“Oshima” is what I want to be called when working with English-speaking people. It is taken from my family name Ohshima (O-h-shima). In Japan, it is common to call your friends by your family name when young, and a friend of mine called me this when they were with friends. They started calling me with their stress pattern “o-SHI-ma”. It sounded like a classical Japanese first name for a female and I found tthis interesting. Ever since, I have continued confusing people with “Oshima” and “Ohshima”.
"I joined FEAST in 2021 and attended the mentorship programme “Storytelling for Adult Audience”. I did not know much about storytelling then, so I just jumped in the ocean of storytelling to see what it is. Being mentored kindly and assiduously by Kiran Shah, I made my debut in the FEAST FEST 2021 (where she told a really scary Japanese folktale! - RJ)
I first encountered storytelling when I helped interpret a workshop on “multi-sensory storytelling for special needs” by Dr. Nicola Grove at the Hyogo University of Teachers Education in Japan. Then, the workshop organizer mentioned the FEAST webinar by Nancy Leopard and I signed up. Thus, I met FEAST and I was drawn into the storytelling world!"
Oshima has been improvising for a long time. She started improvising in the 90’s and has experienced many classes, workshops, and shows in Japan, overseas, and online. Besides venues in Japan, she has visited San Francisco, Seattle, Melbourne, Toronto, and Calgary to study or see 'impro.'
"When I joined FEAST and was becoming a storyteller, Roger Jenkins invited me to help form a new special interest group for Improvised Storytelling which became “Plot luck”! I know from my experience of impro that it can help storytelling, and more importantly, I know it is fun to improvise with good friends! So, I enjoy both storytelling and improvisation for they have a good effect on each other!"