• Andy Wilson

    stilting, family dance

    Andy Wilson

    Andy Wilson has spent many years supporting family dance in the Santa Cruz area. At Family Week, he is patient and competent and will help you guide your child on those first very tall steps. He excels in making other people better—he’s often run our family camp sound board. Soon your child will be proudly walking tall!


  • Anne Bingham Goess

    programmer, fiddle

    Anne Bingham Goess

    Anne Bingham Goess enjoys wearing many hats (and wreaths). Trained as a classical violinist, she immersed herself in choral singing and light opera for many years, and then fell in love with Irish fiddle at Lark Camp. These days she plays regularly for Irish, English Country and Contra dancing in the Bay Area, and wields the violin and viola with the band Erica & Friends. She has also performed since 2010 with the Midwinter Revels, including the 2024 Celtic Celebration of the Solstice. 


  • Courtney Tolhurst

    preschool

    Courtney Tolhurst

    Courtney Tolhurst works in a Waldorf School in Jamestown, California. She was recently accepted into Cal Poly Humboldt as an Upper-Division Transfer student to obtain a Multi Subject Teaching Credential. She adores working with kids of all ages, and is particularly crafty. She loves to dance, sing, and spend as much time as possible in nature! 2025 will be her fourth year attending camp and she couldn’t be more excited!


  • Craig Johnson

    piano, accordion

    Craig Johnson

    Craig Johnson has been to almost every Family Week, and has also played piano and accordion for dancers since 1982. He plays for community and Celtic dance at SF’s Dickens Fair, performs with the Dogwatch Nautical Band, and is a regular musician for San Francisco’s Cotswold and longsword teams, Goat Hill and Ring of Cold Steel.


  • David James

    mandolin, fiddle, guitar

    David James

    David James has spent time in western swing bands, symphony orchestras, pop/rock bands, and ECD/contra dance bands. He’s the musician for Wild Wood Morris (Border) and Rising Phoenix Morris (Cotswold), and a member of the ECD/contra dance band Whirled Peas. David has spent the last 20+ years as a kindergarten through 6th grade classroom music teacher in southern California public schools.


  • Jeff Spero

    piano

    Jeff Spero

    Jeffrey Spero has been playing piano and singing since he was five years old. At a young age he discovered an affinity for popular music and developed his style emulating musicians like James Taylor, Elton John, and Bruce Hornsby. In his 30s, he brought his rhythmic style to American and Celtic folk and dance music and now travels around the country playing dances, concerts, and festivals with bands such as Syncopaths and Rhythm Raptors. In addition to editing and music, Jeffrey is a contradance caller and choreographer whose dances have been enjoyed all across this country and overseas.


  • Kelly Graham

    Morris dance, theater

    Kelly Graham

    Kelly Graham is thrilled to be returning to Family Week this year. After a long hiatus, which ended last year, she is so excited to see all her friends old and new! She teaches Morris Dance and Drama Improv. Be sure to bring your bells and hankies!!


  • Lindsay Verbil

    English country dance

    Lindsay Verbil

    Lindsay Verbil is a caller whose warmth, enthusiasm, and clarity empower dancers to feel capable, confident, and connected to the music and to each other. Her teaching style is focused and precise, while her good humor and sense of fun create a welcoming and joyful space. A dancer herself, as well as a musician, organizer, and co-host of the web series “5 Things,” Lindsay brings together a tangible love for all facets of the dance experience.


  • M’Gilvry Allen

    fiddle, electronic music

    M’Gilvry Allen

    M’Gilvry Allen is a musician and producer from Sebastopol, California. He tours as a fiddle player and utility hitter in several indie projects, while his solo music blends folk instruments, modern electronic production, and multilayered vocal harmonies into a kaleidoscope of familiar sounds. In 2019, M’Gilvry and some friends built an earth plaster music studio in a remote part of Oregon, where he produced his debut album, In My Garden. M’Gilvry’s work can be found at his website, mgilvryallen.com, on patreon at patreon.com/mgilvryallen, and on all major platforms as @mgilvryallen.


  • Nick Cuccia

    sound engineer

    Nick Cuccia

    Nick Cuccia has been bringing his sound expertise to Family Week since 2015. Nick strives to enhance the dancing experience by providing sound that is both clear and enjoyable. Nick has been sound engineer for BACDS’s Family Week, English Week, Fall Frolick/Fall Weekend, Playford Ball, and Fall Ball, as well as NBCDS’s Mad Robin Ball. Nick also leads and teaches contra, English and barn dances throughout northern and central California.


  • Raffi Maslan

    circus arts

    Raffi Maslan

    Raffi Maslan grew up in the Seattle Washington folk music and dance communities, folk dancing since he was nine, contra dancing since age 11, and performing with the Radost Folk Ensemble since he was 13. He gained an early love of juggling, magic, and other circus arts from being enthralled by street performers at festivals and fairs. He has performed as a magician’s apprentice traveling to ren faires, done puppeteering with giant puppets, and taught juggling workshops at the Bash on Vashon new years camp.


  • Rhonda Cayford

    rapper sword dance

    Rhonda Cayford

    Rhonda Cayford has been an avid contradancer for over 40 years, starting in Boston in 1978 and having the good fortune to move to San Francisco in 1980, just as the dance scene was taking off here. She discovered rapper at BACDS English Week in 1986 and it has been her passion ever since. She is the founder of a womens’ rapper team called Twisted Sisters, and was a long-time member of Swords of Gridlock. She has taught Rapper, Longsword, Cotswold, and Northwest Morris at camp. In 2022 and 2023, she held the role of camp programmer.


  • sTåń Fowler

    safety, ropes course

    sTåń Fowler

    sTåń Fowler “Dance Ranger” is our camp safety officer and also supervises the ropes course. He’s a strong advocate of prevention, and a hitch in the US Coast Guard plus thirty years with the National Park Service has given him practice dealing with everything from bandaid-sized boo-boos to lifesaving emergencies. Having been on the staff of over 150 music, dance, and family weeks and weekends, and also attended somewhere north of 6,000 dances, he is not surprised anymore by anything that happens at camp. The ropes course fits in well with his history of tree, rock, and ice climbing over the years and running the rigging of the Pride of Baltimore II. Ropes and knots are his friends.


  • Talitha Amadea Aho

    singing, Morris

    Talitha Amadea Aho

    Talitha Amadea Aho is returning for a second year, teaching singing for all ages and Morris dancing for kids. She has been Morris dancing for a quarter century – first on Ring O’ Bells Morris and now on Berkeley Morris. Her singing class this year will feature folk and gospel songs about journeys over land or sea or through troubles. 


  • Ben Saylor

    Irish flute, juggling

    Ben Saylor

    Ben Saylor got his start in traditional dance music in 2006 when he began playing bass with the band Jubilee for contra dances and camps in and around Anchorage, Alaska. This exposure to Irish traditional music inspired him to pick up the mandolin, tenor banjo, and Irish flute, his main instrument ever since. He performed with Irish group Crooked Road before moving to the Bay Area in 2014, where he has frequented sessions and played with the Golden Gate Ceili band.


  • Cindy Freid

    crafts

    Cindy Freid

    Cindy Freid and her son Jamie discovered contra dancing in 2018 and immediately knew they found their home. They are thrilled to be part of the Family Camp community. Cindy has been an avid crafter all her life and especially enjoys a variety of textile crafts, including weaving, knitting, tatting and temari. Over the years, she has taught crafts with various scouting and other youth groups. She is excited to share her love of crafts at Family Camp.


  • Lorraine Kostka

    crafts

    Lorraine Kostka

    Lorraine Kostka has been leading crafts with children for many years at summer camps and public schools.  Her four kids have grown up attending family camp each year and as teens they still enjoy camp.  Lorraine will share her experience and love of tie dye and other crafts to allow campers a place to create.


  • Shirleigh Brannon

    Irish ceili dance, step dance

    Shirleigh Brannon

    Shirleigh Brannon has been involved with different kinds of Irish and Scottish dance, music, and singing for many years/decades in various locations. Helping others feel like they can participate at whatever level they are is one of her ideas of  having fun.


  • Susan Frontczak

    storytelling, theater

    Susan Frontczak

    Storysmith® Susan Marie Frontczak brings folklore, literature, and history to life; creates stories from thin air; and hones personal experience into tales worth telling again and again. She has performed in 43 of the United States and nine countries abroad. Susan Marie has been teaching storytelling skills since 1991 to both children and adults.  She has led storytelling workshops through CSU Continuing Education, Naropa University, Think360 Arts (formerly Young Audiences), and Colorado Humanities, as well as in her living room. Whether creating stories off the cuff, infusing folk traditions with fresh breath, or presenting a honed dramatic performance, Susan Marie lives up to her motto, “Give me a place to stand, and I will take you somewhere else.”


  • Yoyo Zhou

    contra dance

    Yoyo Zhou

    Yoyo Zhou has been calling contra dances since 2012 across the continent and is excited to participate in Family Week for the first time. He likes to put dancers at ease with clear teaching and a calm and cheerful presence. He enjoys helping everyone get as much fun out of each dance as possible.