Puppet Workshop – (1) Balloon Marionettes

Posted by Diane - September 16th, 2009

Balloon MarionetteWhile attending college at Illinois State University, I was lucky enough to enroll in a Puppetry Arts class. The class was fairly basic, and included some of the rich history of puppetry, some basic performance skills, and some very basic puppet-making. One of the “projects” we did involved very simple “Balloon Marionettes.” We did a group performance using these very simple puppets as part of our assignment.

After college, I had the fortune of traveling with the group “Up with People” for a year. We traveled all over the United States and Europe, performing in a musical show and performing “community service” activities in the places we visited. One of the things we frequently were asked to do was to appear in local classrooms, discussing our group. If you are unfamiliar with “Up with People,” their main purpose is to bring the world together through music and performance. We frequently discussed diversity and tolerance of those who are different when we went into those classrooms.

I was asked by a school teacher in Germany to “teach” a class for her while I was visiting. She wanted a simple workshop that would tell her students what the group I was traveling with was all about. I had told her that I had studied Elementary Education in college, and had even taught for a short time. I also had told her I was a puppeteer. A light bulb went off over my head, and a simple puppetry workshop was created.

The first step? Build the marionettes!


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Puppet Workshop – (3) Diversity Performance

Posted by Diane - September 16th, 2009

Balloon MarionetteNow that you’ve built your marionettes, it’s time to perform your show! The concept is simple and mostly improvised. The following “script” is a loose outline only:

Instructor:  (using two identical balloon marionettes - Puppets enter stage and begin to interact)  How are you doing? How have you been? What game are we playing? etc.

Each student enters the scene with their marionette, one at a time.

Student:  (to the instructor’s puppets) Hey, that game looks fun! Can I join in? (or something similar)

Instructor:  No, you can’t! This game is only for blue balloons (or whatever). Go away! You’re too round (or red, or your eyes are too big, or you have bare feet, whatever).

The student takes their marionette to another part of the stage away from the insructor’s puppets, and begins to “play” (bounce).

One by one, each student approaches the instructor’s marionettes, is turned away, and goes to join the ever-growing group of puppets “playing” (bouncing) over to the side.

Instructor:  (in conversation between the two identical puppets)

Puppet 1:  Hey, this game is getting boring!

Puppet 2:  It sure is. What else can we do?

Puppet 1:  I don’t know, but look at that group over there! They sure look like they’re having a good time!

Puppet 2:  They do! I’d rather be playing with them!

Puppet 1:  Me too! Do you think they’d let us?

Puppet 2:  I don’t know. Let’s ask them.

The instructor’s puppets “bounce-walk” over to the group

Puppet 1:  Hey, your game looks like fun! Can we play?

Puppet 2:  Yes, we’d like to join you!

Either as a spokesperson for the group or all together, the students should welcome the instructor’s marionettes into their group. The entire class then ends up “playing” (bouncing) together in a bunch!

After taking bows, ask the students to take their seats with their marionettes for a post performance discussion!


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Puppet Workshop – (4) Post Discussion

Posted by Diane - September 16th, 2009

Balloon MarionettesOf course, the main purpose of this activity is to discuss diversity. Depending on the age of the students, and where you are teaching this workshop, you may want to ask some follow-up questions to get discussion going.

  • How do you think your puppets felt being told they weren’t welcome to play because of their color or shape?
  • Why was the group at the end more appealing than the two puppets playing together alone?
  • Have you ever been in a situation where you weren’t welcomed because of who you were?
  • How did you feel?
  • What did you learn from this workshop?

The best part about doing a simple workshop like this is that, when you are done, each student gets a marionette to take home as a reminder. The puppets are simple enough to make that you can create them and perform in a reasonably short amount of time.

It is helpful to have a few backup puppets pre-made in case a puppet pops during the performance. This allows everyone to participate.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this simple puppet workshop on making and performing balloon marionettes. If you use it, please share your results! We’d love to hear about it!


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    Diane began performing as a puppeteer when she was only six years old. Her first marionette, Clippo the Clown, a gift from her Grandmother, accompanied Diane to school every year through college. As an adult, Diane began making and performing hand puppets. She writes the shows, fabricates the puppets and props, performs all of the puppetry, and even serves as her own lighting and sound engineer!
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