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Introducing Thai Theatrical Puppetry The thratrical puppetry is unique smong the various forms of puppetry in that each puppet represents a character taken from the traditional Thai theater. There are three types of traditional Thai theatrical performances, all of which are stylized, with dancing, singing and music comparable in complexity with the European opera-ballet of the 18th century French royal court at Versailles. The most sophisticated od these is khon, which performs only the ramakian (the Thai versoin of the Indian epic, Ramayana); the less ssophisticated is lakhon, performs all other classics of Thai drama; and the least sophisticated is likey, which performs common drames, Thai theatrical puppetry is also unique in that each puppet requires the synchronised efforts of three puppeteers is its manipulation, all of whom appear on stage with the puppet and each of whom is khon, lakhon or likay performer in his or her own right. The puppets, in short, perform khon, lakhon or likay on stage with the puppeteers, where the name 'theatrical puppetry'. The Traditional Thai Puppet Theater Company is the authoritative guardian of this dying art form: the directors and senior members of the troupe are direct artistic seccessors of the founder of Thai theatrical puppetry. Performances are as unique as they are authentic Performance at the Traditional Thai Puppet Theater are s showcase for Thailand 's cultural heritage and reflect the undtinting efforts of the troupe to preserve and perpetuate this exotic art form. CreatetionThai theatritic puppetry was invented in 1901 by the legendary khon dancer, Krae saptawanit. Maestro Krae was inspried to create puppets when he saw the grace and ingenuity of the royal puppets and of the puppetsof the deputy king 's palace. The first puppet the created was of the charactor he portrayed on the khon stage, the principal male character. This puppet stood two feet tall. However, he found that in order to make its movements realistic and approximate the movements of khon dances, he needed the help of his theatrical colleagues. The meahanisms and the techniques were quickly perfected, and a new kind of puppetry was invented. Early PopularityAfter creating his first puppet and perfecting the mechanism and the technques for manipulating it, Maestro Krae Saptawanit made more puppets and soon founded a troupe of puppeteers that could perform khon with puppets. Performances were frequent and popula. The principal characters were each manipulated by three puppeteers, and the rest were manipulated by two puppeteers, or even by one puppeteer, depending on how mach movement was required. In the early decades of the theatrical puppetry, the puppeteers stood behind a screen and manipulated the puppets above it, so the viewers could only see the puppets but not the puppeteers. There were male and female puppeteers, but there was no davision of labor. The NameThai aristocrats and theater people who saw Maestro Krae Saptawanit 's performances called his invent Hun Lakorn Lek -'hun' means model or puppet; 'lakorn' refers to staged drama; and 'lek' means amall because the puppets were smaller than the characters of Thai staged dramas. The original Thai name is sometimes tranlated as 'Small Theatrical Puppetry',which is misleading in European languages as western puppets are always small, and to add the adjective ' small' to puppets would suggest that the puppets are minuscule. In fact, the so- called 'Small Theatrical Puppets' first created by Maestro Krae Saptawanit have grown:they now stand at three feet. The word 'small' has been appropriately dropped from the English name. |




