Beginning with the first of two Fellowships from the Nevada State Council for the Arts in 1997 for performance poetry (the other came in 2001 for fiction), Figler has embarked upon a creative life to run parallel with his law career. (He is the only multiple Fellowship winner in two distinct categories). A popular Nevada (former)
slam poet and travelling urban storyteller, Figler has toured the United States at many festivals and events as a featured performer. Most notably, since 1997, he has been featured at SxSW, Bumbershoot,
North by Northwest, the National Poetry Slam competition, the Porchlight storytelling series in San Francisco, the Back Fence PDX storytelling series in Portland, Oregon, HEEB storytelling and the
SF Sketchfest 2011 & 2012. In Nevada, he tours as part of the Tumblewords initiative through the Nevada Arts Council bringing literary events to rural Nevada towns. In 1998, he created a one-man show called "Dayvid Figler IS Jim Morrison in Hello I Love You, Where You Folks From?". In 2006, he was named Best Las Vegas Poet by the readers of LV CityLife weekly. In October 2010, Figler took his storytelling experiences further by producing Las Vegas' premier storytelling series, The Tell. In 2000, he began as a featured commentator on radio station, KNPR in Las Vegas and his audio essays are archived under the banner "Ain't Necessarily So" on the station's website. A number of those commentaries were broadcast nationally on NPR's
All Things Considered. In 2002, 2003 and then again in 2005, his essays were named Best Radio Program by the Electronic Media Awards, Las Vegas' primary broadcast media awards. In 2003, he was also named Best Radio Personality by reader's poll of the
Las Vegas Review-Journal, Nevada's largest circulation daily paper. In 2013, the Vegas Valley Book Festival awarded the individual Crystal Bookmark Award to Figler for his lifelong contribution to the cause of literary awareness in Southern Nevada. A frequent contributor to Las Vegas weekly and monthly magazines, his first national magazine article was the main feature for the Politics issue of
Heeb (magazine), where he profiled (former) Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman and he's since taken up writing legal creative non-fiction for nsfwcorp. In 2005, Portland small press, Future Tense, published his short fictional work of humor, GROPE, about two Las Vegas natives finding a connection in a strip club. Figler is a contributor to Las Vegas guidebooks, including Time Out and also has stories or poems in a number of anthologies including In the Shadow of the Strip (University of Nevada Press), Literary Nevada (University of Nevada Press), The Perpetual Engine of Hope (CityLife Books) Poetry Slam (Manic D Press) and Nevada: 150 years in the Silver State (University of Nevada Press). Rumors abound of a reunion of the seminal "goofcore" punk rock polka band, Tippy Elvis, where Figler served as lead vocalist and primary lyricist. Popular in Las Vegas in the mid-90s, the band did reunite for one show as a surprise to Figler on his 40th birthday and a second show in 2011 at the Artifice bar as part of the Neon Reverb Music Festival. During its heyday, Tippy Elvis was an opening act for
Mojo Nixon,
Boiled in Lead and
Idiot Flesh. ==References==