A Visit to the Harlequin Puppet Theatre

I wrote the blog post below before all the business with Covid-19 and social distancing kicked off and unfortunately it is not currently possible to visit the Harlequin puppet theatre for a show.  However Chris has been busy and has compiled a series of online puppet videos which you can view by clicking HERE

 

We have a good friend who lives in Porthmadog, North Wales, who we have visited and stayed with on a number of occasions and each time the route has taken us through Colwyn Bay.  I kept thinking to myself that we should visit the Harlequin Puppet Theatre at some point and then didn’t get round to it.

So when we visited my friend at October half-term time in 2018, we discovered the theatre did have a show on (the theatre has its showings at school holiday times).  So we booked some tickets and took my friend with us as well.

I was surprised that she had not heard of the Harlequin Puppet Theatre before but perhaps it is less well known to non-puppetry enthusiasts.

I had looked up the theatre previously on Trip Advisor and found many glowing reviews from the parents and grandparents of young children and so I had a good idea of what to expect.

The Harlequin is, very much, a one man operation.  Chris Somerville works the box office, acts as usher, M.C., marionette puppeteer and magician as well as selling the interval refreshments.

Indeed, for everything that is included (and compared to other tourist attractions for entertaining families on offer) the whole thing is extremely reasonably priced.

It a small audience when we visited, as the main Welsh school holidays had not started yet.  But as part of the small but select audience, Chris was entertaining some of his fellow puppeteer friends (including Geoff Felix whom I had met previously at various puppetry events such as Skipton Puppet Festival).

I was pleasantly surprised to see how good the auditorium was looking, given what I had heard about the previous arson attack on the theatre.  You could see that the fire door had been replaced with a modern plain door which I presume is a temporary fix until Chris can afford something more in keeping with the period of the original theatre interior.  It also appeared a small section of the ceiling had been replaced with a temporary fix as well.

The show consisted of a fairytale “The Gooseberry Mandarin” written originally in 1928 by Grace Dorcas Ruthenburg as a one act play and originally adapted for the puppet stage by Eric Bramall.

It says on the website that Chris has created this as a new production in 1999, but I am guessing it uses the original voice artists, soundtrack and puppets created by Eric Bramall “back in the day” and perhaps Chris adapted the show to be performed with a single puppeteer, (you can see from the video below that in its heyday the Harlequin productions used more than one puppeteer at a time) in 1999.  It had a sense while we were watching it of stepping back in time to a previous era.

Our young son Anthony (who was about 18 months old when we visited) was kept entertained through this simple, charming (and fairly short) story after which there was an interval where we enjoyed some ice-creams.

The next section was Chris as Mr. Bimbamboozle doing magic tricks with the assistance of a young lady from the audience.  Chris is extremely good at interacting with the children and the fact that his repertoire and format does not change means that he is extremely well practiced and experienced at what he does and this shows.  He had great stage patter and all the comedy magic tricks were expertly done.

After this came a marionette cabaret using short string marionettes with Chris visible up front operating the puppets.  This is obviously a real treat for the children (and the adults) who may be used to CGI tricks where you cannot see how it is done and is not physically present in the room.  I have found in our shows audiences entranced by very simple techniques in our show “The Tempest“.  On one occasion a man could not understand how the shadow puppets were operated when no-one was inside the booth to do it.  It didn’t occur to him that the puppets were not actually moving at that point!

Again the marionette puppeteering skills were incredibly good.  A Shirley Bassey pastiche puppet was very amusing (“Burly Chassis”) though a little dated perhaps.  On the other hand – a classic performer like Shirley is a good choice for a puppet with a long run as modern performers come and go and the current flavour of the month in pop music does not last as long as a puppet does!

The format of the entertainment, using multiple short performances with an interval as well, plus the extremely good interaction with the audience as Master of Ceremonies meant that our 18 month old son Anthony stayed enthralled in his seat throughout.  Anthony was quiet during the performances and did not seek to escape and walk around the room.  This was great, as we had to take Anthony out when we attended Upfront’s “Pied Piper of Hamelin” with him.  This was no fault of Upfront’s production, it was just designed for an older audience and indeed, Anthony was younger when he saw it.

So to conclude, I would heartily recommend anyone (especially puppetry enthusiasts and families) to visit the Harlequin Puppet Theatre (once he is back up and running) and see a show if you’re in the area to be thoroughly entertained by a master performer!

Click the link to the Wikipedia entry below for more information about the theatre.

Wikipedia entry

RMT celebrate Shakespeare’s 400th Anniversary in style at Historical Hereford Day – Castle Green

Hello again my lovely readers.  Have once again been rather busy with one thing and another and thus have not had a chance to do a blog post for you.

Doubtless you will remember that we were due to perform our first ever Rough Magic Theatre show at Historical Hereford Day at a lovely park called Castle Green on the 23rd of July.  We decided to relaunch the show in honour of the 400th Anniversary of Shakespeare’s death this year after an extended gap where Alice in Wonderland took over as our main 2 hander touring show.

After some extensive rehearsing we got the show back in ship shape and it was a real treat to give the show an airing again.

For the Historical Hereford Day we performed our shorter version of the show which we use for street/outdoor performances (30 minutes instead of the full hour long version for indoor performances).

If I have been to Hereford in the past I do not remember and I have to say that it was great to have an excuse to visit such a beautiful area of the country and Castle Green itself was a lovely setting.  We had of course given thought as to what we might do should the weather be wet but luckily plan B was not necessary as it was a perfect sunny and clear day.

There were lots of other Elizabethan/Shakespeare themed attractions on the day including music, dancing an Elizabethan jester and (oddly enough) Kate Bliss the antiques expert off the telly!

I decided I would not be awed by Kate Bliss merely because she is on the television.  When I happened to be passing walked straight past without making a fuss, (though I did get a good sidelong glance at her and discovered that she looked surprisingly like a normal person and did not have a glowing aura of celebrity or anything like that ;)).

I told my co-performer Leo Nolan-Evans about the presence of a minor celebrity but did not get a satisfying reaction as Leo does not have a television.

Anyway….Our two performances of “The Tempest” went very well with a large audience for the first and a more modest but appreciative crowd for our second performance.

We were told by more than one member of the audience how much they’d enjoyed it and what a great introduction to Shakespeare for kids the show is.

During the second showing there was a man who was taking a recording of the show on a camcorder and not only did he record the whole thing but was polite enough to come and ask our permission to use the footage on his Youtube channel!  How often are people good enough to bother doing that?  This was great news because it meant that I was able to get a copy of the footage too which was very interesting for us as this is the first time we have seen video footage of the street theatre version of the show.  So many thanks to Timothy for the footage!  The sound and picture quality are not great but it gives a general idea (please visit the show page on our main website to see our video trailer with footage of the indoor version of the show by clicking HERE):

 

 

If you would like to book the indoor or outdoor version of this show or to book any of our other shows or workshops please CLICK HERE to contact us  🙂