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The seventh Ishara International Puppet Festival begins today with something for everyone
Anurupa Roy of Katkatha Puppet Arts Trust has produced a play at The Ishara International Puppet Festival that sounds like its straight out of your childs value education class. Roys production,The Little Blue Planet,wants to drive home the menace of global warming to its young audience. We were approached by the Climate Project India for a production that deals with the theme of global warning in a manner that will be easily comprehensible at all levels. Thats how we came up with this in October last year. We try and showcase how human greed and unaware exploitation of resources are leading to disaster, she says. The 35-minute show is scheduled for February 2.
Apart from the on-stage productions,the week-long programme will also see a three-part presentation series by Karen Smith of the US,Ranjana Pandey of India and Jennifer Pfeiffer of Australia,all members of the UNIMA and all working on challenges and opportunities in puppetry. I started a PhD in the Victorian College of Art,University of Melbourne,on the workings of indigenous puppetry artists in different cultures. My presentation will deal largely with ways to empower these people, says Pfeiffer.
Its not going to be all work and no fun though. While the Taiwanese production talks of love between a couple who meet by accident (glove puppet show),the Turkish production starts off with tales of Don Quixote and then moves on to original narratives about a child and his favourite fairy tale (combination of puppet theatre,shadow play and improvisational theatre). Block your dates now.
Tickets are available at the India Habitat Centre programme desk for Rs 100 and Rs 200. The festival will also be held in Mumbai from January 31.
For more details call 24682001-24682009
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