Breakfast at Tiffany’s Delivers a Meal and a Song

Karen and Craig Verm are the music-performing proprietors of the Bed & Breakfast on Tiffany Hill in Mills River, North Carolina.

Breakfast at Tiffany’s ain’t over until the piano lady plays and the opera man sings in the mountains of Mills River, North Carolina.

Photo Above: Karen and Craig Verm are the music-performing proprietors of the Bed & Breakfast on Tiffany Hill in Mills River, North Carolina. © Jared Kay

“We started performing a few songs after breakfast,” says innkeeper Karen Verm. “One of our guests decided to dub it ‘The Fourth Course.’”

The musical snack follows the first-course fruit, a hot entrée and a third-course dessert, usually served on a back porch overlooking woods and gardens.

Karen Verm spent two decades in music academia at Texas, Pennsylvania and most recently at Morgantown, West Virginia, before packing her piano and parking her passion for pancakes and pastries at the Bed & Breakfast on Tiffany Hill, a seven-bedroom home built in 2009.

Craig Verm, Karen’s husband of 20 years, is a handyman at heart plus a sous chef. Yet his self-styled “incredible career” performing opera took him to four continents and across America, including stages at Asheville as well as Knoxville, Tennessee.

These married musicians arrived on Tiffany Hill in 2024.

“We knew that we wanted to include music in some capacity because it’s been such a big part of our careers and our lives,” Karen says.

The usual repertoire rounds up renditions of the very-fitting “Moon River” from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” as well as “If Ever I Would Leave You” from “Camelot.”

Audiences of all ages stay mesmerized, including one 6-year-old girl from Texas who simply requested, “Fourth Course, please.”

“When I open up the mouth and start singing, I’m as close as three or four feet away. The phones immediately come out and people start filming,” Craig says. “It is fun to introduce people to full-body, full-throated singing.”  


The story above first appeared in our September / October 2025 issue.

You Might Also Like:

Ron Messina | Courtesy of the Department of Wildlife Resources

Historic Easement Protects SWVA Land, Opens It to the Public

Lovers of wildlife, woodlands, and waters will soon have a vast area to explore in Southwest Virginia.
This is a landscape photograph of the night sky with the Milky Way over rural Bryson City during summer in the Great Smoky Mountains North Carolina.

Skywatch: May/June 2026

The two planets that, at times, dominate the early evening sky are slowly heading toward each other for a dramatic showdown in early June.
A $1.21 million grant will help the Monacan Indian Nation purchase more than 300 acres on Bear Mountain in Amherst County. © The Conservation Fund

28 New Grants Support Virginia Land, Cultural Sites, and Wildlife

The Virginia Land Conservation Fund has announced grants for 28 projects across the commonwealth, including efforts to purchase tracts that hold cultural and archaeological significance for Native Americans and to preserve wetlands, forests, and Civil War battlefields.
Courtesy of Wunderland

Old Fort Welcomes One-of-a-Kind Retreat

An experience-driven entrepreneur has transformed 35 wooded acres in North Carolina into a distinctive lodging destination.
Vernon and Toni Wright turn grains grown on their family farm into freshly distilled spirits.

Virginia Century Farm Home to New Distillery

For nearly 200 years, Vernon and Toni Wright’s family has raised corn, cattle and quarter horses at Hill High.
skywatch

March/April Skywatch: Late Winter Celestial Attractions

Stars are without a doubt far, even the closest ones.
This painting, inspired by Psalm 23, is one of the frescoes on display at Rumple Memorial Presbyterian Church.

Ben Long Frescoes Saved

Two thought-to-be-lost works by the acclaimed painter have been acquired by a church in Blowing Rock.
Howard Knob has long been a popular rock climbing spot.

Blue Ridge Conservancy Secures 74 Acres on Howard Knob

They say that good things come to those who wait.
Joel Ridge Nature Preserve near Lake Lure is a recent protection by Conserving Carolina.

Conserving Carolina Reaches 50,000-Acre Milestone

The nonprofit Conserving Carolina organization is celebrating reaching a milestone of 50,000 acres protected across western North Carolina and upstate South Carolina.
skywatch

January/February Skywatch: Is the Brightest Star the Closest?

Stars are without a doubt far, even the closest ones.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS