Calendar
Our Summer 2025 program is near completion. Please watch this space for regular updates. Please direct questions, offers, and ideas to programs@worldfellowship.org.

Magic, Music & Storytelling (Roger Isberg, Sarah Isberg & Andy Davis)
14 June @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Magician Roger Isberg, multi-instrumentalist Sarah Isberg, and storyteller Andy Davis
explore the nature of truth and illusion. Held at WFC’s Schmauch Meeting Room. Suggested donation $10-15. All donations go 100% to the performers. Noone turned away.
Roger Isberg started performing at age 15 when he produced his own revue in Gothenburg, Sweden. He went on to pursue clown school, acting, and magic as an adult, training with Viktor Krivalapov in Russia and Mario Gonzalez from the College of Theater and Acting in Paris. Roger performed for two summers with Krivalapov in Sweden. He also performed at clown festivals with Swedens famous Clown Manne. Roger eventually developed his unique magic and music show in collaboration with Swedish jazz pianist, Eva Engdahl, which they performed together for seven years before Roger moved in 2005.
Sarah Isberg, a native of New Hampshire, plays violin and accordion, exploring the magic in the folk music of Scandinavia, the British Isles and America, as well as selected music from classical European composers. Since Roger moved to New Hampshire, he and Sarah have performed together, appearing at the Jackson Lilliputian School, The White Mountain Waldorf School, Christmas Farm Inn and most recently as a private performance for ski writers at Eagle Mountain House in Jackson Village. In 1996, along with Melissa Nicholson, Sarah founded Mountain Top Music Center to provide high-quality music instruction and musical performance opportunities for children.
Andy Davis got his start as a storyteller telling comic tales by candlelight in Mexican refugee camps 30 years ago. He has since broadened and refined his craft and, while based in New Hampshire, has entertained audiences as far north as County Down, as far east as Paris, as far south as Bamako, and as far west as San Diego. His varied repertoire of tales contains equal parts multicultural folklore, magical realism, grassroots history, and personal experience. He can tell a shaggy dog with the best of them, and then follow it up with a poignant family story laden with meaning. He is equally at home sharing the lore and legends of the mountains and woods of northern New England and creating verbal portraits of political courage.