— Coffee-cat.NET

Archive
Tag "ERTH"

internationalpuppetcarnival.com.au
26 June-2 July at Federation Square, Melbourne

Genghis, Khan, and the rhino
Genghis (Phil) and Khan (Cam), supposedly professional rhino (Adam) herders by ERTH.

ERTH (Adam Kealy, Cameron Searle, and Phil Downing) performed in Puppet I-Doll at the BMW Edge in Federation Square. Uhm, yeah, Australia’s own… Puppet Idoll, Pup-pup-puppet Idoll, deemed safe enough for the kiddies. (We had that song stuck in our heads for the whole week.)

Other entries include: puppet hip-hop, Murray Raine’s Henrietta von Hernia and koala trapeze, Polyglot’s dancing dinosaurs, Len the shearer and Dolly the sheep, Snuff Puppets’s Chinese dogs.

At night the theatre was turned into Puppet Burlesque with all things politically incorrect. Especially animal loving.


No more shearing demo. (Shearer and Sheep by ERTH, performed by Adam Kealy (sheep), Cameron Searle and Phil Downing (shearer))

The many seductions of the rhino (ERTH again). The rhino interrupted Burlesque now and then:


It started with a condom (or two)…


And a long-stemmed rose (Thursday)…


And a garter belt…
and boa feathers (Saturday)…


Finished with red pouty velvety lips and fake cable-tie eyelashes on the final day (Adam as the rhino, with Phil and Cam).

Other happenings in Burlesque: Murray Raine’s marionettes (from super-cone-sized boob Madonna, Liza Minelli, Tina Turner, to blown-up Pavarotti, wiggly Tom Jones), Snuff Puppets’ “bovine necrophilia”, Philip Millar’s Ken Koala, Heath McIvor’s motor-mouth Randy the purple “turtle head” (hilarious, no matter how many times I’ve watched the him yelling out the same lines—I reckon it’s the way Heath controlled his voice). Both I-Doll and Burlesque were hosted by Russel Fletcher. The Age has an article on Puppet Burlesque (30 June).

Behind-the-scenes:

Before the I-Doll Phil's Robot Mouse

Left: Before the start of I-Doll. Right: Robot Mouse, Phil having a go with a wine bag, filters, soup lids and foam hanger. It ended up in Randy’s gig, blinking his flashlight for “VCA’s wank-a-thon”.

Other performances I managed to see:

Frankenstein (Jessica Wilson, Colin Sneesby, and Sarah Kriegler) at the Umbrella Revolution: Retelling the story of Frankenstein from Elizabeth’s perspective, it used very well-made, detailed and whimsical puppets. Victor is a skeletal-thin blue puppet with exagerrated facial features (large nose, drooping hollow sad eyes). And then there are a bunch of critters—grotesquely beautiful little monsters made of birds’ skulls, furs, moving about in spidery/crab-like movements. The setting is a “wooden” staircase, where all kinds of scenes rose and disappeared from. A hologram projector was also utilised for some scenes (the birth of Frankenstein, the death of Elizabeth). Definitely worth watching. If there’s anything I feel would improve the show would be (well, I’m nitpicking but) I wished the puppeteers had worn the black gloves.

One Night the Dog (Sarah Kriegler) at The Cubby: Intimate, simple, a one-woman puppet show with rotating set made out of a box.

Some display by Melbourne’s Snuff Puppets
Snuff Puppets More Snuff Puppets

Didn’t get to see anything else. Pity, I’ve heard nothing but good raves on Tadpole, Sad Bird Boy and Other Tales of the City, and Men of Steel. Receptions look good, and people seem enthusiastic for next year.

Articles from The Age:
Main review: Tie me up, tie me down (22 June)
Puppet Burlesque (30 June)
Closing review (30 June)

Coverage from ABC news (WMV file, 4.6 MB)

Read More

Siblings

1st showing: Bowraville Grants Hall
High St., Bowraville
Wed 14 June 2006, 12.30pm – 2.30pm

2nd showing: Redfern Community Centre
29-53 Hugo St., Redfern
Tue 27 June 2006, 6.00pm – 7.30pm

With its origin in dreaming, the story of siblings unfolds, a bird starts losing its feathers, a girl eats them and the Storm Sisters intervene. Siblings is inspired by the myth of the Waugeluk Sisters. It situates elements of this myth within our modern day world. Siblings traverses the line between certainty and mystery, history and story, past and present.

Siblings was initially conceived of as a travelling puppetry show. The show has been designed to pack up into two travelling trunks and can be viewed in halls, classrooms or theatres. The diverse puppetry styles and visual impact of siblings, with its original voice, can be combined with puppetry workshops to pave the way for communities to tell their own stories.

Maddie
“Is that a bird on my window?”


“She’s going to eat another feather.” You can also download a short video of the scene (AVI, 4.1 MB)


“Harry! He’s got my packet of biscuit!”


The final scene

Some puppet photos:

Slightly larger-sized collage photo here. And not forgetting the embittered bird(s) of compassion.

This creative development is generously supported by the Australia Council for the Arts, the City of Sydney through the Redfern Community Centre, Bowraville Youth Club, Bowraville Community Alliance, and ERTH Visual & Physical Inc.

Read More

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


Read More

The Magic Flute is now playing at Sydney Opera House. If you see our dragon (which only appeared for 5 minutes of ooh-aaahs and flashlights), say hi. Here are some publication photos from the Sydney Morning Herald.
The Magic Flute at Sydney Morning Herald The Magic Flute review at Sydney Morning Herald

Full coverage from The Sydney Morning Herald.

Read More

Read the full coverage from The Canberra Times.

From The Street Theatre leaflet:

Intriguing, dream-like, bawdy. The first woman walkes the paths of the garden alone… The garden is now a wasteland and the first man has returned to dust, his line departed. Yet in the midst of this, a spark glows. From it, the first woman fashions new life — to bring comfort, where now there is only suffering — a companion where now only death. But can the lives brought forth stand beside the first woman? all-mother combines rigging and harness technology with puppetry reminiscent of Company Skylark to take on Lilith myth and expand it into a feast of imagination.

all motherERTH is an internationally renowned Sydney-based company, specialising in large-scale performance works such as Gondwana, presented recently at the National Museum of Australia. Director Scott Wright, Designer Steve Howarth and Musician Phil Downing (also a member of rock band Faker) have combined with physical performer barb barnett (serious theatre) to make all-mother one of the most ectraordinary, visually spectacular theatrical experiences of the year and a great show by a member of The Street Theatre.

25-28 January and 31 January — 4 February at 8 pm, 29 January at 5pm.
The Street Theatre. Cnr Childers St and University Ave, Canberra City.
$15-$25, special rates for members and U27. For Bookings please call 6247 1223.

We packed up the props, wind generators, costumes, toolboxes, &c. into the van, headed to a local pub for the obligatory afters chit chat, and went back to Sydney at dawn. The usual comments are: great lightings, stage props and everything had a very fantabulous organic feeling, the sound was fantastic (go Phil!), challenging, confusing, funny Mr. Punch & Judy, great puppets, &c.

Read More