Catch
the Wave!
by
Andrew Periale
Trends in Art sweep across the cultural
landscape like tidal waves across tropical atolls:
The Mersey Sound, Op Art, Performance Art, Disco. Some
waves disappear without a trace, some nourish vestigials
of cultures in obscure tidal pools, others litter the
beach with corpses.
As my partner and I create new work, we usually find
ourselves well behind the current wave, often in a
different ocean altogether.
Imagine my surprise then when I realized that our own
company, Perry Alley Theatre, was " hanging ten"-
surfing the wave alongside some of the country's most
talented Big Kuhutras. It all started on the internet,
when I found the website of Daisy DeBolt. I knew Daisy's
music fiom the early 70s, when she was half of the
exquisite Canadian folk duo Fraser and DeBolt. She combines a natural musicality
with the earthy vocal power of Joplin( Janice, not
Scott). Through months of electronic correspondence,
we discovered common ground and soon were planning
a large-scale international collaboration: puppets,
shadows, dance, music and storytelling- a new art form!
Or is it?
The l9th century German Romantics had an expression
for it: Progressive Universalpoesie- an art form which
transcended boundaries of genre ,form,
academic domain.The current wave in puppetry seems
to be exhibiting similar aspirations in a number of recent
collaborations which synergize diverse cultures, styles,
nationalities, and artistic disciplines. Kwuidan integrates
the talents of Atlanta's Jon Ludwig, New York's Ping
Chong and Japan's Mitsuri Ishii (with the writing of
Lafcadio Hearn), Wayang Listrik brings together the
work of San Francisco's Larry Reed with Balinese dalang
I Wayan Wija, and Dieu!: God, Mother Radio springs from the diverse talents of New York's Roman Paska
and France's Massimo Schuster. The process of each
of these collaborations is considered in this issue
of Puppetry International. Furthermore, each of the
programs will be presented at the International Festival
of Puppet Theater in New York City this September.
In the way that "World Music" has integrated
an array of techniques and rhythms from diverse cultures,
these new productions create a World Theatre which
includes music, movement, performing figures and objects,
masks and acting, from realms traditional and nontraditional:
Progressive Universalpoesie.
And what will Perry Alley Theatre be performing at
the New York festival? Chinese Take-Out Theatre- a
solo performance without collaborators, without ties
to world cultures, outside of any recognizable theatre
traditions. One can't always ride the wave! |
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