puppetguy
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- Joined
- May 14, 2002
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You just have to create your own opportunities. (Like another chap from Minnesota - Joel Hodgson - who cobbled together a few puppets from thrift store junk and wound up with a Peabody Award winning cable show.)
-- Scraps[/QUOTE]
Amen to creating your own opportunities. What some people also don't realize is the amount of work it takes to be a solo puppeteer. Things never happen overnight. I think it was Frank Oz talking about the success of the Muppet Show that said it was an overnight success that was 20 years in the making. Like most folks here, I had high aspirations for working with JHC. It was my childhood dream. But the more I got into puppetry, I realized I liked doing my own thing. I also talked to some "insiders" in the television realm of puppetry and discovered some of the harsh realities that Buck talked about. Its extremely competitive, the work is hardly consistent...I think of my friend Peter Linz who was one of the principal puppeteers on 3 shows at one time (Bear in the Big Blue House, Between the Lions, Book of Pooh) and is now an understudy for Avenue Q. I saw him a few months ago and he said there is no work in NYC right now..everything has wrapped. And yet he has a wife and three children and all the bills that go along with that. It was hard for me to believe that I was in a more stable posisiton as a touring puppeteer than my extremely talented "television personality" friend.
So for the last three years, I've been a full-time touring puppeteer in the Southeast, home basing in Alabama. Last year I did over 200 shows in GA, AL, and FL. This is after being involved in puppetry for the last 13 years. This is one life that no education at UConn or anywhere else can teach you (I know because I went there) Your best bet would be to find a puppeteer whose work you truly respect and see if they'll mentor you. The television industry is entirely different. Growing up, I thought it was "the" job to have in puppetry...and it looks really promising when you see the same names reappear in a majority of Muppet productions. But don't let that fool you. In television, everyone is dispensable and there are about 25 people standing in line for your job when you're dispensed of. In Alabama, I have a puppet monopoly of sorts, I think primarily because nobody's dumb enough to move down here to run a puppet company. But there is a desire and a demand for the kind of work I do in schools and libraries where there is a tremendous lack of quality entertainment for families. So, this is something I provide. And my bills are paid and still have time to pick banjo in a bluegrass band..can't ask for much more than that.
But to restate what Scraps' said, if you want something bad enough, do what it takes to achieve it, especially when it has been proven time and time again that there is very little that cannot be accomplished if the will is strong enough. But don't think there is only one road to "success"....you never know what you might find down a side-road.
David
www.allhandsproductions.com
-- Scraps[/QUOTE]
Amen to creating your own opportunities. What some people also don't realize is the amount of work it takes to be a solo puppeteer. Things never happen overnight. I think it was Frank Oz talking about the success of the Muppet Show that said it was an overnight success that was 20 years in the making. Like most folks here, I had high aspirations for working with JHC. It was my childhood dream. But the more I got into puppetry, I realized I liked doing my own thing. I also talked to some "insiders" in the television realm of puppetry and discovered some of the harsh realities that Buck talked about. Its extremely competitive, the work is hardly consistent...I think of my friend Peter Linz who was one of the principal puppeteers on 3 shows at one time (Bear in the Big Blue House, Between the Lions, Book of Pooh) and is now an understudy for Avenue Q. I saw him a few months ago and he said there is no work in NYC right now..everything has wrapped. And yet he has a wife and three children and all the bills that go along with that. It was hard for me to believe that I was in a more stable posisiton as a touring puppeteer than my extremely talented "television personality" friend.
So for the last three years, I've been a full-time touring puppeteer in the Southeast, home basing in Alabama. Last year I did over 200 shows in GA, AL, and FL. This is after being involved in puppetry for the last 13 years. This is one life that no education at UConn or anywhere else can teach you (I know because I went there) Your best bet would be to find a puppeteer whose work you truly respect and see if they'll mentor you. The television industry is entirely different. Growing up, I thought it was "the" job to have in puppetry...and it looks really promising when you see the same names reappear in a majority of Muppet productions. But don't let that fool you. In television, everyone is dispensable and there are about 25 people standing in line for your job when you're dispensed of. In Alabama, I have a puppet monopoly of sorts, I think primarily because nobody's dumb enough to move down here to run a puppet company. But there is a desire and a demand for the kind of work I do in schools and libraries where there is a tremendous lack of quality entertainment for families. So, this is something I provide. And my bills are paid and still have time to pick banjo in a bluegrass band..can't ask for much more than that.
But to restate what Scraps' said, if you want something bad enough, do what it takes to achieve it, especially when it has been proven time and time again that there is very little that cannot be accomplished if the will is strong enough. But don't think there is only one road to "success"....you never know what you might find down a side-road.
David
www.allhandsproductions.com