![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Carthy Sisco Lee Stripling Jim Ketterman Jim Evans Glenn Berry Harry Johnson Jeff Anderson Marilyn Scott Gil Kiesecker Floyd Engstrom Stuart Williams Vivian Williams Author: Brid NowlanPhotographer: Doug PlummerAbout the projectExhibit ScheduleWA State Old Time Fiddlers Association Home PageArchivesHome
|
Marilyn, born in
1920, grew up on the family farm near Tecumsah, Nebraska. The Collins family was devout
and church going. "We didnt dance. I didnt hear any of them say we
dont dance, but we didnt. We didnt cavort." As a seventeen-year-old bride, she traveled out west, following the crops and settled in Lakewood, Washington. She worked for the school district there for many years and, when she retired, a neighbor made her a present of his fathers fiddle. Marilyn took her new fiddle to a meeting of the old time fiddlers association. After the meeting she "just went nuts with the radio." She would listen all day long, trying to play along with the music. "Everything else wenthouse, dishes, foodeverything else went out the window." She learned from other local fiddlers. Caroll Gaskins would "get down on one knee in front of me and hed say, have you learned to count to three?" And he would mark out the time for her. Jim Calvert played tunes slowly into her "tune sucker" (i.e. tape recorder) and played back-up guitar for her at performances. Marilyns warm, spirited fiddling is a favorite at local shows and events. She says: "Wherever you are, you look out across at your audience and you play for them." |
|||