Some scholars trace the origin of puppets to India 4000 years ago, where the main character in Sanskrit plays was known as sutradhara 'the holder of strings'.
Other scholars claim that shadow theater came to Anatolia in the 16th century from Egypt. The advocates of this view claim that when Yavuz Sultan Selim conquered Egypt in 1517, he saw shadow theatre performed during a party put on in his honour. Yavuz Sultan Selim was so impressed with it that he took the puppeteer back to his palace in Istanbul. There his 21 year old son, later Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent, developed an interest in the plays and watched them a great deal. Thus shadow theatre found its way into the Ottoman palaces.
Man must have created a puppet with animation long ago. Since puppet-like masks and cave-paintings formed part of the magical rituals of ancient men living in caves, an urge to create his likeness (or caricature) and give it movement might have been a compelling factor for the creation of a puppet.
The Nobel-laureate economist Amartya Sen once drew attention to India's extraordinarily large historical literature on such subjects as arithmetic (including the first use of the decimal system), algebra, geometry, linguistics, phonetics, astronomy and so on, not to mention liberated analyses of sexual pleasures, extensive discussions of games and puzzles, big volumes of fables and conundrums. The latter points were elaborated by the European scholar Richard Pischel in his book The Home of the Puppet Play, stating that "The birth place of fairy tales has long been recognised to be India. They wandered from India to Persia and then the Arabs brought them to Europe".
For centuries, the puppetry in one form or other flourished in India, particularly in the villages. Since ages, it has been an important part of folk culture. The major types of puppetry that are practiced in different Indian states are: rod, string, shadow and glove puppetry is practiced by the tribals from Malabar in Kerala and Tamilnadu. The puppetry is very popular in Orissa, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. Sometimes the puppets are made with leather and the movements controlled by stick and many times, they are made with wood or cloth, with the movements controlled by strings. The string puppetry is prevalent in Karnataka and Rajasthan. The puppets employed are very small in dimensions. They have a large head with prominent eyes which gives them personality and charm. The body, including the hands, is made of cloth stuffed with rags. Most of them have no legs, but have long, trailing skirts or robes. Only special puppets such as a stunt horse rider has legs. The string attached to the puppet's head goes over the operator's hands and fingers and then into back of the puppet below the waist. Each hand is also controlled through separate strings. The color and features of the faces depend upon the character of the puppets. Goggle-eyed, dark colored puppet represents a wicked person. A royal person has a lighter color and has mustaches. Brocaded cloth decorations and borers add to their beauty. The male wear turbans and females have combed and braided hair. The female figures hold their skirts or sarees in their hands while dancing and put up a lively show, moving quickly and gesturing. The male excel in fighting; they dash against each other strike, chase, grapple and fall dead. These puppets represents, the good versus the bad, victor against vanquished, the hero and the coward, the generous and miserly.
A puppeteer family manages its own show. It has a little, mobile convertible state, which consists of a cloth backdrop and a curtain gaily decorated in cut and patch work or hand-printed cloth. The puppets are carved from a variety of local woods. If the quality of wood used is not up to the mark, then white cloth is pasted on it and then are applied natural colors. The lighting comes from two oil lamps, one each at side of the stage. Though this is very insufficient light, it helps the performance by creating eerie atmosphere and hiding the strings. The themes presented are based on the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. The manipulations are carried over by the male members of the troupe. The music, singing, dialogue and narrations are provided by the female members of the family. The youngsters provide music by the way of continuous squeaking, playing mrudangum and cymbal. When cleverly employed these instruments provide puppet like pitches. Situations are created so that different characters may engage in lively, dramatic feats. A court scene is usually the opportunity to bring these stock characters to the stage. The court dancer the stunt horse rider, the drummer and the snake charmers invoke greater interest. The puppetry requires exaggeration and distortion in order to achieve maximum impact. But the limitation of the puppets, the mask which can caricature only a certain number of emotions, emphasizes the satire. In creative manipulation and imitative interplay of the puppets, according to the free range of fantasy, there is room for refined humor. Thus success of any puppet show mainly depends on the genius of the puppeteer. The puppetry in one form or other flourished as an intimate part of ancient Indian life, particularly in the villages, where the puppeteer would have been an important part of folk culture. However due to the influence of electronic entertainment media, an ancient art has had to suffer from lack of patronage and face extinction.
http://puppetindia.com/index.html
http://www.kamat.com/kalranga/puppets/index.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puppet_show
Thursday, June 5, 2008
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