit foundation based in Huntington
Beach called Tebot Bach, which means little teapot in Welsh.
Tebot Bach was created in 1999 by Huntington Beach resident Mifanwy
Kaiser as a means to promote poets and their work, promote literacy by
introducing children to poetry and strengthen community.
One of the programs Tebot Bach funds and promotes is a monthly poetry
reading hosted by The Five Penny Poets; Mifanwy Kaiser Michael Paul,
Steve Ramirez, Paul Suntup and Mindy Netiffee.
The success of the readings, held the last Friday of each month at
Fidelity Federal Bank at Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue, is what
prompted the group to start the festival.
Each month the group has two featured poets -- one renowned and one
local. The featured pair is given most of the stage time, but anyone can
attend and sign up for a few minutes in the limelight.
The festival, which began on April 18 and runs through Monday consists
of reading at venues throughout Orange County.
Nationally beloved poet Thomas Lux is the featured guest of the
festival, who will be paired with John Gardiner of Laguna Beach.
“I’m looking forward to reading with him, I’ve heard marvelous things
about him,” said Gardiner, who has several books of his own published.
Lux, who has been a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award in
Poetry and received three National Endowment for the Arts grants as well
as a Guggenheim fellowship, will read his work on Friday at 8 p.m. and
Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Fidelity Federal Bank. He will also offer a
paid poetry workshop.
Despite the honor bestowed upon him, Gardiner said the festival was
about no one poet, but a means of promoting and inspiring new poets and
poetry as a whole.
“At a lot of readings you’ll see the same people,” he said. “The only
time people even think about poetry is at a wedding or they don’t think
of poets as living.”
But there is a whole new generation of poets, Gardiner points out. And
here they are.
Besides the featured pair, other festival events include a
presentation tonight at Barnes and Noble, Huntington Beach of “Incidental
Buildings and Accidental Beauty” an anthology of Orange County and Long
Beach poets work, published by Tebot Bach Books.
There, Surf City poet Hauk will do her second reading of the festival.
At 64, Hauk said she has “been writing forever.”
It is through her poetry that Hauk shares her her witticisms, whimsy
and wisdom with the world.
“I decided to be a writer when I was 10 years old,” she said.
Although Hauk says she took a little detour away from writing when she
became fascinated with biology and went to college, the break was
beneficial to her writing, she said.
“When I was young, I felt like I had nothing to say. Then when I had
some experience behind me, I had more to say,” she mused.
Hauk said she gets her inspiration from everyday things.
“The people I meet I transform them into characters,” she said. “I
don’t really know what my inspirations comes from. Things occur to me as
I go about my daily life. I’m the kind of person who writes poetry on
napkins -- as soon as it hits you, you need to get it down.”
Hauk, who writes mostly free verse, also has a book “Confetti”
published and is the co-editor of a literacy magazine, Pearl.
Hauk and Gardiner are just two of numerous featured poets at the event
organizers hope to expand for next year.
While this inaugural festival was planned in a short two months,
Kaiser said, she and the Five Penny Poets will begin planning for next
year as soon as they wrap up this festival.
FYI:
For a calendar of events and other featured poets visit o7
www.ocpoetryfestival.com
f7
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