Why Women?
by Andrew C. Periale
I have thought for a long time that we should
have an issue of Puppetry International that honored
the achievements of women in our field: Women Pioneers
of Puppetry. I was a bit surprised to find that
not everyone shared my enthusiasm for this idea.
In fact, there were people who looked at me as
if I had proposed we do a "Swimsuit Edition." "Why
women?" they asked. "Why not just 'Pioneers
of Puppetry?...
Why women?
I don't know. And, if I did know, I wouldn't bother
pursuing it. Admitedly, having women as our theme
is fraught. It cannot help but be seen as a political
act. Putting this magazine together, though no
matter what the theme is a journey of discovery.
We bring some of the best minds in the field together
to write about great art and great artists and
as things proceed, the process becomes less like
chemistry and more like alchemy. Proven formulae
turn weird; serotonin kicks in and the serendipitous
erupts; the commonplace, in short, is transformed
into something precious.
The trick as editor, it seems to me, is in knowing
when to get out of the way. This is not an exhaustive
study of Women in Puppetry. It is not complete
or even logical. It is more like a collage: the
whole is more than the sum of the parts. With luck,
by the time we go to print, I will have an answer
to the question, "Why
women?"
At the moment, our minds are full of "Olympic
Moments" visions of athletes who've overcome
tremendous obstacles to jump higher, swim faster,
throw farther than anyone else. Words like "Courage," "Glory" and "Fair
Play" drop from sportscasters' lips like quarters
into one armed bandits. Out of the hundreds of
newspaper article in the sports sections, I was
led as if by an occult hand to this small item: "Little
League to Honor Maria Pepe." At age eleven,
Pepe made the Little League team in Hoboken, NJ.
She was good. Heck, she was their starting pitcher!
It only took three games, though, for Little League
officials to notice. Because she was a girl, Pepe
was out.* Not only was she oppressed by the sport's "old
boy" power structure, she was hurt by the
crowds' insults: "They said stuff like, 'You're
supposed to be play ing with dolls."
You're supposed to be playing with dolls.
Pretty strong stuff.
During Russia's "Silver Age," men dominated
the theater world. Not all women were content to
remain in their "assigned seats," and
a number of them found a new freedom in the world
of puppetry, where they were not considered a threat
to the status quo. Perhaps because they were only "playing
with dolls." Dassia Posner looks at four of
these women whose works and writings had, and continue
to have, an impact.
In contemporary India, whether or not a woman
is even allowed to perform with a puppet may depend
on where she is living. Nineteenth
century French writer George Sand took on a man's
name (and a few "masculine" vices). She
also wrote movingly about puppet theatre.
Helen Haiman Joseph brought puppet performances
to thousands of American children. When she could
find no good book on the subject in English, she
wrote one!
A number of the women spotlighted in this issue
were blatantly discriminated against because of
their gender, but oppression is not always such
an obvious thing. Our designer, Bonnie Periale
(who is, not coincidentally, my wife and puppetry
partner), has been oppressed throughout her long
career as a puppeteer. Her primary oppressor has
been myself a fact of which I am not proud. My
blatant bullying as unpleasant as it is is, however,
relatively easy to spot. Far more insidious are
the journalists who address all their questions
to me, sponsors who call and ask to speak with
me, and people who send invitations with only my
name on them. They do so not because I'm the better
artist (I'm not) or because I work harder (I don't),
but because I am the man and therefore presumably
in charge. Some of the offenders are women ' and
I imagine the slights are unintentional. This should
not be surprising I have no doubt that some of
the hecklers admonishing Maria Pepe to "play
with dolls" were women, too. We are alI part
of a system in which certain types of discrimination
are deeply ingrained.
So, for myself, the answer to the question, "Why
women?" is: for Bonnie. And: for Maria Pepe.
But read the magazine. It's for you, too. |