The Province

Beware the cartoon clown show

Puppets bring Carroll’s 28-line nonsense poem to life in 70 silent, wacky minutes

- Jerry Wasserman

› On stage Jabberwock­y

When: To Feb. 17 Where: York Theatre Tickets/Info: From $22 at thecultch.com

In theatre, as in life, there are things that seem like a good idea at the time. Jabberwock­y, from Calgary’s Old Trout Puppet Workshop, must have been one.

Lewis Carroll’s Jabberwock­y is a nonsense poem that the author included in Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There, his 1871 sequel to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Alice finds the poem written backwards, holds it up to a mirror and reads:

“’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves/ Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:/All mimsy were the borogoves,/And the mome raths outgrabe.”

A father warns his son, “Beware the Jabberwock!”

Ignoring dad’s advice, the son takes “his vorpal sword in hand,” goes on a quest to kill the terrible monster and does.

“O frabjous day!” chortles the father. “Callooh! Callay!”

Despite the semblance of a plot, Alice is completely puzzled. Not so the Trouts, who flesh out the poem and its made-up words with characters and a storyline, but no dialogue, creating their own nonsense world out of Carroll’s.

As they’ve shown in previous visits to The Cultch, the Trouts’ concept of puppetry is eclectic. The characters here range from two-dimensiona­l cardboard cut-outs held by the four actors, to kid-size puppets manipulate­d by the actors while rolling along on wheeled platforms, to the actors themselves in masks (Nicolas Di Gaetano, Teddy Ivanova, Pityu Kenderes, Sebastian Kroon).

Their characters, for no apparent reason, are rabbits.

The storyline involves dad bunny leaving domestic life with sword and armour, coming home defeated, and kid rabbit taking up the challenge, but maybe being co-opted (I’m reaching here) by the contingenc­ies of urban life and the temptation­s of domesticit­y. Or not.

The style of the show is based partly on Victorian models: toy theatres made of cardboard, and scrolling panoramas. Most of the colourful set pieces the actors drag on and offstage are painted cardboard, and settings are indicated by painted canvas scrolls the actors change by turning hand-cranks on stage.

Without dialogue, we get a silent film-like cartoon clown show. A few sequences resonated with me: a clever visual compositio­n where the kid rabbit watches mom and dad bunny having sex; a surprising scene at kid rabbit’s grad dance; a recurring bully bunny who torments our hero.

Carroll’s poem totals 28 lines. The Old Trouts’ play runs for 70 minutes.

Collective­ly created by the company, Jabberwock­y has also been collective­ly directed. And it shows.

Still, the actors all have a good time, and the opening night audience, although pretty quiet throughout, cheered at the end.

The Trouts have internatio­nal cred and the show goes on from here to Spain and France.

So, maybe I’m missing something when I say, “Beware the Jabberwock.”

 ??  ?? The characters in Old Trout Puppet Workshop’s offbeat production of Jabberwock­y are rabbits, for no apparent reason.
The characters in Old Trout Puppet Workshop’s offbeat production of Jabberwock­y are rabbits, for no apparent reason.

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