Skipton International Puppetry Symposium

I attended the first ever Skipton International Puppetry Symposium this last weekend.

It was hosted by Skipton Town Hall who did an excellent job. The talks and networking opportunities were great. It was really lovely to see old friends and people who I’ve only encountered online before plus making new contacts.

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In the first panel discussion at the Symposium was posing the question “Where are we Now” in terms of the puppetry community. The panelists were Mike Dixon from the British Puppet Guild, Cariad Astles from BrUNIMA, Malcolm Knight from PuppeteersUK, Hugh Purves from The Puppet Centre (which is just getting back up and running again after a gap) and Clive Chandler from the PJF. Malcolm also brought his experiences from The Scottish Mask & Puppet Centre to the discussion as well.

David Micklem introduced the discussion and talked about how he felt that in the 90s puppetry was on the fringes but with productions such as “War Horse” and giant puppets by Royale de Luxe arriving on the scene puppetry arrived, (in terms of recognition of the artform).

It was acknowledged that things were difficult now in terms of getting work and funding and that we are in fact down to just one puppetry National Portfolio Organisation getting regularly funded by the Arts Council (Theatre-Rites). Clive also mentioned the lack of support for the arts from local councils now (Birmingham’s arts budget has completely gone and the Cannock Chase museum that Clive has been performing in regularly for years has also gone).

John Parkinson of Upfront Puppet Theatre in Cumbria had a more positive report that their theatre is now receiving a share of the arts funding from their local council for the first time after many years of running their business without any outside support. You can find my other posts about Upfront here: (Snow Queen, Stanelli’s Super Circus, Pied Piper, Commedia dell’Arte masks, Jack & the Beanstalk).

The speakers talked a bit about the organisations they were representing and then questions were taken from the floor including the discussion of the fact that there is not a tick box for puppetry as an art form on the Arts Council England grant forms when even relatively niche art forms like mime are represented. There was a lot of discussion about how we can start working together as a cohesive group to advocate for puppetry as an art form. PuppeteersUK was originally set up to do this job of bringing the puppetry community together in the modest form of a listings directory on a website and sending out a weekly newsletter. Nowadays anyone can make their own website very easily so the monetary support for PUK has been dwindling.

On the second day of the Symposium I attended the Devoted & Disgruntled session (CLICK HERE for my previous D&D at Leeds Playhouse post, CLICK HERE for D&D at The Little Angel Theatre post) at which one of the breakout sessions was discussing how PUK needed to change to address the new issues affecting the puppetry community and what new form it needed to take. This session segwayed into a different session that was thinking in a very freeform creative sort of way about an app for puppeteers that would be more like a game so that people (and younger people in particular) would want to engage with it something like Club Penguin. This was described as Puppet Utopia and was structured as a village with various areas to do different things e.g. a bank to talk about/access funding, a school for accessing puppetry training, a garden where new ideas can grow etc. etc.

I also formed my own session about how puppeteers can get paid a fair wage when the funding climate is so difficult and looked in on a session about the UK puppet festivals working together and maybe forming some sort of network and perhaps co-commissioning new work (something like WithoutWalls does).

You can also read about the discussion of Other Sectors & Wider Networks by clicking the link HERE

You can access the reports from all the Open Space discussions that have ever been held on the Devoted & Disgruntled website and search for whatever topics are relevant to you (including puppetry) in the drop down menus. I notice that not all the break out sessions have uploaded a report, so if this is you, please take a moment to upload a report of your group to the site, as this is a great resource for the puppetry community to be able to access.

You can see at the top some photos from the Halloween Shadow Puppetry Drop-In Workshop that I ran on the Sunday and below is a little video snippit from one of my audience members at my “Edward Lear’s Nonsense” show.

Do please leave a comment if you have anything to add about the Symposium and don’t forget, you can subscribe to this blog, if you would like to receive regular updates.

If you would like to book one of my suitcase shows or a workshop, you can Contact Me Here ๐Ÿ˜Š.

“Al & Kai’s Faboo News” Series Premieres Tomorrow!

Tim Austin & I have been working incredibly hard on a new TV series for kids which premieres tomorrow.

As some of you already know, it is a positive news and entertainment show with puppets. Think The Muppets meets Newsround. We have also been inspired by some of the TV shows we used to watch as kids such as Rainbow.

It is an antidote to the majority of news in the mainstream press which is depressing and overwhelming to say the least. The things we watch, read and listen to have a profound effect on our mental health and our experience of day to day life. This show is something positive, silly and fun to sit down and watch with the kids, or on your own or let the kids watch on their own while you grab a sit down and a cup of tea or get a bit of housework done with the knowledge that it is full of wholesome, uplifting stuff.

The series is starting tomorrow and there will be a new episode every Saturday for the next 12 weeks (with a break for Christmas).

We have the next 3 episodes already made and we are looking forward to creating the rest for everyone to enjoy.

We would love for you to watch and share the show with all your friends and anyone you think might be interested.

There is also the opportunity for you to get involved and BE IN THE SHOW by getting in touch with your own Faboo News. Just click “Faboo Yous” on the website to get in touch.

You can watch the show at faboonews.com or on the Youtube channel. Please like, subscribe and follow our socials to find out when new episodes and content are available.

Each episode has a theme and the first three coming up are “Transport”, “Halloween” and “Peace & Quiet”.

As well as puppeteering Kai, I have been designing and making costumes, props and a couple of sock puppet characters, “Tony” and “Ped”; who are socks that live in Al and Kai’s basement and act as the Faboo News production crew.

Tim came up the initial design for these and wanted them to be very mobile and expressive like Kermit the frog, so was at first not keen to let me add a mouthplate. However, he soon found that it was very difficult to operate them without and agreed to let me add one afterwards, (the eagle eyed will spot which episode the mouth-plates were installed and which they were not ๐Ÿคฃ).

I am also appearing in the show as “Mom” (Al and Kai’s mum) and Tim (who came up with the entire concept for the show and is currently doing, puppeteering, filming, editing and promo.) is playing “Dad” (Al and Kai’s dad). It’s just your conventional family group (human mum and dad with Anteater and Capybara children/siblings).

“Little Miss Seamstress” did an excellent job of customising Dad’s jacket for us. Check out her Facebook Page HERE.

Mom (amongst other things) will be doing a “Mom makes” segment where Mom will be doing various fun and simple crafts for kids to make (some may require a bit of help from adult helpers depending on the craft and the kids’ age/ability level). We aim to use materials you can easily get hold of and are inexpensive (reusing/recycling as much as possible).

While Tim came up with the initial design for the Al & Kai puppets, the excellent Joe Peek made the puppets in consultation with Tim and we are very happy with how they came out.

The Patreon page is now live and you can access it from faboonews.com. Patrons will be able to access all the episodes a week early and also access exclusive behind the scenes content and other goodies. So, check it out to see how you can support us and what fun rewards you can get!

We are currently putting this together on a shoestring budget and we hope that if you like the show you will help us to make it more sustainable going forward (e.g. paying ourselves properly and being able to afford to bring in others to help with editing etc. so Tim doesn’t have a nervous breakdown trying to do everything himself).

So to recap, things you can do to support us are:

  1. Watch the show!
  2. Tell all your friends and family about it.
  3. Follow us on the social media channels (Facebook, Instagram, Tiktok and of course Youtube) links are on the website HERE
  4. Become a Patron (access the Patreon page from faboonews.com)
  5. Send us your Faboo News and BE ON THE SHOW!๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ˜

(A big thank-you to everyone who already supported our crowdfunder for the show ๐Ÿ˜Š).