Story Pirates facts for kids
Story Pirates is an arts education organization based in New York City and Los Angeles. Originally known as the Striking Viking Story Pirates, the group collects written works from students and youth and adapts these stories for the stage. Kid-written work is then performed by professional actors on stage, on video, in schools, and on their popular podcast.
Story Pirates serves over one hundred and fifty elementary schools and community-based organizations in the greater New York City and Los Angeles areas through performances and creative writing workshops. The cornerstone of these services is the “Play/Write Program,” an original arts and creative writing curriculum that allows kids to “develop their creative writing skills…by exploring character building and elements of dramatic improvisation. In 2020, they have also expanded into national online streaming content via the Creator Club and Story Pirates University.
Mission
The mission of the Story Pirates is “to celebrate the words and ideas of young people and to create confident, literate students equipped with a variety of tools for written, verbal, and artistic self-expression.” Story Pirates’ original arts and literacy programs “improve the relevancy and effectiveness of classroom and extracurricular learning, create confident children who carry their ability to express themselves into adulthood, and build strong communities that celebrate the value of young voices from diverse backgrounds.”
National attention
The Story Pirates received national attention in February 2008 when “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart called The Story Pirates “crazy entertaining” on Larry King Live; Stewart had seen the group perform at a party he attended with his son. The group is “described as a mix between School House Rock and Monty Python” and has received critical acclaim. The New York Times called their performances a "theatrical treasure," and many others dub it one of the best kids shows around.