The Promise

Little elephant and boy puppets

Remember the little elephant and boy puppets I was working on last year? Here are some pictures of how they turned out. They were for the Flying Fruitfly Circus production The Promise, which premiered at the Sydney Festival about a month ago. The build for the show was quite big, and largely undertaken by Tim Denton and Annie Forbes in Melbourne, but I was asked to make these little ones and a life-size elephant trunk (more of the trunk soon in another post). The designer was Richard Jeziorny, whom I really like working with.

Little elephant and boy puppets

Little elephant and boy puppets

It’s part of the business that directors sometimes need to alter significantly or completely cut scenes and props, and in this case the elephant was altered or remade in Melbourne so that it could have more head movement than the original design. I was given the opportunity to do it, but couldn’t take it on at the time. It looks from this picture as if it was covered and the head possibly remade completely.

promise_rev

The production received great reviews such as this at the Australian Stage Online. I’d like to see it one day if they tour up this way.

Previously:
A little heffalump
Playing
Studio pics
Nearly done

Yes, Virginia, there is a puppet I’m afraid

Virginia

I’m fond of Virginia Woolf, and her writing has influenced some of the ways I look at the world. I’m not sure if that explains why I wanted to make a puppet of her or not! I do find, though, that the making process itself allows me to understand and meditate in a unique way on what that person was like, and I end up feeling I know more about them than before. From that point of view the result doesn’t matter much. However, I would have liked to capture her beauty more, and her look is rather alarmingly intense. I’ve read she could be, but she wasn’t all the time, like my puppet.

Virginia

Virginia

I started making Virginia quite a while ago, and was trying out some experimental techniques and materials. I tried an air dry clay for modeling her face and hands. I wouldn’t chose it again because I don’t think it is very durable. I also wanted to see if I could build the arms and legs using tubes for the straight bones, round beads for the joints, and elastic running through them to keep them tensioned, then covering them with padding and fabric. There was too much play in them, and the limbs twisted. At this point Virginia got put aside.  But now I’ve re-built her with good joints, and her feet are weighted nicely. She stands about 50cm (20 inches) tall.

I really like her outfit, and her shape and movement; she is satisfying to hold and play with (my kids had her doing the Time Warp the other night), and she is very much a small presence around the house.

Virginia

Nice Carnival’s huge dragon puppet

dragonnice

(photo:  rafael rybczynski)

My interest was piqued by photo #32 in the Big Picture’s post about Carnival. It’s an impressive dragon puppet float that took to the streets in the Nice Carnival recently. I don’t know who made it, but there are resonances with Royal de Luxe’s giant puppets, for instance the carving of the head, elements of the construction and operation and the way it breathes smoke.

There are some photos at Flickr. In particular, Sparrowlight has a cool sequence of photos of the dragon, including a couple of short videos, here and here ; there is a shot of the puppeteers;  and debs-eye caught the dragon at rest (click to see enlarged):

dragonnice2

Messy

Studio

This is what my studio looks like at the moment. I’m making a large dead manta ray out of polystyrene. I wish it wasn’t so messy and that I didn’t have to wear a respirator all day, but it works nicely.

Red

Unusual Australian flowers at the markets today. I imagine they were specially there for Valentine’s day, though it’s not a big deal here.

Musee de la Poupee

I made the mistake of expecting the Musee de la Poupee to be puppets, not an auspicious start; but I also found it quite depressing, especially since I’m not really a doll person. By the end, though, with ghastly gems such as these, I figured it had not been such a waste of time.

Oops!:

Oops!

What a little toughy:

Little toughy

Woof! Woof!:

Woof

Half-dog, half-lion, family fun (I like this one):

Grrr

I also liked a few others, like this felted one:

Doll

There are a few more at Flickr.

Light-sabre dummies

Light-sabre dummies in Galeries Lafayette

These were some other dummies in the swimming apparel department in Galeries Lafayette in Paris, a whole row of them, bearing light-sabres.

Light-sabre dummies in Galeries Lafayette

Plastic dummies in Galeries Lafayette

Plastic dummies in Galeries Lafayette

Galeries Lafayette in Paris has more dummies than you can poke a stick at. I liked these ones, made out of something like polypropylene sheeting snapped together. Maybe you could make interesting puppets with this construction?

Plastic dummies in Galeries Lafayette