Wednesday, January 14th, 2026
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From Fire Performing to Fine Metal Art

This art education major has a burning passion for fire performance, teaching students and metalworking.

Savanah Stahl, a third-year art education major, brings the heat to Millersville University – literally. Trained by professional fire-eating and fire-breathing instructor Thomas Santiago, Stahl has mastered the art of fire performance and has even performed with big music acts like Lauryn Hill and Zion Marley. For nine years, Stahl has wowed audiences across the country, but she now has plans to pursue her passion for teaching and her interest in fine metal work.  

A hand is holding a silver necklace shaped like a bird with outstretched wings. The pendant features intricate feather details and a rectangular blue gemstone set in the center. The chain is loosely coiled above the pendant. The background shows a wooden workbench with metalworking tools and equipment.
A fine metal jewelry piece by Savanah Stahl.

Stahl first discovered the art of fire performance as a teenager attending a music festival with her mother. “I was so captivated,” she said. “I ended up speaking to the performers after the show, and they told me about websites where you can buy props.” She then taught herself tricks through YouTube tutorials. Six months later, at another event with fire performers, she learned about intensive safety procedures and lit her fire staff for the first time in a controlled environment. She said the fire performance community encouraged beginners like her and often let her try new props to explore the range of the art form. 

A performer is surrounded by large soap bubbles while spinning multiple fire props in a dark setting. The performer is wearing a black outfit with fringe details and has a visible tattoo on one thigh. Bright flames and reflections from the bubbles create a dramatic, colorful effect against the dark background. The text “Beardfest 2024 Taidgh Fitzpatrick” appears at the bottom right corner.
Stahl at a 2024 performance in New Jersey.

After establishing herself as a performer, Stahl moved across the country to Colorado, where she spent four years teaching skiing. She later returned to Pennsylvania and taught environmental education at two nonprofits in Adams and Franklin County. Those experiences helped Stahl realize her calling for education. 

Her years of fire performance, working as a ski instructor and teaching environmental education inspired her to apply to Millersville University to major in art education. “Building stage presence and engaging with a crowd are skills I hope to carry over to when I am teaching in a classroom,” she says. Stahl has always had a passion for art, pursuing various forms such as dance, performance art, metalwork and painting. 

A person wearing a green jacket and gray pants is kneeling on a concrete surface while cleaning or polishing a large metal bird sculpture. The sculpture has long legs and an elongated neck, resembling a crane or heron. The person is using a cloth and wearing a pink respirator mask around the neck. In the background, there is a red brick building with windows and a blue sign partially visible.
Stahl poses with a piece of her metalwork art.

“When I was in high school, my art teacher brought us to tour Millersville,” Stahl said. “I remember seeing students’ work hanging inside the building and thinking, ‘I wonder what it would be like to have your work hanging on the wall.’ When selecting a college, MU was the only place

A tall metal sculpture of a bird, resembling a heron or crane, stands on an asphalt surface against a gray brick wall. The sculpture has a long curved neck, slender legs, and textured body with a multicolored patina finish. Small green plants grow along the base of the wall in the background.
A close up of Stahl’s bird piece.

in my mind I wanted to go.”   

A fire performer is captured in silhouette against a dark background, holding two flaming torches—one extended downward and the other raised toward the mouth in a fire-eating act. The flames illuminate the figure dramatically, while blurred spectators and colorful lights appear in the background.
Stahl eats fire in front of a crowd.

After graduation, she hopes to teach in a high school and connect students with art, using nature to inspire youth to create and get outside.  

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