Flying Stage Productions is grateful for all of the
inspiring people and organizations with whom we have worked.

Here are a few of them...

The City of Barre

The continuing renewal of this historic industrial center is no longer much of a secret in Vermont. In 2015 the National Center for Arts Research named the greater Barre area as one of the top 20 “Hotbeds of America's Arts and Culture” among medium and small cities. Flying Stage is proud to have a home here, among such other attractions as Studio Place Arts, the Vermont Granite Museum, and the beautiful Barre Opera House.   www.barrecity.org 

Barre Statue

Brian Boyes

An indefatigable music educator from Cabot School, Brian is the organizing force behind not one but two big bands: Big Bang Bhangra Brass Band, and the all-student 20-piece ensemble The Limes. Both have been featured on The Flying Stage. The Limes were the openers for our recent concert by Burlington popsters Madaila — an appearance which followed a residency for the latter at Cabot School, which Brian arranged for the enrichment of his students.  

Brian Boyes

Positive Pie

Through its four area locations, Positive Pie has become the go-to eatery in Central VT. Its Barre restaurant can be found on North Main St., just around the corner from our Granite St. location, and is a favorite pre-show destination for our audience. Flying Stage and Positive Pie have teamed up several times to offer package deals for people coming to town for an evening's fun.  Visit Positive Pie online  

Positive Pie logo

Barre Partnership

A local non-profit dedicated to a better Downtown Barre. The Partnership coordinates activities that “maintain and improve the economic, social and cultural quality of life in the Barre area.” A signature event has been One Heart, One Community, a week-long series of downtown family attractions, culminating in a fantastic weekend of music, including a big Valentine's show at the Flying Stage.
www.thebarrepartnership.com  

Barre Partnership logo

Senator Patrick Leahy

The Senator is a tireless booster of Central Vermont, its heritage and its culture. He was the featured speaker at our grand opening event in 2014, when ReSOURCE VT-Barre unveiled its new performance space, and the Flying Stage came in for its first public landing.
leahyforvermont.com  

Sen Leahy & Diana Levine

Back Road BBQ

This mobile operation, based in Cabot, is “the official food truck of Flying Stage Productions.” They serve up Carolina Style, fruit-and-maple-wood smoked whole hog barbecue, with an assortment of tantalizing southern sides. The hogs are raised with care at Snug Valley Farm in East Hardwick. If you are coming to a show at the Flying Stage and you see that Back Road BBQ will be there, the advice is simple: bring your appetite!   The Back Road BBQ Facebook page  

Back Road BBQ

Bess O'Brien · Kingdom County Productions

Bess is widely known for her films and other media work through Kingdom County Productions. Another of her ongoing projects is the Writers For Recovery workshops. Founded by Bess and Montpelier author Gary Lee Miller, this workshop series helps cultivate personal writings from people recovering from addiction to opiates and perscription medication. Flying Stage Productions was pleased to team with Kingdom County for a big launch party to celebrate the publication of the program's first book, One Imagined Word at a Time.  

Kingdom County Productions

Russ Bennett

Russ is a designer and builder... among other talents. It was he who made the dream of the Flying Stage a physical reality, by working out how to construct a platform that can be lowered from overhead cranes in the old granite shed that is our home. His vision has also been tapped by high-profile musical productions such as the Bonnaroo Music Festival and the touring band Phish. Russ is owner/founder of Northland Visual Design & Construction.

Bonnaroo logo

Twinfield Middle School Chorus

Twinfield is a small pre-K–12 school that serves Marshfield and Plainfield. When popular performing artists Dwight & Nicole were booked for an appearance on the Flying Stage, program director Diana Levine had an inspiration — on very short notice, she contacted music teacher Terry Frey about supplying some chorus members as backup singers for the headliners. Several crash rehearsals and many permission slips later, twelve talented kids found themselves up on stage, rounding out the sound as Nicole sang “On Top of the World.” It was a high point of the evening.

Nicole & the Twinfield Chorus

Shacksbury Cider

This operation from Shoreham is upholding the proud Vermont tradition of cider-making. While in Barre for Vermont Cider Week, Kim and Colin presented a cider-throwing demonstration at Positive Pie, as part of a special package we offered for attendees of our Madaila concert that evening.  www.shacksbury.com

Shacksbury

Wilkins Harley-Davidson

Of all the festivities across the state during Vermont Cider Week, one of the best was the big tasting-event hosted by this South Barre Rd. dealership. It was so very Barre. For their big raffle, Flying Stage was happy to contribute these "boarding passes" for a future show.  www.wilkinsharley.com

Wilkins Harley-Davidson

Robert Halpert, Esq

An attorney with the Montpelier firm of Zalinger Cameron & Lambek. A practicing musician himself, Rob has a deep appreciation of the local live music scene. His interest in our project led him to assist us in getting Flying Stage Productions off the ground. Thank you!

Musical Lawyer

Natasha Bogar

Natasha is a distinctive visual artist. We have long known her through her work on various special projects for Re-Bop Records. It was Natasha who created the lavishly illustrated wall screens that help us quickly convert the ReSOURCE retail floor into a 150-seat performance space. She and her husband Ethan can often be found helping us out in person during a Flying Stage show.  natashabogar.com

Natasha Bogar

Maria’s Bagels

Time can be tight on show night, when we have to begin preparing our “concert hall” while ReSOURCE is still open for business. But the lowering of the Flying Stage can be quite a spectacle, so why not make a party of it? End-of-the-day shoppers were treated to the show-before-the-show, and our neighbors Maria's Bagels were on hand with their fresh, fantastic fare.

Maria's Bagels

SamosaMan

When Big Bang Bhangra Brass Band were coming in to provide dance music for the Writers For Recovery book launch party, we thought immediately of SamosaMan. Party goers were delighted to find his lean mean samosa-serving setup at the back of the hall all night long.  www.samosaman.com

SamosaMan

 

See also our page about our partner and host ReSOURCE VT

Shop While It Drops

This article originally appeared in the Burlington publication Seven Days. With the author’s permission, it has been slightly shortened and edited for information-sharing purposes by The Flying Stage. Inserted annotations/condensations are in italic.

The Flying Stage Takes Off in Barre

BY GARY LEE MILLER
September 09, 2015

Visit RESOURCE-VT on Granite Street in Barre, and you'll see contemporary environmentalism in action. The nonprofit, which also has branches in Burlington and Morrisville, operates a retail store where you can buy everything from used furniture and appliances to building supplies. A resident training program, YouthBuild, teaches local young people green building skills. A gift shop features upcycled goods like cutting boards and picture frames fashioned from salvaged building materials. And now you can get your live performance fix at ReSOURCE, courtesy of its latest addition, the Flying Stage.

Diana ascends ladder

Diana ascends the ladder to
the Flying Stage

photo by Jeb Wallace-Brodeur

The principle behind the Flying Stage is simple: Chains and pulleys lower the stage from the ceiling to transform the ReSOURCE from a retail store into a music venue [just prior each performance]. The story of how the Flying Stage came to be is a bit more complex, and includes elements of tragedy, perseverance, creativity and hope.

The stage got its start in the mind of Marshfield resident Diana Levine. A guitar, bass and piano player who forged a career as a performer and music producer, Levine is best known as the cofounder of kids' record label Re-Bop Records. Created in 1989 with Levine’s late husband, David “Crow” Levine, Re-Bop made a name for itself by putting out records for kids [and their grown-ups] that were energetic, funky and fun. At the center of Re-Bop recordings were the kids themselves, who sang and told witty stories between tracks.

[Tragically, Levine's career as a musician came to an end after a medical mishap. In spring of 2000, she visited a health care facility to get treatment for a migraine. A physician's assistant injected the drug Phenergan into Levine’s arm — a form of administration that, although allowed for under the drug’s labeling instructions, carries the risk of causing gangrene to develop. Doctors were forced to amputate her right hand and forearm to save her life. Levine sought compensation through the legal system, taking on a major drug maker over insufficient labeling of drug safety issues. Her landmark case went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled in her favor in 2009.]

Although Levine emerged from the courtroom a winner, her creative life had been devastated; the loss of her arm meant she could no longer play music. The desire to keep music a part of her life sent Levine on a search for a new creative outlet, one that would hopefully include both music and the kind of community-friendly focus that had been the hallmark of Re-Bop. The financial settlement gave Levine the time as well as the means. All she needed was the right partner. She found it with ReSOURCE, which already had plans to open a store and training programs in Barre. That provided some security, Levine says.

“My goal was to create another branch of ReSOURCE that had to do with creativity and expression,” she explains. “But if what I envisioned didn't happen, that would be OK, because they were doing so many other good things.”

In 2011, Levine entered a 10-year partnership in which she would provide creative energy and financial support as she helped ReSOURCE strengthen and extend its mission. She tells how an early tour of the ReSOURCE gave her the inspiration for the Flying Stage. ReSOURCE is housed in the former Beck and Beck granite shed. Its long, narrowish structure provides a great space to display recycled goods. But in that first tour, Levine saw that the building had more potential.

“When I walked in there, I saw the length of it first of all. And I thought, This would be a great performance space,” she says. “But I realized that wasn’t going to happen. Then I looked up and I saw this big orange crane [formerly used to carry the granite from one end of the shed to another], and I thought, Why couldn't a stage live up there in the rafters and go up and down? Let's face it. It was an outlandish idea. But they went for it.”

To turn her vision into reality, Levine gave a call to Russ Bennett, whom she’d met through her work at Re-Bop with Trey Anastasio of Phish. Bennett’s Northland Design & Construction has built huge stages for major concert presentations, including the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival and Phish shows. Bennett was glad to lend his expertise and created a design for a stage that could be stored in the rafters during ReSOURCE’s regular business hours and lowered for performances.

Next came construction. Fortunately, Levine says, ReSOURCE already had a team of willing workers in its YouthBuild program. Under the supervision of program manager Jesse Grieg, the kids of YouthBuild made the Flying Stage a reality.

The Flying Stage and the ReSpace were officially opened in June 2014, with a private show by Kat Wright & the Indomitable Soul Band. Sen. Patrick Leahy, who comes from a family of granite workers and wrote an amicus brief for Levine's court case, was among the dignitaries on hand.

The public debut of the Flying Stage came last Friday evening, with a performance by folk musicians Willa Mamet and Paul Miller, who did a show to celebrate the release of their new record, Let Somebody Love You. That inaugural show put one of the coolest aspects of the venue front and center: its ambience.

Levine and her crew had completely transformed the space. Most of the retail stock of the ReSOURCE had been moved to the side, where it was hidden behind beautiful handmade curtains, stenciled and painted with nature scenes. The stock that remained — chairs, tables and overstuffed couches — served as seating for the show. Up front, the stage radiated with light, and the sound of Mamet's voice and Miller's guitar drifted out into the crowd, pure and clear.

The venue felt as comfortable as if it had been there for years. And Levine hopes it will. She's planning eclectic bookings ranging from folk, rock and world music to theater and literary events. With the help of Levine and the ReSOURCE, Barre's newest venue has achieved liftoff.