Monday

Reisa Stone is a professional storyteller, singer, songwriter and writer whose first job was acting in a Sears commercial at the age of four.

Thank you for your inquiries.While Reisa still teaches group voice classes, she has retired from one on one instruction and as West Coast voice clinician for Long & McQuade. Click on Sacred Sound for class information. Website coming soon!

Reisa has earned membership in the
Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers of Canada (SOCAN) through performance & mainstream radio play of her original music.

She sings passionately & tells stories for adult listeners with several Vancouver groups. Her visual art has been exhibited in Artropolis. Three installation pieces became part of the city's landscape for Parade of the Lost Souls 2008.

A member of two international writer/performer organizations, Reisa is galloping along with
My Goat Prefer Naked: Ukrainian Soul Food with Stories From the Village, a cook book narrated by a malcontent Ukrainian grandmother. "Baba" explains how to locate a chicken's belly button, encourage your house goat's modeling career and tenderize meat by keeping it under your saddle.


Participate in her online storytelling group here.


Look for Reisa's poem, The Horsewoman of Chornobyl, in national Ukrainian magazine Nasha Doroha (our dear one, referring to Ukraine).

Some of the best times of her life have been at the heavenly Centrum Arts Foundation, where she has studied with such musical luminaries as the Birmingham Sunlights, Linda & David Lay, Ethel Caffie-Austin, Wolfman Balfour, Bobbie Black and Laurie Lewis. In Winnipeg, she studied guitar with Chet Breau.

Listen for Reisa's narration of Art Is A Mirror on Bravo TV. She is a featured soloist on the Vancouver Gospel Choir's debut DVD, directed by former Harlem Gospel Choir arranger Eric Dozier. She is a former member of the Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir and apprenticed with Nylons founder Ralph Cole for three years.

Reisa is a graduate of the Hoffman Quadrinity Process, a method used by Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government to train leaders.
She was a scholarship student at the Banff School of Fine Arts & with the New York City Opera. She recently appeared on Global TV as spokeswoman for a successful campaign to conserve an urban forest and its wildlife.

A life long horsewoman, animal protector and former veterinary technician, Reisa is committed to ending the brutal practice of horse slaughter. Please go to www.defendhorsescanada.org for information about this crucial international issue. 100,000 horses will be inhumanely transported and slaughtered in Canada this year, most of them sound & healthy.

In alliance with the BC Horse Protection Society, Reisa
headed the successful campaign that took abused carriage horses off Vancouver streets.