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The Country Corn of “Shucked”

Despite its lack of unitary purpose, this new musical comedy, with songs by Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally, is idiotic in the best possible way.

Behold the Fantastical, Uncannily Lifelike Puppets of Barnaby Dixon

Barnaby Dixon‘s incredible two-piece creations redefine the notion of hand puppets, by moving and responding in highly nuanced, realistic ways.

The pinkie and index finger of one hand slip into the creature’s arms, leaving the thumb free to operate the tiny controls that tilt head and mouth movements.

The pinkie and index finger of one hand slip into the creature’s legs, an attribute few hand puppets can claim.

A waistline magnet joins the puppet’s top half to its bottom.

His goal is for viewers to “forget the mechanisms and forget the process that’s gone into making it so they can just enjoy the motions.”

Each character has a unique set of motions and a custom-designed plastic, silicone and metal assembly, informed by many hours of anatomical observation and study. Their structures speak to Dixon’s early years as a stop motion animator, as do his fabrication methods.

His frustration with the glacial pace of achieving the end product in that realm spurred him to experiment with puppets who could be filmed moving in real time.

His first puppet, Dab Chick, below, holds a special place in his heart, and is also one of his mouthiest.

Dab Chick’s tiny head cocks on spectacle hinges and a hand-wound spring wrapped in silicone. The mechanism that opens and closes his beak is a miniature spin on bicycle hand brakes.

While many of Dixon’s recent puppets thrive in a Day-Glo, synth-heavy environment, Dab Chick is a crowd-pleasing curmudgeon, spouting opinions and repartee. He even plays drunk… a hard assignment for any performer to pull off, but Dixon nails it.

Phil the fish is operated with two rods. He performs best in water, appropriately enough, highlighting his talent for blowing bubbles, as well as Dixon’s for using physics to his advantage.

Many puppeteers match their breathing to that of their puppet’s in an effort to get into the zone. Dixon takes it to the next level by streaming real time video of his mouth to a tiny screen embedded below the nose of the puppet he is operating.

In addition to creating and directing original work, he puppeteered the True History of Thra, The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance‘s play within a play and designed the origami-inspired, animal-shaped demon puppets for the Bridge Theatre production of Book of Dust – La Belle Sauvage.

The Guardian lauded the latter as “gorgeous,” a “marvel (that) seem like Jungian projections rather than airy, fantastical creatures.”

Watch more of Barnaby Dixon’s puppet videos here.

Related Content:

The Hand Puppets That Bauhaus Artist Paul Klee Made for His Young Son

Meet Little Amal, the 12-Foot Puppet of a 10-Year-Old Syrian Girl, Who Has Been Touring the World

Hiroshige, Master of Japanese Woodblock Prints, Creates a Guide to Making Shadow Puppets for Children (1842)

– Ayun Halliday is the Chief Primatologist of the East Village Inky zine and author, most recently, of Creative, Not Famous: The Small Potato Manifesto and Creative, Not Famous Activity Book. Follow her @AyunHalliday.

Jessica Chastain’s Close Listening in “A Doll’s House”

Jamie Lloyd’s ascetic production of Ibsen’s 1879 drama eliminates nearly every conventional marker of character, location, or gesture.

A Minor Play by Lorraine Hansberry Gets Lost in a Major Revival

Oscar Isaac and Rachel Brosnahan star in “The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window.”

“Life of Pi” Comes to Broadway

In a stage adaptation of Yann Martel’s novel, a Bengal tiger called Richard Parker—operated by puppeteers—joins a boy named Pi, who is lost at sea, in a lifeboat.

Spring Theatre Preview

Adrienne Warren stars in “Room,” Rachel Chavkin directs the satire “The Thanksgiving Play,” accident-prone Brits put on “Peter Pan Goes Wrong,” and more.

Arinzé Kene’s Postmodern Portrait of a One-Man Show

In “Misty,” at the Shed, the actor-playwright-rhapsode uses spoken-word performance to explore overfamiliar constructs of Blackness.

“Pictures from Home” Loses Focus on Broadway

Nathan Lane and Danny Burstein rely on shtick in Sharr White’s adaptation of Larry Sultan’s book, while Norbert Leo Butz can’t save the musical “Cornelia Street.”

Jessica Chastain in Ibsen’s Proto-Feminist Masterwork

Last year’s Best Actress Oscar winner steps into the role of Nora in a Broadway production of “A Doll’s House,” also starring Arian Moayed and Okieriete Onaodowan.

Finding Laughs Amid the Gray, in Beckett’s “Endgame”

At the Irish Repertory Theatre, John Douglas Thompson and Bill Irwin wring moments of superb physical comedy from two characters who struggle to move.

The One-Person Show, Served Three Ways

In “Small Talk,” “Without You,” and “cryptochrome,” Colin Quinn, Anthony Rapp, and Evan Silver take the mike.

“The Appointment” Skewers the Hypocrisy of the Abortion Debate

This raucously pro-choice musical, by the Philadelphia-based theatre collective Lightning Rod Special, sniffs out taboos and hunts them down at the pace of a sprint.

Highlights from the Under the Radar Theatre Festival

The New Yorker’s co-theatre critics chat about “seven methods of killing kylie jenner,” a puppet version of “Moby-Dick,” and the other plays they saw during this year’s event.

New York’s Theatre Festivals Imagine a World After Mankind

Recent shows’ visions of the future haven’t exactly been post-apocalyptic, with the violence and darkness that term implies. Instead, they have delighted in our disappearance, savored it.
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