Insight into the Inspiration for our Puppets (Part 2)
May 06, 2014 12:00 AM
Tara Nicole Haas
<a title="Insight into the Inspiration for our Puppets (Part One)" href="http://4thwalldramaturgy.byu.edu/insight-into-the-inspiration-for-our-puppets-part-one" target="_blank">In my last post</a>
By Tara Nicole Haas
In my last post, I talked about some of the puppet companies that have inspired our puppet making for The Selfish Giant. Here are a few more who we would like to share!
Blind Summit:
"17 years ago Blind Summit started with two guys, one puppet and one story. There was no adult puppetry scene in the UK. There was no Lion King, Avenue Q or War Horse... no one wanted to do puppetry, or to watch it! Since then we have created 30 productions, trained 100 artists and even directed the puppetry in the London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony. Last year our puppets were seen by over 330,000 people."
Mark Down - Artistic Director
• Puppetry innovators who are subverting and reinventing the ancient Japanese art form of Bunraku puppetry for contemporary worldwide audiences.
• They believe that at a time when theatre is so under threat from the proliferation of new media, puppetry is one of the areas which offers a unique, live experience for audiences. They see puppetry as a radical part of the reinvention of theatre in our time.
• Their work aims to challenge people's attitudes towards puppetry. Their puppets are modern and shows tackle contemporary issues that concern them.
The power of healing and growth is a topic not unknown to students at BYU. Educators and learners alike were asked to stretch their capacity to hold both powers in one hand as they were transplanted from their on-campus home in the Harris Fine Arts Center, to the new West Campus building, formerly known as the old Provo High School. The college of fine arts and communication, which includes Theatre, Media, film, Art, and Design departments, had to establish new communities, while major construction projects prevented them from being as close to the rest of campus as they might like to be.
The BYU Department of Theatre & Media Arts provides students with opportunities to gain hands-on experience in technical theatre by assigning them as lead designers for main stage productions. Wait Until Dark is a unique and thrilling experience to create the design for ultra realism on stage.
Wait Until Dark is full of action and heightened reality. In our dramaturgy guide within the show program, we asked audience members to locate a select few handheld props and set pieces. These items that are utilized to help Susy, the main character who is blind, overcome her tormentors.