Showing posts with label Connor Hopkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Connor Hopkins. Show all posts

Sunday, October 6, 2013

The Head by Connor Hopkins, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, September 26 - October 12, 2013


ALT review



by Dr. David Glen Robinson

The Head Connor Hopkins Trouble Puppet Austin TX
(Photo: Chris Owens)
A miniature mechanical man emerges from a cloud of steam. A ruffled orange and yellow bird squawks obscenities and defecates in the eyepieces of a telescope. A lizard-like thing in wrought iron knee boots flies around the room mounting inanimate objects until someone threatens to get the hose.

These are all images in The Head, the latest production of puppet master Connor Hopkins’ Trouble Puppet Theatre Company, set inside a human being’s mind. The model of the mind represented by the set and the puppet characters inhabiting it could be anybody’s head, hence Everyman’s. TBut the creativity expressed by all of the blinking, smoking, rolling, heaving dream machines and fantastic puppet characters operating them offers an artistic model of Connor Hopkins’ mind and no other.

This is the latest full-length Trouble Puppet show since last May’s The Cruel Circus, and, if possible, it’s a step up in quality from that show. The puppeteers have refined their characters more, giving them sharper movements and character voices. Gone are the nearly uniform puppet hoppity-marches. Now, the inner demons leap out of the steaming vat of Everyman's limbic system, strutting in hip-hop dance steps. Plot expediencies have been weeded out, and the story action is crisp and purposeful. Altogether, the color and darkness and movement create such a medium of fantasy that one is pulled out of one’s own imaginative universe into that of The Head. The seductive appeal is definitely to the inner child, even though the entertainment is strictly for adults. We view this parade of images from our own limbic systems.
The Head Connor Hopkins Trouble Puppet Theatre Austin TX
(Photo: Chris Owens)
The story is a day in the life of U-Name-It. A person gets up, goes to work, struggles to stay out of a bar and away from a cigarette, and tries to deal with a somewhat casual relationship. Now, where did he leave that neurotransmitter support medication?

Just as in day-to-day life, the audience learns of the person’s inner struggles gradually, over a period of time. The Mechanic works on all of this from the mind’s control room in the head. He also deals with the inner demons that pop out of the limbic system, resorting to negotiation, violence, or trickery. The inner demons are his old adversaries, and we always have the feeling of a story in progress when The Mechanic struggles for control with them. Some of this head stuff is predictable, some of it is wildly surprising. Whatever, we know it's for high stakes because we see it around us in everyday reality.

The quotation attributed to Helen Keller comes to mind: “Life is an exciting adventure or it is nothing at all.“ Trouble Puppet is committed to the adventure. Perhaps all the excitement is why the look of the show seems accented with a kind of delicacy. Transforming beauty is found in the least likely places.

See The Head and share your favorite images with friends. Although I seldom make cross-medium references, with this show I recommend the “How-to” article on the making of puppets for The Head in the current Austin Chronicle edition (Vol. 33 No.6, Oct 4, 2013; p. 34), “Creature Construction” by Elizabeth Cobbe. The article gives an extra dimension to one’s appreciation of a standout Trouble Puppet production.




The Head rby Connor Hopkins uns until October 12, 2013 at Salvage Vanguard Theatre , 2803 Manor Rd. in east Austin. It runs 1 hr 20 minutes with no intermission; tickets are $10-$20, available through

brown paper tickets
CLICK for TICKETS

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

THE HEAD by Connor Hopkins, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, September 26 - October 12, 2013





Trouble Puppet Theatre Company Austin TX







[resident at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd. -- click for map]


presents

The Head Connor Hopkins Trouble Puppet Austin TX  
 The Head: A Trouble Puppet Show

by Connor Hopkins
Sept. 26–Oct. 12, 2013, 8 pm
Thursdays – Saturdays, 6pm Sundays

Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Road, Austin, TX 78722 - click for map

ASL interpretation offered on selected nights. Group sales welcome. Director/cast talkbacks available for groups of five or more.
**This show contains content and copious amounts of language not suitable for children.** 

Tickets$10–$20 at the door or via

brown paper tickets




Trouble Puppet Theater Co. presents The Head, a darkly hilarious original work of puppet theater for grown-ups. Inside the Man's head, an overworked Mechanic struggles with faulty machinery and the head's other residents, the Personal Demons, to navigate through the day.

The Mechanic maintains and operates the machinery that makes it possible for The Man to get out of bed, go to work, have conversations, and otherwise live daily life. The Man's issues, poor judgment, and bad habits chronically make the little Mechanic's job more difficult. When the Personal Demons climb out of the shadows of the Limbic Lobe, all hell breaks loose inside and outside the Head.

Trouble Puppet's bunraku-style tabletop puppets are each manipulated by as many as 3 puppeteers and are designed and built by Connor Hopkins, our assistant builder, and invited guest builders from out of town. The puppets, the set, and the show are a visually and technically remarkable spectacle, with a gorgeous original score.

A completely original work by the company who brought Austin award-winning productions of The Jungle, Frankenstein, Riddley Walker, Toil & Trouble, and The Cruel Circus. Written and directed by Artistic Director Connor Hopkins (winner of B. Iden Payne Awards for Outstanding Direction of a Drama as well as Outstanding Original Script and The Austin Examiner's Best New Play Written by an Austinite), The Head features music by Justin Sherburn, lighting by Megan Reilly, sound design by K. Eliot Haynes, costume design by Monica Gibson, graphic design by Chris Owen. Performers: Jose Villarreal, Noel Gaulin, Rachel Wiese, Parker Dority, David Higgins, Travis Bedard, Kim Adams, Nathan Lahay, Elyce Lahay, Chris Gibson.

Trouble Puppet Theater Company: Founded in 2004, Trouble Puppet is dedicated to the creation of exceptional works of puppet theater, to the promotion of the art of puppetry, and to the support of its practitioners. We reach as far as we can into the possibilities that puppetry offers, in its many forms and styles, and seek to balance risk and exploration with a drive for excellent craft and technique. Our work is inspired not only by our artistic passion but by our social, political, and human convictions: that there can be no end to the struggle for knowledge and compassion, against injustice and intolerance . . . and boring theater.

Trouble Puppet is a sponsored project of Salvage Vanguard Theater. This production is supported by the Jim Henson Foundation.

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Monday, July 15, 2013

GET INTO TROUBLE fundraiser, Trouble Puppet Company at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, August 1, 2013





Trouble Puppet Theatre Company Austin TX








[workshopping and performing at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd. -- click for map]

presents
Get into Trouble

 Get into Trouble Trouble Puppet Theatre fundraiser Austin

with Trouble Puppet Theater Co.
Aug. 1, 2013, 7–11 p.m.
Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd. Austin, 78722 -- click for map

Party with your personal demons! Join the Trouble Puppet Theater Company at their 5th annual party and festival of troublemaking. Admission includes live performances by Adam Sultan, Datri Bean, and others, as well as games, raffles, food by Counter Culture, and drink. Plus a sneak peek at Trouble Puppet’s upcoming show The Head, an original Trouble Puppet show, and the personal demons living inside the head.

Come in costume as your own personal demon (or angel) to receive additional raffle tickets! All for $15 at
brown paper tickets




http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/425542.

Funds raised support creation of our show The Head (opens Sept. 26).
 
Trouble Puppet Theater Co., Trouble Puppet Theater Company, led by Artistic Director Connor Hopkins, is dedicated to the creation of exceptional works of puppet theater and is the recipient of such B. Iden Payne Awards as Outstanding Direction of a Drama, Outstanding Original Script, Outstanding Production of a Drama, and Outstanding Puppetry. Trouble Puppet is a sponsored project of Salvage Vanguard Theater and is supported by the City of Austin Cultural Funding program, the Jim Henson Foundation, and individual donors.

Salvage Vanguard Theater is a hub for Austin artists, audiences, and arts organizations. SVT creates and presents transformative, high-quality artistic experiences that foster experimentation and conversation.

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Photos by Stephen Pruitt for The Cruel Circus by Connor Hopkins, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company at the Salvage Vanguard, May 8 - 25, 2013

Performance photos by Stephen Pruitt for the

Trouble Puppet Theatre Company Austin TX






production of

The Cruel Circus
by Connor Hopkins
May 9–May 25, 2013 (8 pm Thursdays – Saturdays, 6pm Sundays.)
Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Road, Austin, TX 78722 - click for map
Arrive early (at least 15 min. before showtime) for preshow music by Cami Alys!

Tickets: $10-$20 at at the door or on-line via

brown paper tickets





The Cruel Circus Connor Hopkins Trouble Puppet Theatre Company Austin TX
(photo: Stephen Pruitt)
The Cruel Circus by Connor Hopkins Trouble Puppet Theatre Company Austin TX
(photo: Stephen Pruitt)

 Frankenstein meets the island of misfit toys . . . and goes to the circus. A mysterious tinkerer brings to life an entire world of strange circus performers — some polished and complete, some clumsy and misshapen — then disappears, leaving them to make sense of who they are and what they are made for.

A new work of dark whimsy from the company who brought Austin award-winning productions of The Jungle, Frankenstein, Riddley Walker, and most recently, Toil & Trouble. Trouble Puppet deploys bunraku-style tabletop puppets to create graceful, lifelike, compelling drama for adults. This production features beautiful, complex puppets of remarkable design, by Connor Hopkins. Come see the handwalker, unicyclist, lion-tamer, acrobats, human cannonball, and fuselier!



Click to view additional performance photos by Stephen Pruitt at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Opinion: Caroline Reck on Austin's 'New Puppet Revolution,' Howlround.com, April 15, 2013

Published at
Howlround Theatre Commons






Caroline Reck
April 15, 2013
Caroline Reck (photo via CreativeAction.org)
Caroline Reck (photo via CreativeAction.org)

 


I was invited to write this entry about the response of Austin audiences to the “New Puppet Revolution.” Each word in this phrase makes me smile: “new,” because Austin is such a nourishing environment for new theater, “puppet,” because puppet theater (particularly shows geared toward adult audiences) is killin’ it in Austin these days, and “revolution,” because puppets have been aiding and abetting revolutions since people first started moving objects around. Put the whole phrase together, and I’m suddenly thinking about time, objects, and anarchy: a great crossroads to talk about puppets.


Mention puppetry to most people, and the image conjured up is of a creature, perhaps made of felt, probably adorable, with a moving mouth that’s talking to you (or your child), most likely through a television screen. There is really great puppetry like this in America—with the extraordinary Jim Henson Company topping the list. There is also a lot of other puppet work being made that looks nothing like this, and for some reason that is baffling puppeteers in caves and attics across America, audiences are starting to take notice.


Puppetry is a diverse and ancient art form. I won’t get specific on the timeline, but sometime between developing opposable thumbs and the invention of broadcast television, people began animating objects and giving them soul, voice, and intention. These objects have served as great entertainment and meaningful ritual to people young and old for a really long time. Then, very recently, the world industrialized and certain children in lucky nations weren’t an obligatory part of the workforce anymore. Someone noticed that bored children get into mischief, and started gearing puppets shows toward the little ones. Meanwhile, collective common memory in this country forgot that puppets are for grown-ups, too.
Austin audiences like to be presented with new ideas, and to be presented with old ideas wrought in a new way, and they like how puppetry can do both. Glass Half Full and Trouble Puppet both consistently sell out shows, and both make a majority of their income from ticket sales.

Puppetry is a rigorous art form that uses movement, timing, spatial relativity, scale, breath, and gravity to create a sense of visceral recognition in the gut of the audience. Puppets can simply do and be more than humans. They can be beasts and spirits, inanimate forms made animate, ideas made manifest. They make use of scale in a way humans cannot; they can be large in one scene and tiny in the next, which effectively changes the dimensions of the stage. Puppets can fly, breathe underwater, grow onstage; they can vanish. They can be publicly incinerated, internally lit, transparent, and show that they have “no heart” by literally carving out the absence of a heart in their figure. They make costume changes in a flash (two different identical puppets). They evade the stereotypes of the traditional actor. A tiny female puppeteer can perform a giant puppet; an aging puppeteer can play a young hero. They are a democratic, constantly evolving, revolutionary art form that can take many shapes and forms and tell stories that are whimsical, or demonic, or profound.

So there is really nothing new about puppet revolution. But the recent popular response to the puppeteer’s ongoing revolution feels new. The popularity of puppets on Broadway (Lion King, Avenue Q, War Horse) nudged people to find out what else is out there. The puppet has a special relationship with the audience. We know, intellectually, that the puppet is an object. Yet seeing an object repudiate everything our intellect knows to be true, by moving, feeling, being, invites the audience to take that extra step toward believing. Part of the work of puppetry happens in the audience, when they lend their collective imagination to the scene; when the mind’s eye erases the marionette’s string, fades out the tabletop manipulator’s body, and ignores the arm rod sticking from the elbow of the puppet. The audience is uniquely implicated in the energetic triangle between audience, puppeteer, and puppet. They are viscerally involved, part of the magic, moved to laughter and tears.



I’m the Creative Director of a little company called Glass Half Full Theatre, which was founded in France in 2004. We relocated to Austin in 2010, and have had great audiences and critical response to our original, puppet-based work since we arrived. This is in part because Austin audiences are open-minded; they are happy come to see what they’ve never seen before. It’s also because the other puppeteers beat down the path to adult audience in Austin before we got here.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Video by Dannie Snyder: Rehearsing Once There Were Six Seasons, Glass Half Full Theatre workshop running February 21 - March 3, 2013

A video by Dannie Snyder and LIV Creations for
Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX





and its upcoming workshop production of environmental puppetry


Once There Were Six Seasons Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX

 

 

Once There Were Six Seasons 

Feb. 21st – March 3rd. Thursdays-Saturdays @ 8 PM, Sundays @ 6 PM.

 

Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 E. Manor Road, Austin, TX, 78722 - click for map  

Tickets: Sliding scale $12-$20. 
Pay-what-you-can: Sunday February 24th
Some ASL interpreted performances (see ticketing site for details). 
The two-weekend workshop performance will include opportunities for audience feedback and interaction, including talkbacks hosted by Rudy Ramirez and In.gredients.



Once There Were Six Seasons from LIV creations on Vimeo.



brown paper tickets








Glass Half Full Theatre presents a workshop production of Once There Were Six Seasons, an original work of environmental puppetry. Puppeteers manipulate vast miniature landscapes to address the impact of climate change on subsistence societies around the world. From the Arctic to the Philippines to the high plains of Texas, this work highlights how the accelerating pace of human-caused climate change has outstripped the ability of traditional cultures to adapt their lifestyles. From B. Iden Payne award-winning director and writer Caroline Reck, with an award winning cast of puppeteer/performers: Connor Hopkins, Rommel Sulit, Noel Gaulin, Gricelda Silva, and Parker Dority, and award-wining designers Eliot Haynes and Stephen Pruitt.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

ONCE THERE WERE SIX SEASONS, environmental puppetry by Glass Half Full Theatre, February 21 - March, 2013

Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX





(performing at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd. - click for map)

presents

Once There Were Six Seasons

opening February 21, 2013

We’ve leaped into full pre-production mode for Once There Were Six Seasons, a new work focusing on the effects of climate change on traditional societies which will open on February 21st, 2013. The title comes from a true story Caroline heard in Orissa, India, from a story passed down to a man from his grandmother:
In earlier times, in this grandmother’s lifetime, there used to be six seasons in that part of the world. The farmers still used an ancient method of observing animal behavior to determine when and what to plant. Now, that region only has two seasons (Summer, and Rains), and the animal behaviors that farmers counted on to grow their crops have been distorted by the rapidly changing planet. Farmers can no longer rely on their traditional methods, and communities are slowly collapsing as people move on to settle in the city slums.
Stories like this are happening all over the world, and we’d like to invite you to learn more of them with us in February.

The performance will make use of very small puppets existing in vast landscapes on the SVT Mainstage, with visible puppeteers affecting changes in the landscapes and on the puppets themselves. This is a genre of puppetry we have been gradually crafting, which we are calling “Environmental Puppetry.” In this style, the focus is on the changing landscapes rather than the articulations of the puppet’s body. If you are familiar with our piece, “Bob's Hardware” performed in the 2010 Winter Austin Puppet Incident, it’s in that genre.


Donate


Glass Half Full has received a very small amount of City of Austin funding for this project, which will have a workshop performance for two weeks only in February 2013. If you are interested in donating to this project, or learning more about our process of creation, please get in touch at info@glasshalffulltheatre.com or click on our donate button below:



Otherwise, we hope to see you when we present Part One in February.

Thank you from myself and on the behalf of the collaborating team on this show:
Parker Dority, Gricelda Silva, Noel Gaulin, Rommel Sulit, Connor Hopkins,
Kyle Zamcheck, Ia Ensterä, Stephen Pruitt, Zac Crofford,
and Eliot Haynes.



Caroline Reck
Producing Artistic Director
Glass Half Full Theatre
caroline@glasshalffulltheatre.com
 
(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

2012-2013 Season of Puppetry and Performance, Glass Half Full Theatre

Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX









celebrates its 13 B. Iden Payne Award nominations this year, with double nods in Comedy and Drama to both FupDuck and The Orchid Flotilla for Production, Acting, Script, Score, and Puppetry, as well as Direction for FupDuck and Sound & Scenic Design for Orchid

and announces its 2013 season:


Once There Were Six Seasons

February 2013 @ Salvage Vanguard

This new work uses puppetry and physical theatre to addresses the impact of climate change on traditional farming societies around the world. This project will show, through puppetry, narrative and imagery, how farming systems used for hundreds of years across the globe have been drastically affected by the rapidly changing global climate, and how communities and families are undone when their cultures are irrevocably altered by these external environmental changes. Tiny puppet figures exist in vast spaces onstage, and visible puppeteers move the figures through a changing environmental landscape. Emphasis is placed on the shifting landscapes around the puppets, and on the puppeteers’ role as the “cause” of those changes. There will be lots of sand and water. Featuring the performance and design work of Ia Instera, Eliot Haynes, Connor Hopkins, Rommel Sulit, Gricelda Silva, Parker Dority, Noel Gaulin and Caroline Reck.



The fourth Austin Puppet Incident

an evening of short works of puppetry from a variety of local and visiting artists
June 2013 @ Salvage Vanguard 

The Austin Puppet Incident is a joint creation of Glass Half Full Theatre and Trouble Puppet Theater Company, with the goal of highlighting short works of puppetry for adults, we encourage artists to participate in our reciprocal model, in which artists work with and for each other in a variety of pieces. 



The Boston/Austin Project

December 2013 at the Salvage Vanguard (Austin) and at the Charlestown Working Theater (Boston) 
 
A physical theatre performance crafted and devised by Caroline Reck and guest artist Bonnie Duncan, whose Poste Restante won the Austin Critics' Table award for Outstanding Touring Show. Bonnie and Caroline met in 2008 at the National Puppetry Conference, and are crafting their performance via Pintrest*, phone calls, and residencies. They got tired of their cohorts saying, "You two have a similar vision. You should work together." So now they are. Find it on Pintrest as "The Show We Will one Day Make Together."

Monday, September 24, 2012

Upcoming: Toil and Trouble, the Trouble Puppet adaptation of Macbeth, October 31 - November 18



Trouble Puppet Theatre Company Austin TX







Toil and Trouble

Oct. 31, 2012, – Nov. 18, 2012
Salvage Vanguard Theater.
Tickets on-sale now at brownpapertickets.com

Trouble Puppet Theater Company presents Toil and Trouble, an adaptation of Shakespeare's Macbeth for puppet theater—an elegantly brutal play brought to life (and death) through puppetry, complete with witches, ghosts, and bloody skullduggery.
Adapted by Artistic Director Connor Hopkins (winner of B. Iden Payne Awards for Outstanding Direction of a Drama for The Jungle AND for Frankenstein as well as Outstanding Original Script for The Jungle and The Austin Examiner's Best New Play Written by an Austinite for The Jungle), Toil and Trouble will feature music by Graham Reynolds, lighting by Stephen Pruitt, sound design by Buzz Moran, and imagery by Chris Owen: what CultureMap calls "some of Austin's best creative minds at play."
**HALLOWEEN PARTY on Oct. 31! Admission that night includes food, drink, and extra trouble!**
Group sales welcome. Director/cast talkbacks available for groups of five or more.
Toil and Trouble is underwritten by Joel and Dina Sherzer and James and Sharon Reck and is mounted with the generous support of The Creative Fund.


(Click to return to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Upcoming: The Orchard Flotilla by Caroline Reck and other pieces, Glass Half Full Theatre at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, March 23 - April 6


Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX





presents

The Orchid Flotilla:

Gestural Theater & Shadow Puppetry

Caroline Reck, The Orchid Flotilla, Glass Half Full, Austin, TX



Puppetry & Performance by Caroline Reck & Gricelda Silva
Found Object Shadow Puppetry & Costumes by Erin Meyer

March 23- April 6, performance times TBA

Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Rd. (click for map)

The flotilla is a tiny floating island of rubbish, adrift on a sea of blue plastic. Characters arise out of the depths in the form of human performers, manipulated objects, plastic junk masquerading as organic material, and human limbs manipulated as puppets. These characters are unified in their search for meaning in a solitary existence. From the depths of lonely imagination arises a sensual and poetic narrative about the transformative power of companionship and a witty examination of disposable packaging.

Original Sound & Music by Eliot Haynes & Adam Sultan
Scenic Design by Connor Hopkins -- Lights by Megan Reilly


History of the Production Inspired by a trip to the sinking Sunderban Islands in India and Bengladesh, work began in 2008 on The Orchid Flotilla. A gestural theatre and shadow puppetry performance, which also incorporates body puppetry, object manipulation, and live sound amplification, it explores several convergent themes: the human capacity to overcome ecological disaster; the transformative power of companionship (real or imagined); and the usefulness and uselessness of the manufactured objects we depend upon.


First presented in 2010 at Salisbury University for the International Association for Environmental Philosophy's conference "Geo-Aesthetics in the Anthropocene", The Orchid Flotilla is a deeply meditative piece, punctuated by humorous moments that acknowledge the universal struggle inherent in the human condition. The story unfolds over five "days" from sunrise to sunset and spans 13 years of the woman's life. During the "nighttime" sequences, shadow puppets and human shadows in the canopy of the flotilla reveal further details about the inner workings of the woman's mind, heart, memory, and hopes.

Click to view additional image at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Saturday, January 28, 2012

The Crapstall Street Boys, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company at SVT, 1/24-2/05


Crapstall Street Boys Trouble Puppet Theatre Company, Austin TX

by Michael Meigs


Perhaps it's inherent to the art form, but I did have a moment of wondering whether we ought to be concerned about our Connor.


The Crapstall Street Boys is captivating puppetry and story telling, as is always the case with the Trouble Puppet Theatre Company, a crew of talented and devoted colleagues and acolytes who've gathered around Connor Hopkins. This time the approach is announced as "Czech puppetry" -- small articulated figures at the end of a long rigid wand. The characters are anything but stiff, for with the deft and delicate handling of that single attachment, TP members achieve convincing body English and even give those glassy little eyes a hint of emotion. Or, often, a suggestion of wonder, sometimes one of bewilderment.


The presentation of this fable imagined by our Connor takes place on a lengthy table provided with folding cut-out scenery constructed on the scale of the tiny boys. Hopkins puts a narrator into the piece to assist the puppeteers. Steve Moore sits at stage right in a comfortable chair with a large book before him, setting the scene and explaining some of the action as it occurs. Connor, Caroline Reck, Rob Jacques and Lucie Cunningham move a number of tiny folk through the story -- the protagonist, addressed only as "You, lad!" and his dull-witted and venial parents, a factory owner who buys young boys for a mysterious assembly line, a dog and a chicken, a couple of ravening monsters that sail in as hand puppets to gobble the unwary, and the boys of the factory at Crapstall Street.


The table action is quick and menacing, presenting a grim dog-eat-dog story -- almost literally -- as YouLad is cast into subhuman circumstances similar to the pitiless meat processing lines depicted so vividly by the company in their adaptaion of Upton Sinclair's The Jungle. In the miserably exploited work team YouLad makes a friend, the equally lost young fellow named Little Pig who counsels him how to survive. One by one, while struggling frantically for food, young workers disappear and the monsters are afoot.


Erin Meyer is assigned a puppetcam. She follows the action at times and grainy black-and-white images appear on a screen high behind the puppeteers. The duality between puppet action and video action is disconcerting, perhaps deliberately so. The video presentation was intermittent and somewhat erratic; whether that was deliberate or due to equipment malfunction was unclear.


Crapstall Street is a grim place, friends, and the message is one of ceaseless, animal exploitation of man by man, children by parents, humankind by lurking evil. The medium is accomplished but the message is harrowing.


Has our Connor experienced unhappinesses that must be worked out through fable? Puppeteers are necessarily manipulators of their story-telling instruments, and perhaps that shapes a world view -- elsewhere, more commonly, a Howdy Doody happy freneticism, but here the a sophisticated, emphatic conviction that the characters embodied by these puppets are either powerless or brutal.


Perhaps we should sit Connor and friends down with their opening act, Darren Petersen the juggler, patter man, dog trainer and unicyclist of Circus Chickendog, who's as breezily upbeat as the TP piece is gloomy. That would make for some very entertaining group therapy. And for this FronteraFest Long Fringe production made of roughly equal parts of Chickendog and Crapstall, it would achieve an average mood of just about, "It's all right, mate!"


by Hannah Bisewski


As part of Austin’s 2012 Fronterafest Trouble Puppet Theatre Company stages performs a haunting nd unapologetically macabre piece at their home venue the Salvage Vanguard Theatre. The Crapstall Street Boys by TP leader Connor Hopkins tells the story of a factory employing boys, located in the heart of a town overrun by monsters. YouLad’s parents sell him to the factory in exchange for the money that will buy them a “monster masher” to protect themselves, and he starts to notice something strange happening around him. Some boys in the factory disappear;, others grow bigger and bigger.


The puppets in the show are dark, nearly grotesque, but appropriately so. In keeping with that style is the technique of using a small camera inserted shakily into scenes, projecting images in eerie night-vision blur onto the projection screen above the puppet set. A brisk, deep violin piece accompanies the more frenetic action of the puppets, and when it returns at the close of the show it hints at the eerie events that will continue to haunt the small village.


Narrated by Steve Moore as a sort of demented bedtime story, The Crapstall Street Boys inevitably reminds you of the more macabre fairy tales that colored your childhood. The sheer morbidity of The Crapstall Street Boys may remind you of how dark these stories really were. Maybe this particular fairytale isn’t much of a parody after all.


All in all, the show, directed and designed by Connor Hopkins, is a fine piece of puppet theatre and an excellent showing on Trouble Puppet’s part.


Review by Cate Blouke for the Stateman's Austin360.com Seeing Things blog, January 25

Comments by Elizabeth Cobbe for the Austin Chronicle, January 26 (215 words)


EXTRA

A message from Connor Hpopkins in the program leaflet:

Director's Note: If you've ever seen a Trouble Puppet show before, it will be quite clear to you what a departure from our usual form this one represents. A different sort of puppet, a different sort of story (although our traditional themes get in there: capitalism, cannibalism, corruption ... ), and a new technological tool in the live-feed camera traveling around onstage with the puppets: these all make this show a big experiment for us. So our hope is that what the show lacks in mastery and technique it makes up for in innovation, and, well, the puppets are real cute. Plus we've got Steve Moore. So how far wrong can you go, in that situation? I know, I shouldn't ask.

Anyway, thanks for coming out, and we hope you enjoy our stab at this style. Also, we're taking a poll: I originally conceived Crapstall as a kids' show. Having seen it, do you or do you not think this show could be a kids' show? I say yes; others say that would be a prosecutable act. Tell us what you think. And if it goes well, look for a more developed version sometime in the future. If it doesn't go well, let us never speak of this again

Click to view the program leaflet for The Crapstall Street Boys:

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Upcoming: The Crapstall Street Boys, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company for FronteraFest at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, January 24 - February 5

Received directly:

Trouble Puppet Theatre Company



Trouble Puppet Theater Company

presentsThe Crapstall Street Boys, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company

The Crapstall Street Boys: A Trouble Puppet Show

FRONTERA FEST Long Fringe (45 minutes)

At Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Road (click for map)

Tickets: $10 at hydeparktheatre.com or at the door

Jan 24th at 9:15pm; Jan 28th at 11:00pm; Jan 29th at 3:15pm; Feb 4th at 6:45pm

INFO FOR TROUBLE PUPPET: kathryn@troublepuppet.com; 512-573-2540; www.troublepuppet.com.

Part of Frontera Fest’s 2011 Long Fringe, The Crapstall Street Boys uses Czech marionettes to tell the story of You Lad, sold my Mister and Missus to the workhouse. There, he assembles anti-monster security devices and enormous amounts of packaging in a city clogged with garbage and infested with ravenous, boy-eating monsters. As hunger and desperation get the better of You Lad, he discovers the connection between the monsters, the garbage, and the dwindling number of boys. Trouble Puppet brings you a darkly hilarious, smart tale. And monsters.

This show represents Trouble Puppet’s foray into a new style of puppetry.

Trouble Puppet Theater Co., the recipient of such B. Iden Payne Awards as Outstanding Direction of a Drama, Outstanding Original Script, Outstanding Production of a Drama, and Outstanding Puppetry, is dedicated to the creation of outstanding works of puppet theater for grownups. Both of TP’s 2011 mainstage shows are on the Austin Chronicle’s 2011 “Best of” theater lists. Trouble Puppet is a sponsored project of Salvage Vanguard Theater and is supported by the City of Austin Cultural Funding program, the Jim Henson Foundation, and individual donors.

Salvage Vanguard Theater is a hub for Austin artists, audiences, and arts organizations. SVT creates and presents transformative, high-quality artistic experiences that foster experimentation and conversation.

Frontera Festival is Hyde Park Theatre’s five-week city-wide fringe festival featuring over 800 local and national artists annually.

Monday, December 12, 2011

The Austin Puppet Incident, Trouble Puppet and Glass Half Full Theatre Companies, December 9 and 10


Austin Puppet Incident



by Hannah Bisewski and Michael Meigs


Trouble Puppet Theatre Company's brand of inventive, challenging entertainment is so strong here in Austin that the company can fill up the Salvage Vanguard Theatre for two weekend nights with a miscellany from students at their puppetry workshop.


Artistic Director Connor Hopkins shared his workshop for a month with collaborator Caroline Reck of Glass Half Full Productions and her students. Mind you, there were few novices among them -- performers at the Austin Puppet Incident included animators from Trouble Puppet's earlier epic productions of Frankenstein, The Jungle and Riddley Walker, as well as other veterans, grizzled or not. (Hopkins himself, beginning to look like the Old Man of the Mountain with that voluminous beard, presented a short traditional Mr. Punch show).


Organizers kicked off the night with an hour of short puppet films selected from Heather Henson's collection of Handmade Puppet Dreams ("numbers 1,4, 8 and 14"). They constituted a kaleidoscope of fascinating variations on the puppetry medium, with subject matter ranging from nursery rhyme retellings to a comic science fiction homage. Thanks to selections made by Henson and by Hopkins every film offered quirky humor.


The nine scenes of live puppetry entertainment began with a fantastical piece The Miniaturist, adapted from the Millhauser novel In the Reign of Harad IV. To a narration recorded by Austin writer and performer Turk Pipkin, puppeteers working simultaneously in three formats enacted the tale of a mythical master craftsman who became so obsessed in creating miniaturized works of art that they were too small to see -- and eventually too small even for magnifying glasses. The eerie life-size figure of the craftsman appeared at stage right, animated by three puppeteers; stage center showed a shadowbox with silhouettes; at stage left, two marionettists gave life to characters no more than 18 inches tall. You can get a sense of it through a YouTube video posted by Trouble Puppet -- but only as through a glass darkly. In contrast,if you were sitting in the audience, your attention would b keenly fixed on each successive element of the story and the characters would loom enormous in your imagination.


The rest of the night’s scenettes ranged from the traditional (including Hopkins' very traditional Punch and Judy) to the experimental in several different forms. A different puppeteer conceived and elaborated each scene, with imaginative results. Some skits were half-human, half-puppet; others were of a developing form called “environmental puppetry,” pioneered by Reck, a style that aims to evoke the intricacy of the puppets’ environments rather than focusing on the puppets themselves. Concluding the magic hour were Bob's Hardware, an prosaic, appealing story of a man and his dog over a span of years as a small community is overwhelmed by franchises, and Arbor Day, a gleefully sardonic prosecution (perhaps persecution) of the traditional American Christmas tree. Connor Hopkins wearing a bristling, leafy headpiece as the sylvan prosecutor was an awesome sight.


Glass Half Full Theater and Trouble Puppet Theater Company are very Austin. Forget your notions of puppetry as entertainment for kids. These folks have serious, dramatic things to say. The toy-like appearance of their instruments tempts you to smile quietly at the absurdity of the make believe, but the accomplishment of their art provides a visual bliss of brilliant conceits and unpredictable movement.


ALT still owes these pioneers an essay on their epic Riddley Walker of last October, which for reasons beyond our control ALT caught only on closing night. If you missed these two evenings of the Austin Puppet Incident, you can still catch these innovators as they perform the new piece The Crapstall Street Boys four times at the FronteraFest (Januaury 24 - February 4). Otherwise you'll just have to hunker down and hold out for their Macbeth, scheduled for October 21 - November 18.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Upcoming: Riddley Walker, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, September 29 - October 16


Received directly:

Trouble Puppet Theatre


presentsRiddley Walker Trouble Puppet Theatre Company

Riddley Walker

September 29-October 16

shows at 8 p.m. Wednesdays-Saturdays and at 6 p.m. on Sundays

Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Road (click for map)

Tickets: $10-$20 at http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/198032

Two thousand years after the collapse of civilization, in one of the last nomadic bands left in an increasingly settled land, a boy named Riddley Walker turns twelve years old and becomes a man of his people. They are outsiders in a culture where packs of wild dogs prowl the landscape, roving puppet shows propagate a historical dogma against technology and cleverness, and secretive sects work to rediscover ancient knowledge. With a very old puppet and a black dog for allies, Riddley escapes from the tragedy and authority of his culture and reintroduces comedy and anarchy to his world.


Riddley Walker is adapted for Trouble Puppet Theater Co. by Artistic Director Connor Hopkins, from the award-winning novel by Russell Hoban. Trouble Puppet Theater Co., recipient of such B. Iden Payne Awards as Outstanding Director of a Drama, Special Certificate for Puppetry, and Outstanding Original Script, is dedicated to the creation of outstanding works of puppet theater for grownups. This production employs tabletop puppetry inspired by the Bunraku tradition and supported by shadow puppetry, an original score by Justin Sherburn, and a layered sound and image design.


Group sales welcome! Director/cast talkbacks available for student groups. The show will also have American Sign Language interpretation at two performances. Those under 17 must be accompanied by adults. Not recommended for children under 11.

Tickets now available on-line

Trouble Puppet is a sponsored project of Salvage Vanguard Theater and is supported by the City of Austin Cultural Funding program, the Jim Henson Foundation, and individual donors. Special thanks to Sharon and James Reck for underwriting Riddley Walker!

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Ongoing: 69 Love Songs, Gnap! Theatre Projects at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, July 8 - 23

Found on-line:


Gnap! Theatre Projects presents69 Love Songs theatre Salvage Vanguard

'69 Love Scenes

Directed by Avimaan Syam
Conceived by Kerri Lendo
Written by Avimaan Syam and Monique Daviau with additional text by Kerri Lendo, Curtis Luciani, Shannon McCormick, Erika May McNichol, and Caitlin Reilly Schave

July 8th- 23rd, Thursdays- Saturdays in the main stage at 8 p.m.

Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Road (click for map)

Tickets $10, Visit: http://www.eventbrite.com/event/1836435829/efblike

Gnap! Theater Projects presents a play in 69 parts inspired by the songs on the The Magnetic Fields's triple album 69 Love Songs. Drawing from elements of the album such as the space between sincerity and insincerity, wry humor, and an effortless ability to slip into any genre, we’ve packed 69 scenes into a whirlwind of a play about love, love songs, and the use and abuse of both.

Featuring Adrienne Mishler, Gricelda Silva, Maggie Whilhite, Liz Brammer, Joanna Wright, Courtney Hopkin, Hugo Vargas-Zesati, Joel Osborne, Jay Byrd, Jericho Thorp, Leah Moss


Musical direction: Adam Hilton - Set design: Connor Hopkins -Lighting design: Brigitte Hutchison
Technical director: Ace Manning- Choreography: Caitlin Reilly -Video design: Courtney Hopkin and Brandon Paul Salinas
Costumes: Heather Koslov - Props: Jodi Odness - Stage Manager: Elizabeth Bigger

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Upcoming fundraiser: Get Yourself into Trouble - The Apocalypse, Trouble Puppet Theatre Company, July 20

Found on-line:






Trouble Puppet Theater Company

presents

Get Yourself into Trouble: The Apocalypse

Trouble Puppet’s annual party and fundraiser

July 20, 7 p.m.

Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Road (click for map)

www.salvagevanguard.org

Ticket: $15 - includes food, drink, and a raffle ticket. Tickets available online.

As we have each year for a thousand years, since the Great Collapse and the dark days of Bad Time, Trouble Puppet unites the tribes of the wastelands at our annual party and fundraiser, Get Yourself into Trouble! Join a tribe and compete for prizes and glory, or survival. View part of Doomsday Machine, hosted by Cinematic Titanic’s own Mary Jo Pehl; watch Aileen Adler serenade exploding puppets; and shake it to the swing and jazz of the Shivers—the White Ghost Shivers!

In the games, you may win theater tickets, puppets handmade by your Troublemakers truly, including a special portrait puppet of whomever you choose (be they friend or nennimy), and 3-day ACL Music Fest passes.

The end of times will be fueled by Dripping Springs Vodka, Spec’s, Brick Oven on 35th, Chef Sandy Bowie, AustinLiveTheatre.com, and others.Tickets, $15, available at the door or at Advance (online) tickets receive an extra raffle ticket.

Spike Gillespie interviews Connor Hopkins and Carolyn Reck:




Read Spike Gillespie's interview of the Trouble Puppeteers at her blog Spike Speaks, posted July 10