Difference between revisions of "Handspring Puppet Company"

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During the period of the children's plays this problem was solved largely through the use of polystyrene covered in layers of paper. However, Adrian (the master puppeteer and puppet maker) always found this to be an unsympathetic material. With the Kentridge collaboration, carved wood, the medium he'd grown up with as a teenage puppeteer, appeared to be the most appropriate once again, but this time roughly carved to fit the look of the charcoal drawings that were the backbone of the animated films.  
 
During the period of the children's plays this problem was solved largely through the use of polystyrene covered in layers of paper. However, Adrian (the master puppeteer and puppet maker) always found this to be an unsympathetic material. With the Kentridge collaboration, carved wood, the medium he'd grown up with as a teenage puppeteer, appeared to be the most appropriate once again, but this time roughly carved to fit the look of the charcoal drawings that were the backbone of the animated films.  
 
   
 
   
Since then a central design concern has been how to make this weighty material light enough for the puppeteers to hold aloft for the duration of their 90 minute performances. Solid wooden heads are therefore carved to be split in half, and hollowed out, leaving a cranium-like wall about 4mm thick. The bodies themselves are made of lightweight ply. In Tooth and Nail Adrian allowed some of this skeletal structure to be seen by the audience and since then has further developed this style. In The Chimp Project all the puppets, both animal and human had whole-bodied skeletal structures covered with gauze. This resulted in puppets which were fully three-dimensional, lightweight, but whose transparency evoked a lantern-like ghostliness which somehow seemed right for the play.  
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Since then a central design concern has been how to make this weighty material light enough for the puppeteers to hold aloft for the duration of their 90 minute performances. Solid wooden heads are therefore carved to be split in half, and hollowed out, leaving a cranium-like wall about 4mm thick. The bodies themselves are made of lightweight ply. In Tooth and Nail Adrian allowed some of this skeletal structure to be seen by the audience and since then has further developed this style. In The Chimp Project all the puppets, both animal and human had whole-bodied skeletal structures covered with gauze. This resulted in puppets which were fully three-dimensional, lightweight, but whose transparency evoked a lantern-like ghostliness which somehow seemed right for the play.
 
Handspring is now in its 21st year. A celebratory exhibition of their puppets, Episodes is currently on a nationwide tour, which opens at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town in 2002. Handspring is a modest sized company run by Adrian Kohler and his partner, Basil Jones. It is currently based in Kalk Bay, near Cape Town, where the company office and workshop are part of their house there. The company provides an artistic home and professional base for a core group of performers, designers, theatre artists and technicians who collaborate with them on a project basis.
 
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== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 10:07, 2 December 2010

Founded in 1981 by Adrian Kohler, Basil Jones, Jill Faubet and Joe Weinberg. The modest sized company is today run by Adrian Kohler and his partner, Basil Jones. It is based in Kalk Bay, near Cape Town, where the company office and workshop are part of their house there. The company provides an artistic home and professional base for a core group of performers, designers, theatre artists and technicians who collaborate with them on a project basis. The company got its name from a quotation by the famous Russian puppeteer Sergei Obratzov: “The soul of the puppet springs from the palm of the hand.” Their activities include performances for both children and adults, involvement in health care and development, lecturing at tertiary institutions and mounting exhibitions.


Work with puppets and children

The company's original focus was the creation of new South African plays for children and for the first five years they toured educational shows to primary schools throughout Southern Africa. In 1986 they moved to Johannesburg and began work in children's educational television. Between 1990 and 1995 they produced Spider's Place, a multi-media science education programme with teacher development outreach.


Adults and puppets

However, Handspring had always felt the challenge of developing an adult audience for the theatre of puppets and therefore began at night to workshop plays for adults. The first step in this unmarked territory was Episodes of an Easter Rising in 1985, performed in Cape Town, Grahamstown and Johannesburg. They were astonished and delighted by the strong support the production received from adult audiences and the press. This set the arc for all their future theatre work. Exposure to international theatre for puppets at the 7th international Festival of Puppet Theatre in Charleville-Mezzieres in 1985 increased their resolve to work for adults.

The rich theatre life that existed in Johannesburg in the late eighties and nineties gave Handspring many opportunities to work with top South African directors. So they also became known for their collaborative work on adult shows, notably with artist, film-maker and theatre director William Kentridge. Their first international success came in 1991 with Starbrites directed by Barney Simon, which toured to Europe and had a London season. In '92 they began work with the artist, William Kentridge. Their first collaboration, Woyzeck on the Highveld won many awards in South Africa and was highly acclaimed at festivals around the world. Since then, the company has collaborated with Kentridge and others on several other multi-media productions.

Prominent adult shows include Episodes of an Easter Rising (1985), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1988), Woyzeck on the Highveld (1992), Faustus in Africa (1995), Ubu and the Truth Commission (1997), the operas Il Ritorno d’Ulisse (“The Return of Ullyses”), which premiéred at the celebrated Kusten Festival des Artes in Brussels in 1998, and The Confessions of Zeno (Documenta XI, Kassel; Spier, 2002). In these multi-media shows, directed by Kentridge, the company combined live actors, puppet and film footage. The puppets used for Faustus in Africa (designed by Kentridge and made by Kohler**??) have since been housed in the *** museum in Berlin. Handspring Puppet Company: Adrian Kohler was part of them. They staged Woyzeck on the Highveld in 1992 and Faustus in Africa in 1995. Fred Abrahamse’s production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream was staged at the Market through a Market-Baxter-Handspring Puppet Company collaboration in 1989. They performed in Barney Simon’s Starbrites which was staged at the Market in September 1990. William Kentridge directed them in Woyzeck on the Highveld at Upstairs at the Market in 1992. ****


The puppets and materials

The work with top South African directors provoked new and unexpected developments in the way they made and worked with puppets. However, some of the changes stemmed from the performers' interaction with the materials and the demands of the performance. For rod manipulators like Handspring, the weight of the puppet was an important criterion.

During the period of the children's plays this problem was solved largely through the use of polystyrene covered in layers of paper. However, Adrian (the master puppeteer and puppet maker) always found this to be an unsympathetic material. With the Kentridge collaboration, carved wood, the medium he'd grown up with as a teenage puppeteer, appeared to be the most appropriate once again, but this time roughly carved to fit the look of the charcoal drawings that were the backbone of the animated films.

Since then a central design concern has been how to make this weighty material light enough for the puppeteers to hold aloft for the duration of their 90 minute performances. Solid wooden heads are therefore carved to be split in half, and hollowed out, leaving a cranium-like wall about 4mm thick. The bodies themselves are made of lightweight ply. In Tooth and Nail Adrian allowed some of this skeletal structure to be seen by the audience and since then has further developed this style. In The Chimp Project all the puppets, both animal and human had whole-bodied skeletal structures covered with gauze. This resulted in puppets which were fully three-dimensional, lightweight, but whose transparency evoked a lantern-like ghostliness which somehow seemed right for the play.

Sources

Tucker, 1997 http://www.handspringpuppet.co.za/

For more information

See the Handspring Puppet Company's website at http://www.handspringpuppet.co.za/


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