Connect with us

Entertainment

Puppet weddings and box-truck shows: How L.A.’s Bob Baker Marionette Theater survived COVID

Published

on

Again in March of 2020, the day Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced that each one of California’s stay leisure venues wanted to close down to forestall the unfold of the coronavirus, Alex Evans, govt director and head puppeteer on the Bob Baker Marionette Theater, known as a gathering. His message? First, staffers had been going to remain late, taking turns performing puppet numbers that might be filmed and later posted to Instagram. Then, earlier than they left their base of operations in Highland Park, Evans instructed everybody to pick a favourite handcrafted puppet or two from the theater’s large 2,000-strong assortment, be it a beret-wearing French rat or a horn-playing monkey in a high hat. That will permit troupe members to make use of the puppets at house to create kid-oriented DIY public service bulletins encouraging the likes of handwashing or common train.

If the Bob Baker troupe’s pandemic pivot occurred at warp velocity, it is perhaps as a result of the longest constantly working puppet theater in America has tailored to a lot adversity since its founding in 1963. In 2013, the theater’s authentic creator, animator-puppeteer Bob Baker, was so cash-poor that he was compelled to promote the corporate’s authentic constructing simply west of downtown. The next 12 months, Baker died on the age of 90. After that, the puppeteers realized that the brand new proprietor’s plans included taking a wrecking ball to the cinderblock construction and erecting a multiuse improvement on its website. Although they had been promised the theater might return to the advanced, the supplied house turned out to be the dimensions of a strip-mall Starbucks. This necessitated a citywide seek for a brand new house, one which ended on York Avenue in a former silent movie show. In between, the troupe confronted “a long time of uncertainty,” says director of improvement Winona Bechtle, when it got here to creating ends meet.

One way or the other, although, these self-effacing gamers found that they had been extra sturdy than they thought, that there typically was an answer and that in the event that they didn’t have the abilities to make their plans a actuality, they’d determine it out ultimately.

Borrowing an idea from the New Deal period, when touring puppet exhibits had been commonplace, the troupe put in curtains and constructed fold-out surroundings in a 15-foot Isuzu field truck donated by Bob Baker followers Greg and Eli Park. Quickly after the preliminary lockdown was lifted, the troupe was tooling round L.A. in its “Marionette Cell,” pulling into driveways or parking curbside and placing on a present whereas younger audiences sat at an applicable distance.

Ladybug puppets operated by Karina De La Cruz, left, and Daisy Hernandez entertain the viewers outdoors the Bob Baker Marionette Theater in L.A.’s Highland Park neighborhood on March 4, 2022.

Advertisement

(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Occasions)

They by no means stopped brainstorming new methods to maintain the theater going. They supplied puppet-making classes over Zoom in addition to behind-the-scenes backstage excursions. They arrange an account on Patreon, the subscriber-based platform service, providing perks comparable to non-public Zoom exhibits, typically capped with question-and-answer periods that turned out to fill a necessity to attach for each followers of the theater and puppeteers cooped up in quarantine. “Generally I’d come downstairs and I’d be like, ‘The present was booked for an hour however you’ve been speaking for 80 minutes,” says Bechtle. “Nobody wished to [hang up], so that they’d simply hold it going.”

If somebody didn’t have the money to change into a Patreon member however was nonetheless searching for attention-diverters for antsy offspring, there was Bob Baker puppeteer Ginger Duncan’s weekly Instagram Stay periods. Each Sunday, Duncan might be present in her Pasadena yard getting one among Baker’s authentic creations from the Sixties — a kindly spell-caster with a sharp hat known as the Inexperienced Witch — to skip, dance and, in a high-pitched, giggly voice, reply to followers’ questions within the feedback part. On the backside of the display, Duncan put in a donations button and the $5 and $10 choices flowed in.

It’s a proven fact that there are some on the market who’re creeped out by puppets (in addition to mimes and, after all, clowns). However again in the summertime of 2020, the Bob Baker gang skilled its sights on a promising untapped demographic: engaged {couples} searching for a protected marriage ceremony venue, with the novel bonus of being married by a brightly coloured puppet officiant manipulated by Evans, who’s licensed to carry out matrimonial ceremonies. The troupe partnered with Quick & Candy, a self-described “elopement pop-up,” which took care of the flowers, images, decorations and cake. From the attitude of Alena Niu, who tied the knot with Alex Lathrop on the theater nearly two years in the past, the association had an interesting practicality. Solely 4 friends had been allowed, so there was no fussing over who sat subsequent to whom and no want for the standard chicken-or-fish menu planning. In reality, as a result of Niu and Lathrop are toy designers for Mattel, it barely induced a ripple after they introduced that their nuptials can be Zoomed stay from a marionette theater. “If I’m like, ‘Oh, I bought married by a puppet,’ [people don’t] at all times register what I mentioned,” says Niu. “It’s like, ‘OK, cool,’ then, ‘Wait. What?’”

Advertisement
Puppeteers dressed all in red operate ladybug marionettes outside a theater.

Bob Baker Marionette Theater puppeteers Karina De La Cruz, left, Daisy Hernandez and Jamin Orrall give a sidewalk efficiency outdoors the troup’s Highland Park theater.

(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Occasions)

With fewer exhibits to carry out, troupe members additionally launched into a guide venture. They dove into the theater archives and started compiling what would ultimately change into “Enchanted Strings” (Angel Metropolis Press), a coffee-table quantity that tracks the historical past of the Bob Baker Marionette Theater.

As October 2021 approached, and restrictions eased barely, a brand new problem offered itself: easy methods to create a protected in-house expertise in celebration of Halloween. They hoped to assemble their model of what Bechtle calls “a Disneyland darkish trip,” the place small teams of individuals might wander down a zig-zag pathway flanked by mechanized puppets. “It was an engineering madhouse,” says Evans of what it took to provide what they known as the “Peek-a-Boo Stroll-By means of.” They lucked right into a wealth of live-show experience from a pandemic-sidelined tech group keen to assist. Lighting designer Joel Huxtable, who excursions with Ziggy Marley, confirmed up. So did sound engineer Chris Constable. Gearheads with time on their arms got here and, freed from cost, restored animatronics that hadn’t moved in 40 years.

There’s one thing concerning the Bob Baker Marionette Theater employees, maybe their unfiltered earnestness, that makes folks need to assist. This got here in useful a month after their Halloween success when Evans realized that irrespective of what number of new artistic gambits they dreamed up, the theater’s closure appeared imminent. It was time for one thing they’d by no means executed: a direct plea on social media — on this case, an Instagram publish explaining their plight — within the hope that people would attain for his or her wallets, and that their spectacular listing of celeb supporters would activate their very own followers. Reposts from Karen O of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and actress Eva Mendes, who’s been a fan since elementary faculty, helped do the trick. Inside a month the troupe hit its fundraising purpose, sufficient to assist get by one other 12 months of the pandemic.

Advertisement
A man repairs a drum major marionette.

Bob Baker, in 1998, repairs a puppet backstage at his Marionette Theater, then positioned at 1345 W. First St. close to downtown L.A.

(Con Keyes / Los Angeles Occasions)

Nevertheless it meant extra than simply with the ability to hold the doorways open. “It was like we’d constructed up sufficient goodwill that when the specter of us going away occurred — and never for the primary time — folks reacted in another way,” says Bechtle. “This time we had nearly 5 years of offering constant service to folks, internet hosting summer season camps, doing residencies. We’re so clearly a vibrant nonprofit that exists to serve the group. It felt like, ‘Oh! We acknowledge what a useful resource you might be. This can be a place price supporting.’ And for the puppeteers, myself, for everybody on the theater, it simply felt like an enormous vote of confidence.”

Late final 12 months the troupe was lastly in a position to invite audiences again into the 100-seat theater. Bechtle remembers youngsters streaming in. A few of them had been to exhibits pre-pandemic, some had been too younger to have ever been to the theater earlier than. But all of them requested for the puppets by title. They’d say, “The place’s the Inexperienced Witch?” “The place’s Blissful the Birthday Canine?”

“How do they know this?” Bechtle puzzled, then realized it was from Zoom and social media. “It was actually candy to reopen,” she says. “Nevertheless it additionally felt like folks by no means left.”

Advertisement
A crowd of kids giggles as a girl marionette entertains them.

A Bob Baker marionette at a 2001 present.

(Carlos Chavez / Los Angeles Occasions)

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Entertainment

At a Cannes Film Festival of big swings and faceplants, real life takes a back seat

Published

on

At a Cannes Film Festival of big swings and faceplants, real life takes a back seat

“Is it too real for ya?” snarls the Gang of Four-soundalike punk band Fontaines D.C. over a thrumming bass line on the soundtrack to “Bird” as we cruise the streets of Gravesend, Kent, east of London. How’s this for too real? Piloting an e-scooter is the shirtless, much-tatted Bug, played by Barry Keoghan, last seen in “Saltburn” wearing significantly less. Hanging onto him is 12-year-old Bailey (Nykiya Adams), his daughter from a previous relationship (something of a stretch, age-wise, but sure).

Ever the optimist, Bug is planning to sell the hallucinogenic slime he skims off the back of a toad he’s imported from Colorado to fund his imminent wedding to a fling of three months. And despite having an elaborate, curling centipede inked on his face and neck, he’s crestfallen that Bailey would let a friend cut off her locks before the big day. She’s entering surly adolescence like a hot comet and not thrilled to have a new stepmother.

It’s all in keeping with the studied miserablism of British director and Cannes darling Andrea Arnold (“American Honey”). Every interior in “Bird” is more squalid than the last; every door seems designed to be busted down by a violent boyfriend.

Nykiya Adams in the movie “Bird.”

Advertisement

(Atsushi Nishijima)

Is it too real for ya?

Actually, no, not really. And that’s before Arnold introduces us to Bailey’s creepy Boo Radley-ish friend, the mysterious title character (Franz Rogowski of “Passages,” deepening his brand of bug-eyed strangeness), who, in a long-telegraphed moment of protective vengeance, sprouts huge CGI wings that were already painfully suggested.

“Bird” is part of what might be described as Cannes’ reality problem. Or so it seems — it’s only the halfway mark — as we ping-pong between screenings of revered directors leaping off the deep end, their former penchants for verisimilitude tossed aside. Emerging from the raves for George Miller’s “Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga” came the admission, shared by many, that it just wasn’t convincing physically: too lacquered and digitally finessed, the grungy tactility of “The Road Warrior” long gone. Any hope of Francis Ford Coppola reproducing the warmth of his best films was dashed by the sprawling “Megalopolis,” a Rome-as-New-York urban fantasia that, for all its delightful looniness, could have used some subway grit.

Advertisement

Maybe realness is overrated. It’s tempting (but too easy) to impose a coordinated aesthetic on any one edition of a film festival, the early responders hoping to collate their scattered experience of seeing multiple movies a day into a larger sense of coherence. Still, this was restless work. Many of Cannes’ first-week offerings felt like products of the pandemic and, as such, exuded an air of desperation.

A man and a woman listen to a suggestion.

Richard Gere and Uma Thurman in the movie “Oh, Canada.”

(Festival de Cannes)

Paul Schrader’s flashback-heavy “Oh, Canada” — sluggish even at 95 minutes — is expressly about notions of reputational realness unraveling. A Hollywood lion in a fascinating winter, the always-watchable Richard Gere plays Leonard Fife, a celebrated Errol Morris-like lefty documentarian, who, though suffering through the final stages of cancer, agrees to a filmed interrogation by some of his most devoted students. Already you anticipate that some of these interviews aren’t going to go Leonard’s way as Schrader’s métier, the language of self-excoriating doubt, finds voice.

Was he a draft dodger who fled to Canada on principle to escape military service? Was he a faithful family man? No points for guessing correctly on those two. Meanwhile, a deeper truth emerges, more about the inexorable march of time than integrity. Gere, reuniting with Schrader for their first collaboration since the exuberant strut of 1980’s “American Gigolo,” is a fragile, vulnerable presence here, playing up Leonard’s thickened voice and dimmed virility. “I have a Genie and a Gemini!” he sputters, clinging to his awards while the rest of his life tips into fabrication.

Advertisement

Please, Yorgos Lanthimos, show us how it’s done: If we’re going to have a Cannes overrun with fantasy, let one come from the maker of “Poor Things” and “The Lobster.” The Greek director has chosen an unfortunate moment to do a faceplant. “Kinds of Kindness,” though it gets its audience pumped with opening credits set to Eurythmics’ snaky, pounding “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This),” slackens into a tiresome trio of subpar mini-films lacking the emotive weirdness that Lanthimos usually serves on tap.

Three adults hug in bed.

From left, Margaret Qualley, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe in the movie “Kinds of Kindness.”

(Atsushi Nishijima / Searchlight Pictures)

It’s not the actors’ fault, many of whom take on triple duty in three brittle, gruesome tales about, sequentially, murderous micromanagement, cannibalistic survival and obsessive cultdom. The cast launches gamely into the flat-toned violence: Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, Hong Chau and a particularly committed Margaret Qualley (who hopefully filed for worker’s comp). The weak link, however, is the script by Lanthimos and Efthimis Filippou, who, despite the hope they’d steer back to their darkly suggestive “Dogtooth” days, can’t seem to link their customary meanness to any kind of profundity.

Lanthimos has never made a movie this gratuitously brutal (brace for a fried thumb served on a dinner plate), nor has he made one this dumbly obvious, relying on that ominous, pinging piano note from “Eyes Wide Shut” and a frisky cast to sock it over. He’s clearing his throat. It’s more a collection of memes than a sustained piece of thinking.

Advertisement

One filmmaker, though, has nailed the free-floating dreaminess that Cannes seems to be lost in, the Zambia-born Rungano Nyoni, whose confidence summoning a mood clarifies in the exquisitely haunting “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl.” (Playing in the Un Certain Regard section, her drama runs circles around several others in the official competition.) It begins in the middle of the night — a sequence you’ll never want to end — as Shula (Susan Chardy), driving home from a party, pulls over. There’s a dead body on the road. Turns out it’s her uncle Fred. A garrulous, drunk cousin, Nsansa (Elizabeth Chisela), shows up, lending her some unwanted company.

The movie then eases into the rituals of mourning: mounting a funeral, cooking for the bereaved, grieving performatively, so much of it conducted in a state of shock. Nyoni’s debut, the surreal 2017 comic satire “I Am Not a Witch,” poked a sharp stick in the eye of African mysticism, drafting a solemn girl into unwanted witchery while other women remained tethered to traditional roles. Here, the connection is cooler and more disturbing. As Shula steps into rooms flooded with water, the film pivots to a trance-like menace, echoed by Lucrecia Dalt’s scraping experimental synth score.

We also learn more about guinea fowl than ever imagined, including how the plump species warns the rest of the herd of danger. Shula, lost in her stubbornly vague half-memories, can’t quite shake free of her uncle’s past. And when a final showdown arrives — several women and girls chirping out an animalistic warning — the hair on the back of your neck pricks up.

Suddenly, Cannes was too real after all.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

‘The Substance’ Review: An Excellent Demi Moore Helps Sustain Coralie Fargeat’s Stylish but Redundant Body Horror

Published

on

‘The Substance’ Review: An Excellent Demi Moore Helps Sustain Coralie Fargeat’s Stylish but Redundant Body Horror

Not long into Coralie Fargeat’s campy body horror The Substance, Elisabeth Sparkle (Demi Moore) is unceremoniously fired from her gig as the celebrity host of a daytime exercise program. The former actress’ credentials — an Academy Award, a prominent place on the Hollywood Walk of Fame — aren’t enough to save her Zumba-meets-Jillian-Michaels-style show, fittingly called Sparkle Your Life. Her producer, an oily personality conspicuously named Harvey (Dennis Quaid), wants to replace Elisabeth with a younger, more beautiful star. In his words: “This is network TV, not charity.” 

The Substance, which premiered at Cannes in competition, is Fargeat’s second feature. It builds on the director’s interest in the disposability of women in a sexist society, a theme she first explored in her hyper-stylized and gory 2017 thriller Revenge. She gave that film a subversive feminist bent by turning the trophy girlfriend — a sunny blonde who is raped and murdered — into a vengeance-seeking hunter.

The Substance

The Bottom Line

Uneven genre offering boosted by formal ambition and Demi Moore.

Advertisement

Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
Cast: Demi Moore, Dennis Quaid, Margaret Qualley
Director-screenwriter: Coralie Fargeat

2 hours 20 minutes

In The Substance, a woman also takes fate into her own hands and combats underestimation, only this time she’s at war with herself, too. Fargeat combines sci-fi elements (as in her early short Reality+) with body horror and satire to show how women are trapped by the dual forces of sexism and ageism. Beauty and youth are the targets at the heart of this film, but the director also takes aim at Hollywood’s ghoulish machinations and the compulsive physical and psychological intrusiveness of cisgender heterosexual men. 

Fargeat flaunts an exciting hyperactive style. Ultra wide-angle shots, close-ups and a bubble-gum color palette contribute to the film’s surreal — and at times uncanny — visual language. The British composer Raffertie’s thunderous score adds an appropriately ominous touch, especially during moments of corporeal mutilation. 

Advertisement

There’s a lot going on in The Substance, and while the ambition is admirable, not everything works. The thin plotting strains under the weight of its 2 hour 20 minute runtime; there are scenes, especially in the middle of the film, that land as leaden repetition instead of clever mirroring. But strong performances — especially from Moore and Quaid — help sustain momentum through the film’s triumphantly amusing end.

During his final meeting with Elisabeth, Harvey doubles down on his offensiveness. By the time women reach the age of 50, he suggests to Elisabeth while stuffing his mouth with shrimp, it’s over for them. Fargeat heightens the perversity of Harvey’s blunt assessment with shots of his mouth masticating on shellfish bits. As he crushes the coral-colored creatures with his molars, Elisabeth stares at him with a faint disgust bordering on hatred. Quaid’s character lives in the more satirical notes of The Substance, and the actor responds with an appropriately mocking performance.

Harvey’s words, coupled with the blank stares Elisabeth now receives from passersby, drive the actress to seek a solution. She reaches out to the anonymous purveyors of The Substance, a program that allows people to essentially clone a younger version of themselves. While Fargeat’s screenplay leaves much to be desired when it comes to conveying the company’s scale of operations or how they function in her version of Los Angeles, the rules of the experiment are straightforward. After individuals spawn their duplicates, it’s critical they maintain a balanced life. Every 7 days one of them enters a coma, kept alive through a feeding tube, while the other roams free. Then they switch. The catch, of course, is the addiction of youth. 

Elisabeth and her younger self (Margaret Qualley), Sue, follow the program rules for a bit. The middle of The Substance is packed with scenes underscoring the difference in treatment they receive. While Sue blossoms, winning the affection of Harvey and getting her own exercise show, Elisabeth languishes in the shadow of her invisibility.

Moore imbues her character with a visceral desperation, one that enriches the unsettling undercurrents of Fargeat’s film. She plays a woman who can’t quit the addiction of having youth at her fingertips despite its lacerating effect on her psyche. In one particularly strong scene, Elisabeth, haunted by a giant billboard of Sue outside her window, struggles to leave the house for a date. She tirelessly redoes her makeup and each attempt reveals the layers of anguish behind the actress’s pristine facade. 

Advertisement

Moore leans into the physical requirements of her role later in the film. Elisabeth eventually learns that upsetting the balance of the experiment reduces her vitality. Sue, greedier for more time outside the coma, becomes a kind of vampire, and Elisabeth wilts. Moore’s slow walk and hunched shoulders add to the sense of her character’s suffering. Special makeup effects by Pierre-Olivier Persin render Elisabeth’s withering even more startling and persuasive.  

Qualley does not have as meaty a role as Moore. Her character functions as Elisabeth’s foil, seeming to exist only to help us understand the perversion of Hollywood’s gaze on the starlet. That’s a shame, because The Substance’s smart premise and direction promise more revelatory confrontations between Elisabeth and Sue than the one we are offered.

The reality of this experiment is that it traps both characters in the same toxic, self-hating cycle as the standards imposed by society. The most compelling parts of The Substance deal with how social conventions turn women against themselves. A stronger version of the film might have dug into the complexities of that truth, instead of simply arranging itself around it. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Entertainment

Sean 'Diddy' Combs apologizes for attack on his former girlfriend revealed in 2016 video

Published

on

Sean 'Diddy' Combs apologizes for attack on his former girlfriend revealed in 2016 video

Embattled hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs issued an apology Sunday for his 2016 assault of his former girlfriend that was captured on a hotel security video.

The video, released Friday in a CNN report, shows Combs chasing, kicking, dragging and hurling a glass vase at Casandra Ventura, who filed a lawsuit against Combs last year. Ventura, a singer who goes by the name Cassie, settled the suit the day after it was filed in U.S. District Court.

The video matched the details of the incident at the InterContinental Hotel in Century City as described in Ventura’s lawsuit. Combs denied all of the allegations at the time the suit was filed.

But Combs acknowledged his actions in a video posted on Instagram.

“It’s so difficult to reflect on the darkest times in your life, but sometimes you got to do that,” Combs said. “I was f— up — I hit rock bottom — but I make no excuses. My behavior on that video is inexcusable. I take full responsibility for my actions in that video.”

Advertisement

Combs went on to say he sought mental health counseling after the incident. “I got into going to therapy, going to rehab,” he said. “I had to ask God for his mercy and grace. I’m so sorry. But I’m committed to be a better man each and every day. I’m not asking for forgiveness. I’m truly sorry.”

Combs’ apology comes two days after the video first appeared. The Los Angeles Police Department and the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office have both said they are aware of the video but could not prosecute Combs for his actions as the statute of limitations has passed.

Ventura’s attorney Douglas Wigdor issued a statement Sunday that said the Combs apology was self-serving.

“Combs’ most recent statement is more about himself than the many people he has hurt,” Wigdor said. “When Cassie and multiple other women came forward, he denied everything and suggested that his victims were looking for a payday. That he was only compelled to ‘apologize’ once his repeated denials were proven false shows his pathetic desperation, and no one will be swayed by his disingenuous words.”

Law enforcement sources have told The Times that Combs is the subject of a sweeping inquiry into sex-trafficking allegations that resulted in a federal raid in March at his estates in Los Angeles and Miami. Combs has not been charged with any crime and has denied any wrongdoing.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending