Indigo Moon – Puppetry Masterclass

Yesterday I visited Zion Arts Centre in Manchester to participate in a Masterclass on shadow theatre by Indigo Moon.

You will notice that I say Shadow “Theatre” rather than shadow puppetry.  Although puppets did form part of what we looked at, it was by no means limited to just that.

I consider myself a gifted and knowledgeable shadow puppet maker and performer, and was unsure whether I would learn a lot.  However, the knowledge that I have of shadow puppets is largely out of books or through personal trial and error.  In addition, we at Rough Magic Theatre are generally masters of the lo-tech tech.  This tech is no less magical for being simple, but simple it is.

Indigo Moon are a wonderful two person team.  Haviel does all the music and technical stuff with the lighting, and Anna does the puppetry and performance.

I think one of the most useful things for me was the different techniques they produced using halogen lamps, though Anna was keen to stress that the things we were shown could be done without the use of halogen lamps.  For example, removing the reflectors from a torch could produce similar effects.  Haviel was also keen to advocate the use of angle poise lamps which are useful for moving about or being fixed in a particular position.

They used an extra bright lamp to avoid their effects being spoilt in school halls without total blackout. However, they also stressed the fact that they had a super-duper rather expensive screen which was designed to stop the light source shining in the eyes of the audience and could be projected onto from either side.  So while they were keen to say the things we were shown could be done using simpler equipment, I am far from sure that every technique we were shown would work as well in all circumstances.

I do feel that one of the joys of shadow theatre is that it can be created by anyone and that you do not need to have expensive equipment.  All you need is a light source, an object to cast the shadow, and a screen of some sort to cast the shadow onto.  You do of course need an audience to look at the shadows, but that goes without saying.  Anna was keen to make this clear as well and the different techniques we looked at were all looking at the variations you could make to each of these elements to create interesting and special effects.

We looked at coloured gels to produce coloured shadows, multiple light sources to create multiple shadows of each object.  This is particularly interesting if the light sources are at different angles.  We were shown a couple of “magic” tricks to morph one person into another person and to join up the top and bottom halves of two different people.  This was done by using two angled lights and sneaky use of “barn doors” to mask off different areas of light.

We were also shown a clever technique which made two 3-D still figures appear to move and dance with each other, by moving the light rather than the people.  This finally solved for me a conundrum that I had been wrestling with about a particular shadow puppetry technique using a 3-D object that I saw a long time ago in “The Girl Who Cut Flowers” by Horse + Bamboo.  I had been assuming that they had been moving a 3-D object in front of light source, but I suspect they were actually inserting the light inside the object.  The effect for the audience is quite magical and also totally bewildering.  This is because the shadow that you see creates an effect totally at odds with what is happening behind the screen.  When doing conventional shadow puppetry, for the most part, the shadow that the audience sees, largely resembles the puppet that is being manipulated on the other side.

Then, you can do things with the screen to change the shadows.  We used pieces of white card to “catch” images from a projector, experimented with rumpled, rippling and 3-D screens, creating almost a tent out of a large silk screen and crawling inside it with puppets, multiple light sources, coloured lights and body shadows too.  In other words, we were a whole load of grown people having a play session.  Anyone who laughs at this idea needs to get more in touch with their creative side, as playing is one of the best ways of developing new ideas.  The majority of great inventions start with a happy accident.

Funnily enough, we did not talk much about puppet making techniques at all.  This was probably just as well, as if we had, it would probably have been covering old ground for me.  Having said that, I did see some interesting control mechanisms that Anna uses on the puppets in Aladdin.  She has metal welding rods to support the puppet from behind, with nylon fishing line to control various moving parts on each puppet, which she controls with metal rings that she can slip her fingers through.  This means that she can articulate specific parts on each puppet using only one hand.  In order to achieve this level of articulation, however, they have had to reinforce the puppet bodies with thin acrylic sheet as well as laminating the card cut out pieces.

It all made me wish that I had the chance to see the show in action, and indeed, I would recommend people of all ages to get to the Zion Arts Centre tonight and see their Aladdin show.  However, if you were to try, you would find that they have sold out, so try and catch them elsewhere on their run.  Click here to see their full gig list.

Anna also had an admirable collection of traditonal Javanese puppets, which are made from cured hide, rather than cardboard and punched with very intricate cut out detailing.  She also gave us a brief insight into her experiences of Indonesian shadow puppetry.  A lot of this was not new to me, but unlike myself, Anna has had the enviable experience of having lived in Indonesia and experienced the tradition first hand.  A point she made about it, which I thought was very telling, is that because it is a live tradition rather than something that exists only in museums; it is constantly changing and renewing itself.  Also, although the stories are very ancient and involve Hindu mythology and characters.  The “clown” characters in particular are used as a vehicle to talk about up to the minute events in a similar way to “Spitting Image”.  Of course the Dhalang or Puppet Master can get away with saying things that are quite politically dangerous, because it is the puppet who says them, not him.

Tangent time – Who reckons we should bring back Spitting Image?  I think we really need some ugly rubber puppets on prime time TV to say the things that the media is not saying.  The press seems to be either supposedly impartial or decidedly right wing at the moment.  Some amusing sketches to show what evil prats the Tories are would be just what we need right about now.  There is no budget for really good programming on ITV and the BBC are intending to give us more repeats than ever before.  I understand that the BBC trust are doing public surveys to find out what direction we want them to go in, so please everyone go and tell them that you want more innovative new programming, not just safe bets, repeats, reality shows and quizzes.

Treasure Island, Hansel & Gretel and 4 generations of Toy Theatre Enthusiasts!

At last I am going to tell you all about our trip to visit the lovely Ted & Enid Hawkins in Blackpool!

We were invited to visit Ted & Enid for “a bit of dinner” and to do our Toy Theatre show for each other, when we were at the Vischmarkt Papierentheater Festival in the Netherlands together.  We had missed each others shows due to our performances being at the same time due to the scheduling.  We were very pleased when we discovered that they lived just a short journey up the M6 from us in England, so keeping in touch would be fairly easy.

It was a great while later, however, when I was well into the making of the “Edward Lear’s Nonsense” show for Skipton Puppet Festival that Ted finally got in touch by email and made a more concrete invitation.  I was slightly fed up, that once again, events would not arrange themselves in a nice evenly spaced manner but instead would lie in wait behind bushes and then spring out at me all at once.  As Ted explained that he was due to have an eye operation and might not be able to see our show at all, should the operation not go well, we were very happy to oblige by going to visit Ted sooner rather than later.  Just to remove the suspense for you, Ted’s operation went very well and he can now see better with the eye that was operated on than the other!  He was considering the use of an eye patch to even things up and to indulge his piratical side a little, but thought it would be uncomfortable.

Considering the fact that Ted had done a show of “Treasure Island”, I perhaps shouldn’t have been surprised at the number of copies of the book on Ted & Enid’s shelves, (there were at least 4 different ones).  Ted explained, however that there was a personal connection for him with the story, because he shares the same name as the main character (Jim Hawkins).

Ted had very kindly laid out his considerable collection of toy theatres and scenery in his “den” upstairs so that Tim and I could have a nosy at them.  I think it wasn’t quite his entire stock, but there simply wasn’t room for any more to go out!

Ted had created, for many of his paper theatres, the most beautiful surrounds which were extremely detailed and artistically finished.  He obviously has a keen aesthetic sense as each one was finished using a style and materials appropriate to the style of the theatre.

You can see it best from the pictures, but the majority of the printed cardboard theatres include only the proscenium arch, the curtain, some of the “boxes” with the posh people in and the orchestra.  However, in the case of Buxton Opera House, (a building I’d recently visited for Buxton Puppet Festival), Ted had created the entire exterior of the building, which opened up to reveal the stage inside.

He had also ingeniously invented a gismo to fold the audience members in their seats flat when the building was being closed up and to pop them back up when it was opened.  Doubtless many of the toy theatre afficionados out there will already know that Ted won an award for this Buxton Opera House theatre design, and very well deserved too.

It appears that Toy Theatre enthusiasts like Ted are often to be seen nosing around in model and doll’s house shops for such things as miniature light fittings and wallpaper.  If you were to try to use normal wallpaper the patterns would of course be too large.  Ted’s excellent painting skills were put to good use in the way he suggested the reflections on the window panes on the exteri

Ted's award winning theatre!

Ted's award winning Buxton Opera House (Exterior)

or.  He used some kind of air-drying clay for the stone work and two halves of a hamster toy to create the domes on the two towers!  I do love creative recycling!

Inside Buxton Opera House

Interior of Buxton Opera House

I had been intrigued by Ted’s articles in the Puppet Master, (British Puppet and Model Theatre Guild Magazine) about his creative ways of getting toy theatre figures to move.  He had mentioned on a number of occasions to me the triumph he had in putting into action an innocent and simple stage instruction in the “Forest of Bondi” play.  The play directed that a dog should jump over a gate, once in one direction and then back in the other!  Quite a challenge for a little piece of cardboard!

So, I was very pleased to see the theatre that Ted had used for this, some of the figures, the sets and the ingenious dog.  There was also a set in which a lady leans out of an upper storey window, with a lighted lantern goes in again, and then comes out of the door at the bottom.  Easy for real actors with props, a technical challenge, to someone creating a toy theatre show.  Ted had actually used a doll’s house lantern that really lit up for this, which impressed me, I have to say.  We were also treated to the video of the performance of this show with the dog jumping later in the day.

Another lovely “Doll’s House like” theatre was this model of the Blackfriars Theatre home of “The King’s Men”, (of whom Shakespeare was of course one).

Ted with The Blackfriars Theatre, Home of "The King's Men"

Ted had inherited this from someone else, when it was in a sad state of repair, and has been renovated and improved by Ted, who replaced all of the balsa wood timbers with something rather more substantial.  Like the B.O.H. It is hinged.  So you can either view the stage through the theatre over the audiences heads, or you can swing that to one side and view the stage only.  I am not clear whether it is necessary to open it up if you wish to perform a play with it or not.

The other theatre that I most admired was this chinese style one based on the Pantomime Peacock Theatre built in 1874 in the Tivoli Gardens, Copenhagen.  Ted created using the two dimensional image at the top for a guide.  Once again, Ted has made it into more of a beautiful object than it could have been, using his own creativity and skill.  It is also clear that Ted has had hours of pleasure out of making these.  Ted told me that the last ten years, that he has been involved with the toy theatre have been among the most enjoyable in his life.

Since there is so much to say about this visit, and this is already a long post, I will leave you with a tantalising “To be continued…….”

The Real Pantomime Peacock Theatre, Tivoli Gardens, Copenhagen

(Ted actually visited this theatre in 2003 and was given a backstage tour and shown how the mechanical peacock fan tail works)