Creating theatre for children and their families at the Boo, Horse + Bamboo's theatrespace in Waterfoot, Rossendale

Wednesday 20 March 2013

making choices

The first crop of new Moomin characters are starting to emerge from the clay buckets in the workshop, and the realisation has dawned that all sorts of design choices have to be made- what level of modelling goes into the faces? Will they look like the same characters without big eyes? Of course the complication with this show is that the decisions aren't ours - the character designs have to be approved by the foundation who manage Tove Jansson's work. Usually in creating a Horse + Bamboo show,  the masks and puppets have their own logic - but the logic of line drawing is quite different, and the bits of information you choose to leave out aren't necessarily the same.  Somehow Moomintroll himself was more straightforward (which we made for the R+D months ago) - a smooth, simple head, a rounded snout. But Too-Ticky is more complex - for a start, she's more human. Well, we'll see what the foundation have to say.


Yesterday was also the design R+D for the new 20 Stories High show - Melody Loses her Mojo. For this show we are talking about creating a puppet to represent Harmony, Melody's 5 year old sister. In this show the 'fitting in' is with the human characters rather than the other puppets - the Mojo puppets represent a different level of reality, whilst Harmony is definitely of this world. In Horse + Bamboo shows puppets are sometimes used to be 'little world' versions of mask characters, so of the same materials, style, colouring. In this show Harmony doesn't want to obviously be a puppet at all - and so all the information I would usually choose to leave out of the sculpting might need to be in - therefore much more realistic. Usually I work so instinctively - it feels this is definitely the year to be questioning my choices, my long held beliefs.

Friday 15 March 2013

MOOMINS!

I've decided - Monday is the official start of puppet making for the Christmas show - MOOMINLAND MIDWINTER. It's a show we are making for the Egg, the beautiful children's theatre in Bath. The last two days have been a slightly exhausting delight - Lee Lyford (the Egg's associate director), Hattie Naylor (the writer), Tom Rogers (designer) and myself spent pretty much two whole days working through Hattie's script and working out HOW it can all happen. Tom has the incredibly hard task of working out how to represent all of the many spaces and scales in the show without filling the stage to bursting. And now the list has emerged - at least 35 fully articulated puppets - Too-Tickys, Hemulens, Little Mys and Moomintrolls in various sizes, not including shadows, animations or flat objects. I think I'd better get going!
I shall be strengthened and motivated by the words of the inspirational children's author David Almond on Desert Island Discs this morning - "Where else is our culture going to be regenerated except through young people and through art for young people". Made my day.