A puppetry extravaganza that includes larger-than-life bees, butterflies and different bugs can be held Thursday and Saturday in Ames.
The Iowa Insect Pageant, a free occasion open to the general public, can be held at 6 p.m. Thursday on the Campanile garden on Iowa State’s campus and at Bandshell Park 2 p.m. Saturday.
The celebrities of the present can be giant variations of a few of Iowa’s smallest creatures. The puppets have been created by Iowa State college students, college and members of the group.
As a lot as attainable, the puppets have been constructed from recycled trash and different repurposed objects.
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The inaugural Iowa Insect Pageant can be introduced by ISU Theatre in partnership with the ISU Jazz Band and Iowa State’s Division of Entomology.
“For the previous a number of years, ISU Theatre has actually tried to consider collaboration in a brand new means,” stated Amanda Petefish-Schrag, affiliate professor of theatre. “Definitely, in theater, we do numerous collaborating inside the self-discipline. However we’re actually making an attempt to broaden that to consider who different potential collaborative companions are on campus within the numerous schools and in the neighborhood.”
As a result of Petefish-Schrag’s division plans productions a few 12 months upfront, they have been additionally initiatives that might be enjoyable, participating and might be held outdoor.
“Particularly as a result of the pandemic has taken all of us outdoor much more, however that’s been one of many actually good issues that has occurred throughout this time,” she stated.
Speaking with Matt O’Neal within the entomology division sparked the concept of making insect puppets. Not lengthy after that, the director of Iowa State’s jazz bands, Mike Giles, got here on board the challenge and wrote authentic music for use within the manufacturing, carried out by the jazz band he leads.
“It’s been a extremely attention-grabbing challenge in so some ways,” Petefish-Schrag stated. “Significantly in the way in which you begin to be taught nearly a brand new language as you speak between the humanities and sciences and even completely different disciplines inside the arts – speak about how we’ve got these shared targets and the way will we obtain them.”
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How the tiny aphid grew to become the most important puppet within the present
About 50 puppets can be used within the efficiency. Some have been designed by Petefish-Schrag herself, who has an extended historical past in puppetry and teaches a course about it on the college.
The puppets contain numerous shapes, sizes and kinds of puppets.
Puppet designers hung out interacting with entomologists, studying what the scientists themselves assume are attention-grabbing particulars about bugs, what they’re enthusiastic about and what their analysis is, she stated.
“From there, we form of discovered, if this have been a pageant, and we have been fascinated by distinctive abilities and the distinctive life tales of those completely different bugs, what would we deal with?” Petefish-Schrag stated.
That query led to an aphid being the most important puppet within the manufacturing. At greater than 10 ft lengthy, the puppet displays the massive impression the insect has, regardless of its tiny dimension in actual life.
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“A puppet is rarely going to have the ability to do the whole lot a residing organism can do. So to be efficient, while you design a puppet, you’re actually fascinated by what makes it important,” she stated. “Then we’re going to deal with that and create their pageant persona round that.”
Petefish-Schrag and her college students realized about aphids from O’Neal, who research them in his lab.
“They’re so small. However Dr. O’Neal is learning aphids, partly, as a result of their impression is so giant, which is tough to imagine while you’re this insect that you could barely see,” she stated. “Then listening to concerning the magnitude of the impression of this very tiny insect was an idea we locked into and determined to look into its scale another way.”
Ames Public Library holds puppet occasion in tangent with Iowa Insect Pageant
The Ames Public Library can have a free occasion for all ages on Saturday from 10:30 a.m. to midday along with the Iowa Insect Pageant.
Attendees will be taught extra concerning the interdisciplinary challenge, listening to from challenge leaders about how the music and puppets have been created.
Contributors will even have the prospect to make their very own puppets through the library occasion and are then invited to participate in an insect puppet parade on the 2 p.m. Bandshell Park efficiency.
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Insect puppets are constructed from reused and recycled supplies
The entire puppet designers labored from the same recipe of utilizing discovered and repurposed “trash” supplies, Petefish-Schrag stated.
The pageant bees she created incorporate sweet wrappers, used clothes, outdated jewellery, wire hangers and discarded promenade decorations. The puppets are stuffed with reused packing paper and dryer lint.
“Every thing that individuals will see is constructed from issues that for essentially the most half are repurposed issues which may have in any other case ended up in a rubbish can,” she stated.
Using reused and recycled supplies added one other layer of that means to the challenge.
“We have been being actually cognizant of the truth that we’re studying about bugs, and a part of what we’re studying is that there are methods that our human exercise negatively impacts issues like bees,” Petefish-Schrag stated.
The notion of reusing supplies in puppetry is an concept that goes again centuries, she stated.
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“Going again a very long time, puppeteers have been fascinated by what supplies are plentiful and what supplies are issues that individuals on this group will acknowledge,” she stated. “Then how will we rework these supplies to offer them new that means?”
Petefish-Schrag cannot keep away from puppetry
Petefish-Schrag started her puppetry profession at a really younger age.
“I began working professionally as a puppeteer after I was 4 years outdated,” she stated. “I occurred to be born right into a household of puppeteers.
“After I was about 4, I began touring with my household and spent my days down within the basement workshop with my mother, constructing puppets and studying the way to create — not simply puppets — however the way to assist construct a puppet theater.”
Rising up in Alexandria, Minnesota, she simply thought each household had a puppet theater of their basement.
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When she acquired a bit of older, she realized the way to guide reveals and reply the cellphone for her household’s enterprise.
“I can declare no credit score, however I did get to have this actually fascinating childhood,” she stated.
Petefish-Schrag continued working along with her household by her college years and even into faculty.
“After I branched out by myself, I believed I’d by no means have something to do with puppetry once more, and you may see how properly that labored,” she stated with amusing as she pointed to a number of bee-shaped puppets in her workplace. “I believe what retains pulling me again to it’s that puppetry is each an artwork and a science on the similar time.
“Puppets are these little machines that must work properly, and the machine has to work properly along with the human physique, after which it additionally has to aesthetically inform a narrative. Which is absolutely difficult but in addition actually thrilling to get to be concerned in all that pondering. It’s a really participating strategy to strategy the performing arts. And it retains bringing me again.”
IOWA CITY — Iowa football has scheduled a game with Albany in 2025 while moving its scheduled game with Florida Atlantic from 2025 to 2030, the team announced Monday in a news release.
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The Albany game will be on Aug. 30. Iowa then has games against Iowa State on Sept. 6 and UMass on Sept. 13. Dates for the 2025 Big Ten schedule will be announced later this fall, according to the release.
The rest of Iowa’s future nonconference schedules are below:
2026: Northern Illinois (Sept. 5), Iowa State (Sept. 12), UNI (Sept. 19)
2027: Ball State (Sept. 4), at Iowa State (Sept. 11)
2028: Western Michigan (Sept. 16)
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2029: Northern Illinois (Sept. 15)
2030: Florida Atlantic (Aug. 31)
Comments: john.steppe@thegazette.com
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Even though the season is over for Iowa Hawkeyes legend Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever, there is a lot to be excited about moving forward.
Clark and the Fever ended up being swept out of the first round of the WNBA Playoffs by the Connecticut Sun. It was a disappointing end to what had been a magical season for the team.
Despite being bumped out of the postseason, Indiana looks like a team to watch in the near future.
Tamika Catchings, a former superstar with the Fever and one of the all-time greats in the WNBA, did not hold back when talking about Clark. She believes that the former Iowa superstar has legitimate WNBA MVP potential.
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“Coming in and the impact that she had on our team, you look at the MVP, and you look at the impact they’ve had on their teams. From the triple-doubles and her play on the floor, she does have to be in the (MVP) conversation. … I do think if Caitlin continues to grow and keep doing what she’s doing in this league, she’ll continue to be in those talks.”
During her rookie season, Clark just continued getting better. By the end of the year, she was dominating opposing defenses like she did with the Hawkeyes.
When everything was said and done, she averaged 19.2 points per game to go along with 8.4 assists, 5.7 rebounds, and 1.3 steals. Clark shot 41.7 percent from the floor and 34.4 percent from the three-point line.
Those numbers show just a glimpse at what Clark could be capable of long-term.
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Looking into the future, Indiana will have a chance to add more talent around Clark. If they make the right moves, they could be a championship contender in the very near future.
Hopefully, the Fever can put together a strong offseason. Having a franchise cornerstone like Clark certainly helps build a championship team.
Only time will tell, but Clark has lived up to the hype and her potential is through the roof for the future. Fans should expect to see more success next season and an even better version of Clark after a full offseason of work.
Mary Elizabeth Betty Trumm, 89, of Cascade, Iowa passed away peacefully surrounded by her family on Saturday, September 28, 2024, at her home in Cascade, Iowa. Visitation for Betty will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. on Monday, September 30, 2024, at the Reiff Funeral Home in Cascade, Iowa,