Background
Donald Davis was born in Waynesville, North Carolina, a small town in the mountainous region of Western North Carolina.
Donald Davis was born in Waynesville, North Carolina, a small town in the mountainous region of Western North Carolina.
He received a Bachelor of Arts from Davidson College in 1966 and a Master of Divinity degree from Duke University Divinity School in 1969.
Davis had a twenty-year career as a minister before he became a professional storyteller. He has recorded over 25 storytelling albums and written several books based on those stories. His long career as a teller and his promotion of the cultural importance of storytelling through seminars and master classes has led to Davis being dubbed the "dean of storytelling".
As a child, storytelling was a daily part of his family life.
"My grandmother did lots of telling," Davis recalled to the Winston-Salem Journal. Davis served as a Methodist minister in High Point, North Carolina for over 20 years before retiring to become a professional storyteller.
Davis currently performs at storytelling festivals, schools and libraries across the country. Past storytelling festival appearances include the Village of Tales Ojai Festival in California, the Hoosier Festival in Indianapolis, Indiana and the Colonial Williamsburg Festival in Virginia.
He is also a regular performer at the National Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee.
He is the former Chair of the Board of Directors for the National Association and has been a featured teller at the Smithsonian Institution and the World’s Fair. Davis has appeared on National Public Radio, Cable News Network and American Broadcasting Company"s Nightline. He also conducts seminars and master classes on storytelling throughout the United States.
Davis is a strong advocate of storytelling.
Not just the profession, but also storytelling in everyday life. He feels that we connect with one another through the stories that we tell each other across the family dinner table or at a bar after work.
He believes that stories are really about identity, about who we are, and that technology may be all about moving information but it is in our stories that wisdom is passed down. Davis currently lives on Ocracoke Island on the Outer Banks of North Carolina.
He usually wears a bow tie.
His books and albums have won numerous awards including the South Carolina Middle-School Young Reader"s Award, YALSA"s Popular Paperback for Young Adults Award, Anne Izard Storyteller"s Choice Award, Publishers Weekly Listen Up Award, AudioFile Earphones Award, Parents" Choice Award (Gold Title), and several World Awards.