{"title":"Puppetry and Public Spectacle","authors":"Skye Strauss","doi":"10.29173/inton79","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Flight of the Phoenix, a puppet pageant at Northwestern University, became more than a way to perform despite safety restrictions – the build also became a valuable way to create community during the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. The shared project of bringing the puppets to life through simple techniques that invited hands-on participation, helped the artistic community to come together again as we emerged from extended isolation. The spark of the project––that began with a simple proposal to fly bird puppets down the lakeshore––brought together a team of designers, makers, directors, puppeteers, and filmmakers, all of whom were excited to excited to contribute their unique ideas and skillsets. As the puppets grew in number, scale, and complexity, the event called for a growing cast of volunteers capable of bringing a bigger version of the final event into being. I interpret the corresponding process of expansion through what artistic director and puppeteer Jim Lasko calls “radical listening” in his essay “The Third Thing” (2014). The finished work of public spectacle reached out to an even wider community as it captured the attention of university students, staff, and faculty and the citizens of Evanston who became surprise witnesses to the birds’ triumphant flight. The performance’s wordless grace made space for everyone involved to find themselves reflecting on the finished performance as they began to release grief, migrate again after a time of stasis, and collectively celebrate re-emergence.","PeriodicalId":475358,"journal":{"name":"Intonations","volume":"45 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Intonations","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.29173/inton79","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Flight of the Phoenix, a puppet pageant at Northwestern University, became more than a way to perform despite safety restrictions – the build also became a valuable way to create community during the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. The shared project of bringing the puppets to life through simple techniques that invited hands-on participation, helped the artistic community to come together again as we emerged from extended isolation. The spark of the project––that began with a simple proposal to fly bird puppets down the lakeshore––brought together a team of designers, makers, directors, puppeteers, and filmmakers, all of whom were excited to excited to contribute their unique ideas and skillsets. As the puppets grew in number, scale, and complexity, the event called for a growing cast of volunteers capable of bringing a bigger version of the final event into being. I interpret the corresponding process of expansion through what artistic director and puppeteer Jim Lasko calls “radical listening” in his essay “The Third Thing” (2014). The finished work of public spectacle reached out to an even wider community as it captured the attention of university students, staff, and faculty and the citizens of Evanston who became surprise witnesses to the birds’ triumphant flight. The performance’s wordless grace made space for everyone involved to find themselves reflecting on the finished performance as they began to release grief, migrate again after a time of stasis, and collectively celebrate re-emergence.
西北大学(Northwestern University)的木偶表演“凤凰飞行”(Flight of the Phoenix)不仅成为了一种不受安全限制的表演方式,而且在正在进行的Covid-19大流行期间,这一建筑也成为了一种创造社区的宝贵方式。共同的项目通过简单的技术将木偶带入生活,邀请亲自参与,帮助艺术社区再次走到一起,因为我们从长期的孤立中走出来。这个项目的火花——始于一个简单的提议,让鸟木偶沿着湖岸飞下去——汇集了一个由设计师、制作者、导演、木偶师和电影制作人组成的团队,他们都非常兴奋地贡献自己独特的想法和技能。随着木偶在数量、规模和复杂性上的增长,这个活动需要越来越多的志愿者来完成一个更大版本的最终活动。我通过艺术总监兼木偶师吉姆·拉斯科(Jim Lasko)在他的文章《第三件事》(the Third Thing, 2014)中所说的“激进倾听”来解释相应的扩张过程。这一完成的公共奇观吸引了更广泛的社区,引起了大学生、教职员工和埃文斯顿市民的注意,他们惊奇地目睹了这些鸟的胜利飞行。表演无声的优雅为每个参与者提供了空间,让他们开始释放悲伤,在停滞一段时间后再次迁移,并集体庆祝重新出现,从而发现自己在反思完成的表演。