Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Progress...


“God damn it,” I mumble softly under my breath as a tiny orb of scarlet grows from the tip of my left index finger for what felt like the thousandth time, placing the needle and thread on the table. It’s been years since I last sewed, and it showed. Sucking the tip of my finger to stop the flow of blood, I flip the two crudely stitched pieces of anti-pill fleece inside-out with my right hand and flop the abstract figure down onto the table next to the needle and thread. The stitches tacking together the edges of the ivory fleece are jagged and sloppy, but the shape resting on the rough wooden surface is unmistakable. A faceless and legless and spineless little man lay amid a mess that would soon define him, and, oh! what a beautiful mess it is.
White Styrofoam balls roll by black feather boas. Yellow hunks of foam rubber hide beneath sheets of red and black felt. Brown squares of cardboard hold orange pom-poms. Purple markers cross paths with dull gold wire clothes-hangers. A blue hot glue gun sits faintly smoking beside a spool of white thread. It’s hard to believe that this colorful pile of lifeless crafting supplies is destined to become an animated, static creature, capable of swaying the minds of children and adults alike—a puppet.
            Ah, the puppet—such a curious representation of the human psyche. The puppet is a caricature of man himself, as stylized reality. Elements of realism, expressionism, symbolism, and fairy tale combine to form such an undoubted caricature. The puppet is not just a simple imitation of man; it is a veritable symbol of man. Convincing and bursting with life it takes the place of man, yet must follow the laws of art, and achieving this level of liveliness from throwing together a slew of fabrics and foams and plastics is no small feat. Only if the puppeteer succeeds in creating a puppet that is a mechanically and visually conceivable symbol of a certain type of person, and only if this puppet is well operated, will an audience accept the puppet as a living being. The puppet is a simple, yet inventive and complex, representation of man. The careful conveyance of its physical characteristics, basic movements, and depiction of its personality define its success. Many puppeteers, puppet builders, and puppet designers devote their entire lives to mastering this craft…
            But here I am, surrounded by what looks like about half of the stock of a craft store and a sea of notes sketches on crumpled scratch paper, with no prior experience regarding anything puppet related, wondering if I possess the imagination and skill to create a caricature worth listening to, worth indulging in, worth loving. I take a deep breath, and begin to build upon the loose, ivory, man-shaped sleeve of anti-pill fleece.
After an exasperating five hours of meticulous work and a few burns from the dastardly hot glue gun, I have finally finished him. He’s a fairly modern style puppet—a combined hand and rod puppet. To operate a combined hand and rod puppet, the puppeteer places one hand inside the character’s head, controlling head movements by pivoting that hand from the wrist and operating the mouth with the fingers and thumb. The puppeteer uses his other hand to operate to rods or wires attached to the character’s wrists to control hand and arm movement. I look down at him. He stares back up at me with a blank gaze of tired desperation, lifeless. My eyes scan his limp figure, drinking in every little perfection and every little flaw.
His soft off-white head stuffed with foam rubber is topped by a plume of feathery black hair wildly sprouting from the apex of his fleece scalp. A few onyx strands dangle in front of his wide, bloodshot Styrofoam eyes. Though the eyes appear tired and sad, dark purplish bags of apparent exhaustion hanging heavily from each, black felt pupils stare up at me intently. A fluffy orange pom-pom nose bulges out from beneath the eyes directly above a gaping black mouth hiding a bright crimson tongue. A perpetual five o’clock shadow runs across his cheeks and down his floppy wilted neck, stopping above skinny shoulders covered by a beat up old t-shirt as stuffed arms sag from the openings of the sleeves. His right hand clasps a large yellow No. 2 pencil; his left, a crumpled ball of paper marred by scribbles and scratches and forgotten dreams. Straightened lengths of a dull-gold wire clothes hanger cuff his wrists and shoot down past the opening at the bottom of his t-shirt.
He’s beautiful. I gently run my fingers over the sloppy stitching that keeps him from splitting in two—down the side of his head, past his shoulders and arms and hands—stopping at the gaping opening at the bottom of his torso, fingers toying the edge of the fleece. A strange feeling comes over me, and I wonder what possessed me to build a puppet in the first place, how I ended up sitting at my kitchen table staring at a caricature that, for some odd reason, I feel like I already know.
I jerk my hand away from the puppet as a blurry memory blankets my mind, and remember how this odd journey began only a few weeks prior. I had just filled my prescription for Percocet due to a slight re-fracturing of my knuckles, so I popped the hard white cap off the translucent orange bottle and tossed a couple of those little blue suckers in my mouth. I plopped down on the couch and browsed through the Netflix movie selections, waiting for the inevitable narcotics-induced euphoria to kick in. As the familiar warm and fuzzy feeling of oxycodone and paracetemol washed over my consciousness, a furry little red creature with excited eyes, a bulbous orange nose, and an endless grin plastered on his face caught my eye, directing me to the title above him. “Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey,” was splayed in thin white and orange lettering across the top of the page, and I focused my attention on the description.
“Narrated by Whoopi Goldberg, this documentary follows the career of puppeteer Kevin Clash, the soft-spoken man behind the furry red monster, Elmo.”
I was sold. I clicked play faster than you can say, “TICKLE ME ELMO!” and spent the next hour and sixteen minutes with my eyes glued to the computer screen. When the credits rolled, after what was quite possibly the greatest seventy-six minutes of my life, I slammed my laptop shut and closed my eyes. I was forced to face the truth.
My eyes suddenly snapped open. I had become puppet obsessed. I had gone Muppet-crazy. At that very moment, the sensational, inspirational, celebrational, Muppet-tational puppets took hold of my mind, consuming my every thought. For the next few weeks, I watched every Muppet movie I could find, read anything I could get my hands on regarding the Muppets, spent countless hours on the internet poring over Muppet fan sites. I can’t imagine how crazy I must have looked, watching Sesame Street in the library, laughing out loud while reading children’s books, or singing along with puppets to show-tunes.  

Thursday, April 19, 2012

New Draft, Kinda...


“God damn it,” I mumbled softly under my breath as a tiny orb of scarlet grew from the tip of my left index finger for what felt like the thousandth time, placing the needle and thread on the table. It’s been years since I last sewed, and it showed. Sucking the tip of my finger to stop the flow of blood, I flipped the two crudely stitched pieces of anti-pill fleece inside-out with my right hand and flopped the abstract figure down onto the table next to the needle and thread. The stitches tacking together the edges of the ivory fleece are jagged and sloppy, but the shape resting on the rough wooden surface was unmistakable. A faceless and legless and spineless little man lay amid a mess that would soon define him, and, oh! what a beautiful mess it is. White styrofoam balls roll by black feather boas. Yellow hunks of foam rubber hide beneath sheets of red and black felt. Brown squares of cardboard hold orange pom-poms. Purple markers cross paths with dull gold wire clothes-hangers. A blue hot glue gun sits faintly smoking beside a spool of white thread.
How the hell did I get here?
I had just filled my prescription for Percocet due to a slight re-fracturing of my knuckles, popped the hard white cap off the translucent orange bottle, then tossed a couple of those little blue suckers in my mouth. I plopped down on the couch and browsed through the Netflix movie selections, waiting for the inevitable narcotics-induced euphoria to kick in. As the familiar warm and fuzzy feeling of oxycodone and paracetemol washed over my consciousness, a furry little red creature with excited eyes, a bulbous orange nose, and an endless grin plastered on his face caught my eye, directing me to the title above him. Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey was splayed in thin white and orange lettering across the top of the page, and I curiously focused my attention to the description.
“Narrated by Whoopi Goldberg, this documentary follows the career of puppeteer Kevin Clash, the soft-spoken man behind the furry red monster, Elmo.”
Alright, I’m sold. I clicked play faster than you can say, “TICKLE ME ELMO!” and spent the next hour and sixteen minutes with my eyes glued to the computer screen.
Nothing could have torn my undivided attention away from the fascinating documentary. My roommate needs me to move my car so he can get out of the driveway? He can wait. That same, pissed off roommate sets my car on fire in anger over his not being able to get out of the driveway? Eh, I’ll take care of it later. Raging vehicular flames take hold of the dry, wooden siding of our house? Someone will call 911, I guess. Fire completely engulfs the house and all of its inhabitants, including myself? Well, at least I’ll die happy.
The credits rolled (after what was quite possibly the greatest seventy-six minutes of my life) I slammed my laptop shut and closed my eyes. Then it hit me, like a damn freight train. My eyes snapped open, and as I stared blankly at the striped silver top of the closed laptop resting on my lap and quietly muttered, “That’s it. I’m gonna make a Muppet. Yeah, I’m gonna make a Muppet!”
            Cut to Muppet construction.
I slid my hand into the opening at the bottom of his torso, and cautiously made my way up to his foam rubber head. I pivoted my hand from the wrist and he cocked his little dome to the side, and as I opened that same hand u

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Draft...


            “God damn it,” I mumbled softly under my breath as a tiny orb of scarlet grew from the tip of my left index finger for what felt like the thousandth time, placing the needle and thread on the table. It’s been years since I last sewed, and it showed. Sucking the tip of my finger to stop the flow of blood, I flipped the two crudely stitched pieces of anti-pill fleece inside-out with my right hand and flopped the abstract figure down onto the table next to the needle and thread. The stitches tacking together the edges of the ivory fleece are jagged and sloppy, but the shape resting on the rough wooden surface is unmistakable. A faceless and legless and spineless little man lay amid a mess that will soon define him, and, oh! what a beautiful mess it is.
White styrofoam balls roll by black feather boas. Yellow hunks of foam rubber hide beneath sheets of red and black felt. Brown squares of cardboard hold orange pom-poms. Purple markers cross paths with dull gold wire clothes-hangers. A blue hot glue gun sits faintly smoking beside a spool of white thread.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

THOSE HAPPY SONS OF BITCHES

Well, this is all I have at the moment. I'm trying to make the tone happy and playful and fun while trying not sound condescending...or something like that. I have written and rewritten and rerewritten and rererewritten, and so on and so forth. Driving me insane.


Hi there! I’m so glad you came to join me on this sensational, inspirational, celebrational, Muppetational adventure.
Huh? What does Muppetational mean?
You know, like, the Muppets?
Wait…YOU DON’T KNOW WHO THE MUPPETS ARE?
You have to know. You have to know. You have to know!
No? So, you’re telling me you’ve never chuckled along with good ol’ Kermit the Frog as he tries to keep his eccentric troupe on an even keel while being chased by the domineering diva, Miss Piggy? You’ve haven’t laughed at Fozzie Bear’s hilarious attempts at being a hilarious or witnessed Gonzo the Great’s audacious daredevil stunts? You haven’t taken part in the disastrous scientific experiments of Dr. Bunsen Honeydew and his terrified assistant Beaker?
Still not ringing a bell?
Wow, did your parents not love you? I bet they never took you to Disneyworld. They probably made you read books and swim five hours a day and play the violin.
Alright, alright. I’ll stop. That crossed the line.
What’s that? You still want to know what a Muppet is?
Okay, I suppose I can fill you in on what you’ve been missing out on.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Puppets...and Stuff...

Before I begin, yes, this is the five hundred word start to my paper. And yes, it’s also my updated proposal. I don’t know if they’re supposed to be one in the same, but I can already see the change in direction with my writing. That’s the point, right? But, I digress. I’m not sure exactly where this idea is going or what the finished product is going to even remotely resemble, but I’d like to make a puppet and write about it…and stuff.
Puppets? Yes.
Let me explain. I just had my prescription for Percocet filled because of a slight re-fracturing of my knuckles, settled down on the couch and browsed through the Netflix movie selections while waiting for the painkiller induced euphoria to kick in. A furry little red creature with wide, excited eyes, a bulbous orange nose, and an endless grin plastered on his face caught my eye, directing me to the title above him. Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey was splayed in thin, white and orange lettering across the top of the page, and I looked to the description…
“Narrated by Whoopi Goldberg, this documentary follows the career of puppeteer Kevin Clash, the soft-spoken man behind the furry red monster, Elmo.”
I’m sold. I clicked play faster than you can say, “TICKLE ME ELMO!” and spent the next hour and sixteen minutes glued to my computer screen. When I finished, I lay back in bed and thought how interesting it would be to make a muppet. That’s when it hit me.
I’m going to make a muppet, and I’m going to document it. The final piece will be, tentatively, divided into a few sections:
·         The introduction, I guess. I’m not even sure what that means anymore. I suppose I could talk about the history of muppets and Jim Henson and whatnot.
·         The building process. I’ll delve into mechanics, as well as the emotional and creative aspects of the process, using interviews hopefully.
·         The identity of the puppet. This will focus on the puppet itself, who the puppet and what part of me and my personal life and personality the puppet embodies. Interviews will hopefully be used for this as well.
·         Puppet in action! Hopefully, I’ll find some form of audience, hopefully a group of children, and try and brighten their day with ray of happiness in the form of a talking piece of foam and fleece.
·         Conclusion…kinda…sorta… Explicate the experience as my own puppeteer journey, of sorts.
This is clearly nowhere near even being a complete idea, but I think I’m really onto
something. I will use puppet builders, puppeteers, and children for interviews. Secondary sources are also endless. There’s an endless supply of muppet movies, muppet books, muppet documentaries, muppet-building guides, you name it, and it’s there. I know this is going to change, and I’m excited to see where it leads. Time to start building… 

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

EXTREMELY Abstract Proposal


1.      What is your project?

I currently have two ideas that I can’t decide between, so I’m basically relying on discussion in class to guide me toward one. I either want to highlight one of my Navy SEAL father’s war stories, or delve into the life and work of Norman Keith Collins—the tattoo artist infamously known as Sailor Jerry.

2.      What process will you use for primary research? (Who, where, what, etc.)

For the Navy SEAL combat story, I suppose I’ll just interview my father and a few of his buddies, if they’re still alive. He’ll be in Afghanistan for a few months, so I’m prepared to spend countless hours on the telephone. For Sailor Jerry, I am going to try my hardest to get to people who know him, interview tattoo artists who carry on his work and/or people who have his tattoos, and maybe even do a little primary research on myself in the form of a brand new tattoo…

3.      What directions do you imagine your secondary research going?

Books, movies, maps, stories, whispers, rumors…secondary research is relatively broad. It’s too soon to really tell right now.

4.      Why is this an interesting subject for you?

Naturally, I’m interested in what my father was doing while he was away for an average of nine months of every year. He’s done some incredibly brave and extraordinarily interesting things, and I’d like to really dig in to that. As for the Sailor Jerry idea, I was damn close a few nights ago to getting the hula pin-up girl tattooed on my forearm in my rum-induced drunken stupor, and to be quite honest, the idea hasn’t fully escaped me. I’ve always been tentative about tattoos, as to whether I want to commit to one or not, and maybe this will serve to sway me one way or the other.

5.      What questions do you have about the topic as you enter it? (These are important because they will help shape what you do at the beginning, but they will almost certainly change as you work on your project.)

Why do you do what you do? Why did he do what he did? Why? Why? Why?