Summoned by Puppets
By Tom Wachunas
“I ought to be thy Adam, but I am rather
the fallen angel…”
- Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
Once upon a time, nearly three years
ago, the highly accomplished local artist Erin Mulligan-Brayton was listening
to opera music and painting an image of puppets. She had also at that time been
reading Frankenstein, and suddenly an
idea was born – to make Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel into a puppet opera. She
promptly contacted Craig Joseph, curator of Translations Art Gallery in
downtown Canton.
Thus began an
ambitious collaborative journey into previously uncharted theatrical territory
in these parts. Joseph mobilized an eclectic group of 24 individuals into teams
– conceptualizers, builders and performers. Ultimately he directed what can
rightly be called a resplendently quirky hybrid of ingenious shadow play, melodramatic
pantomime and puppetry (including masks, shadow puppets, rod puppets, body
puppets and a marionette).
The story, finely
honed into nine scenes that unfold in just under an hour, begins with Robert
Walton (enacted by a masked Justin Edenhofer), captain of a North Pole-bound
ship that has rescued Victor Frankenstein, stranded on the ice floes, weakened
and near death from the cold. Walton nurses Frankenstein back to fragile
health, and hears his woeful tale.
Throughout the performance, live black-robed
and hooded stagehands (or deckhands, really) manipulate props and scrims with
solemn economy of movement suggesting, perhaps, acolytes of a religious rite
executing their ordained tasks. The cleverly crafted visual mechanics -
including wooden nooks and niches occupied by animated shadows, ghostly video
imagery (designed by Zach Christy) and exquisitely expressive puppets - have an
eerily medieval feel, infused with a spirit of alchemy and conjuring. It is an
urgent and tenebrous spirit, well befitting this story of an obsessed scientist
who would be God, the Creator of life, and the terrible consequences of
reaching beyond his own prideful grasp.
What further
elevates the production from the level of a simple theatrical curiosity is its
earnest embrace of operatic form. In this case, the score for the remarkable
chamber orchestra (music by Steve Parsons, libretto by John Popa) has been
pre-recorded (excellently mixed and mastered by Ron Flack and John King of
Realgrey Records and available for purchase at the gallery). I think, though,
the live audience experience could be considerably more enhanced by placing
additional amplification at the front of the house, to better envelop us in the
soaring drama of the music. The recorded vocal performances - from Damian Henri
(as Victor Frankenstein), Bart Herman (as The Creature), Amanda Medley (as
Elizabeth Lavenza), and James Graysmith (as Captain Walton) – are emotionally
gripping and constitute a discretely powerful aural event in itself. There are
moments – lyrically and musically – reminiscent of Sondheim-ian works at their
most intelligent and intense.
An additionally
compelling aspect of conveying Victor Frankenstein’s harrowing descent into
torturous grief and remorse is the progressive diminishing of his physical
stature. We see three masked “real person” versions (enacted by Jimmy Ferko,
Christopher Hisey and Kyra Stephens) that culminate in a shrunken puppet – an
emaciated doll cradled ever so gingerly in Captain Walton’s arms. Meanwhile,
the created monster grows (that’s Donald Jones underneath the massive overcoat)
until he teeters over all he surveys, his face frozen in a look more lonely and
forlorn than terrifying.
Who would have
thought that something so innocuous as a puppet show could embody the gravitas
of this classic tale? This one works surpassingly well at pulling on our
heartstrings.
Frankenstein:
The Puppet Opera, at Translations Art Gallery, 331 Cleveland Ave. NW,
downtown Canton. Performances on Oct.
10, 17 and 24 at 8 p.m. / Oct. 31 at 8 and 10 p.m. / Nov. 1 at 8 p.m. TICKETS
are $10 at
PHOTOS by Craig
Joseph and Donald Jones
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