Handspring_Puppet_Company

Handspring Puppet Company

Handspring Puppet Company

South African puppetry company


The Handspring Puppet Company is a South African puppetry performance and design company. It was established in 1981 by Adrian Kohler, Basil Jones, Jon Weinberg, and Jill Joubert,[2] and is based in Cape Town, South Africa.

War Horse, a play seen by nearly eight million people, features horse puppets designed and created by Handspring Puppet Company and operated by three actors to each.

Quick Facts Company type, Founded ...

History

Jones and Kohler met at the Michaelis School of Fine Art in Cape Town.[2] At first, they designed puppets for children-targeted productions, which Jones initially disliked. Kohler "introduced him [Jones] to the West African tradition of puppetry for adults,"[3] working with Malcolm Purkey and Barney Simon, among others.[4]

Productions

Some notable productions include:

Episodes of an Easter Rising

Esther van Ryswyk directed Episodes of an Easter Rising (1985), a play based on David Lytton's radio special of the same name.[5] It told the story of two white lesbian women who became part of South Africa's anti-apartheid struggle. It premiered at the Baxter Theatre in Cape Town and toured to the National Arts Festival in Makhanda (formerly Grahamstown), WITS University Theatre in Johannesburg and to the 7th World Festival of Puppet Theatre in Charleville-Mézières, France.[4]

Ubu and the Truth Commission

In 1997, they worked with William Kentridge (director) and Jane Taylor (scriptwriter) on Ubu and the Truth Commission.[4] The play draws extensively on Alfred Jarry's absurdist production Ubu Roi (1896). It fuses the chaos of the Ubu legend with original testimony from witnesses at the post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). It highlights Kentridge's work in the evolution of truth through a combination of fictional narratives and facts.[6] The production premiered in Weimer, Germany on 17 June 1997. Over the next two years, it toured to 38 theatres in South Africa, Europe and the USA.[7]

Tall Horse

Tall Horse (directed by Marthinus Basson in 2004) was a collaboration between the Sogolon Puppet Troupe of Mali and Handspring Puppet Company. The production was based on historical events: in 1827 the Pasha of Egypt, Muhammad Ali, sent a giraffe as a gift to King Charles X of France. The play dramatised the giraffe's journey across the Mediterranean Sea and the politics underlying it. With initial funding from the John F. Kennedy Centre in Washington, D.C, Tall Horse was also supported by Anglo Gold Ashanti, a mining company with interests in both Mali and South Africa.[8]

War Horse

The maquette for the horse Joey from the National Theatre production. The puppets were made by the Handspring Puppet Company. This scale model was a gift to writer Sir Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse.

The Handspring Puppet Company achieved critical acclaim when War Horse featuring life-size puppets they had created, premiered at the Royal National Theatre in South Bank, London, on 17 October 2007.[9] Kohler and Jones worked with directors Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris and choreographer Toby Sedgwick[10] to design and construct life-sized horse puppets, each controlled by three actors. Two actors operate the legs and a third controls the head and neck, with all three actors providing a variety of sound effects.[11] The company won an Olivier Award, Evening Standard Theatre Award and London Critics' Circle Theatre Award.[12][13][14] The show transferred to the West End on 28 March 2009,[15] and on 15 March 2011, it premiered on Broadway at the Vivian Beaumont Theater in New York City.[16] The play has been performed globally to nearly eight million people worldwide.[17]

Or You Could Kiss Me

The company collaborated with Neil Bartlett and Rae Smith on Or You Could Kiss Me, which opened at London's National Theatre on 5 October 2010, for a six-week season. The show has been described as "an intimate history of two very private lives, lived in extraordinary times". It was loosely based on the lives of Kohler and Jones, and speculated on their future circumstances when both men reach the age of 85.[18]

Exhibitions

  • Unmasking the Puppet1987 This exhibition opened at the UNISA Gallery in Pretoria and toured to the Johannesburg Art Gallery, the Durban Art Museum, the Tatham Art Gallery in Pietermaritzburg, and the South African National Gallery in Cape Town.[1]
  • Episodes 2001–2003 Presented in various venues across South Africa, this installation included puppets from seven productions created over 16 years. Episodes represented a retrospective of Handspring's work. The exhibition was sponsored by the Goodman Gallery.[19]
  • Patrimony 2004–2005 An exhibition of Bamana Puppets from Mali, it featured puppets from the extensive family collection of Yaya Coulibali. It toured South Africa.
  • At Arms Length – The Art of African Puppetry – 2006 Produced by the Museum for African Art (now known as The Africa Center, New York), this exhibit presented nearly 100 animated puppets, marionettes and puppet sculptures used in traditional and contemporary theatrical performances from Handspring and the Sogolon Puppet Troupe from Mali.
  • The Puppet Show – 2008 Produced by the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, USA at the Pennsylvania State University and the Frye Art Museum in Seattle. Here the kinetic work of leading contemporary artists was set off against a backdrop of more puppeteers from the world of professional theatre.[20]
  • KKNK National Art Festival – 2011 Selected as a featured visual artist for solo exhibition at the Klein Karoo National Arts Festival, held annually in Oudtshoorn, South Africa, Handspring Puppet Company exhibited puppets featured in performances in the preceding 2 years that were in line for further international touring.[19]
  • National Theatre Gallery London – 2012 This exhibition explained the puppet-making process for War Horse.
  • Circa Gallery, Johannesburg – 2016 An exhibition of Joey and Topthorn, characters from War Horse, together with portraits of puppets in the Handspring archives which Kohler had realised as editioned linocut prints.

Awards

Theatrical Awards

2007 Evening Standard Awards

Best Design (Rae Smith and the Handspring Puppet Company, winner)

2007 Critics' Circle Theatre Awards

Best Designer (Basil Jones, Adrian Kohler, Rae Smith and the Handspring Puppet Company, winner)

2008 Laurence Olivier Awards

Best Set Design (Rae Smith, Basil Jones and Adrian Kohler, winner)

2011 Tony Awards

Adrian Kohler and Basil Jones won the Special Tony Award for War Horse.

2011 Outer Critics Circle Awards

Outer Critics Circle Special Achievement Award for "Puppet Design, Fabrication and Direction for War Horse"[21][22]

Honorary Awards

2012 – Honorary Doctorate of Literature Kohler and Jones both received an honorary doctorate in literature from the University of Cape Town, South Africa.[23]

2018 – John F. Kennedy Gold Medal Kohler and Jones received the John F. Kennedy Gold Medal in the Arts from the Kennedy Center International Committee on the Arts at a ceremony held at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa.[24]

Production Schedule

More information Title, Year/s ...

Notes

  1. Rubin, Don (1997). The World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre: Africa. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780415059312. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  2. "About the Company". Handspring Puppet Company. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  3. Costa, Maddy (3 October 2010). "The gay puppet stars of Or You Could Kiss Me". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  4. Taylor, Jane; Law-Viljoen, Bronwyn (2009). Handspring Puppet Company (PDF). David Krut Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9814328-3-0. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  5. "Puppeteer set to continue pulling strings". HeraldLIVE. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  6. The world premiere of Ubu and the Truth Commission followed on 17 June 1997, at the Kunsfest in Weimar.
  7. "Tall Horse" Archived 20 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Handsrping Puppet Company
  8. "War Horse" Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine ltdb.co.uk, accessed 20 January 2010.
  9. Itzkoff, Dave (20 December 2010). "'War Horse' Corrals Its American Cast". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  10. TED Blog (30 March 2011). "The genius puppetry behind War Horse: Handspring Puppet Company". TED 2011. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  11. "'War Horse' Opens In The West End 3/28/09" broadwayworld.com, 8 December 2008
  12. Hetrick, Adam (20 December 2010). "Seth Numrich to Lead 'War Horse' on Broadway; 35-Member Cast Announced". Playbill. Archived from the original on 23 February 2011. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  13. "Troubadour Theatres Limited". www.troubadourtheatres.com. Retrieved 15 October 2019.
  14. Hetrick, Adam (5 October 2010). "Or You Could Kiss Me Opens at London's National Theatre 5 Oct". Playbill.com. Archived from the original on 20 October 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  15. "Exhibitions". Handspring Puppet Company. 2 September 2019.
  16. "UCT honorary degrees 2012". University of Cape Town.
  17. Law-Viljoen, Bronwyn (2009). Handspring Puppet Company. South Africa: David Krut Publishing cc. pp. 278–284. ISBN 978-0-9814328-5-4.
  18. "War Horse on Stage: Official Site". War Horse. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  19. Teague, Ellen; Sherriff, Scarlett (20 October 2021). "Little Amal migrant puppet welcomed to Westminster Cathedral". The Tablet. Retrieved 1 November 2021.

References

  • Kentridge, William. "Director's Note". In Ubu and the Truth Commission, by Jane Taylor, viii–xv. Cape Town: University of Cape Town Press, 2007.
  • Jones, Basil, and Adrian Kohler. "Puppeteers' Note". In Ubu and the Truth Commission, by Jane Taylor, xvi–xvii. Cape Town: University of Cape Town Press, 2007.

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