Birmingham Post

THE GOD MAKERS!

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SHAKESPEAR­E’S play As You Like It ends with the wedding of four couples, including Rosalind and Orlando, in a ceremony overseen by the God of Marriage, Hymen. But how do you go about depicting a god on stage? The answer for the Royal Shakespear­e Company’s current production is to create a gigantic puppet, measuring five and a half metres high and 11 metres wide.

Stephen Brimson Lewis (RSC director of design, and set designer for As You Like It), and Mervyn Millar (puppetry director and codesigner), well known for his work on shows such as War Horse, discuss the challenges of creating their version of Hymen...

Why did the puppet need to be so big?

Stephen: Shakespear­e’s As You Like It ends with a great marriage ceremony. He asks for the God of Marriage to appear on stage and bless the couples. In other production­s an actor might change costume and come back dressed as a god. But Kimberley Sykes (the director) and I wanted to make something bigger, to create a moment at the end that felt very different to the rest of the play. We looked at things like the Burning Man Festival in Nevada, where they do these huge events with big puppets – and then a little closer to home, Mervyn and I both remembered the Sultan’s Elephant, which was a huge marionette that went through London in 2006.

Mervyn: At Burning Man they have some things that are extraordin­ary pieces of engineerin­g, made with artistic sensibilit­y – so we knew the opportunit­y was there to make a piece of sculpture on a massive scale that was also able to move dramatical­ly.

What were the initial steps in creating Hymen?

Stephen: The first step in the design process was to research the traditiona­l image of

Hymen. Surprising­ly Hymen turns out to be male, but we decided to make him in to something slightly more androgynou­s.

I’ve certainly never designed a puppet on this scale. That takes a very particular skill so we got in touch with Mervyn and his company Significan­t Object, and asked for his help. I’m delighted he came on board.

Mervyn: Stephen and Kimberley already had a strong concept when they came to me. They showed me some drawings and asked if what they wanted to o create could be done, and whether I could d help. We did some more drawings, and then we had to work out how we could realise that on stage. We had to work out how the actors would operate it, whilst ensuring it could work reliably for over a year’s worth of performanc­es.

How did the design process develop?

Stephen: We had a computer scan of him created, and a full-size polystyren­e head, from which we then cast the materials that created the real head. It’s made from a very simple, almost hat-like material called variform, which you can heat and mould and bend over objects. We also had to make the ‘skin’ and the ‘bones’, and the skeleton had to be a metal structure to ensure it was durable. Alongside that we also had a ‘muscle’ layer which was all made in wood.

Mervyn: We created smaller versions of Hymen and did some work on the computer, but it’s not until you get the final object in the room, when you can handle it, that you can really begin to understand how the joints are going to move and what kind of adjustment it will need. So there was a lot of experiment­ing and testing the joints.

Creating a puppet on this scale must require a lot of people. Can you tell us about who else was involved?

Stephen: I don’t think we’ve ever built anything quite like it here at the RSC, so with Mervyn’s expert advice and skill we pulled together a team from our Scenic Workshops, who make all our sets and props. Quite early on we learnt we needed carpentry, prop making and scenic painting skills, people who could work with a range of materials, particular­ly people who worked with metal to advise us on what the joints would be like. It was a wonderfull­y collaborat­ive process.

Mervyn: The RSC has an amazing group of skilled people: brilliant carpenters, painters and metalworke­rs who’ve got loads of experience, and a technical design team who are willing to take on anything. I have to say the experience was really pleasurabl­e, and the attitude of the staff fantastic. One of the reasons I love puppetry is because it brings all the different technologi­es of the theatre together into one space. It’s got movement, it’s got performanc­e, it’s got design. And it’s always satisfying when everyone’s skills coalesce into this dynamic theatre object.

When was hymen intergrate­d into rehearsals?

Mervyn: Because this puppet is so big, all of the testing of the mechanics had to happen in the workshops. With a smaller puppet, you might make a prototype, send it into the rehearsal rooms and then bring it back onto the workbench and fiddle a bit more. That just wasn’t possible on this project.

Stephen: I was keen to try and introduce the puppet into rehearsals as soon as possible, but it became increasing­ly clear we couldn’t. Our rehearsal rooms in London aren’t big enough or high enough to get him in. We managed t to get him ready for the last week of rehearsa als when we had moved up to Stratford. B Before that, the actors had spent weeks and weeks with broomstick­s, baskets on sticks and lots of sellotape over things so they could get a sense of how big the puppet was going t to be. I’m guessing few quite guessed the s scale until we introduced him on their first d day in Stratford!

How do you hope audiences will react t to Hymen?

Mervyn: It may be made of steel, aluminiu ium, wood, mesh, tissue paper, moss, leaves an and all sorts of strange things, but you want th the audience to believe in it. When he’s on st stage he breathes, looks around the auditorium, and his arms reach out into the space. The audience knows it’s a puppet, but I hope they forget that, and believe the character has come to life.

Stephen: I’m hoping audiences will feel the enjoyment, and, if you like, the playfulnes­s of this character, and enjoy that wonderful suspension of disbelief that you can get with puppets – even though we all know they’re inanimate objects! I certainly got it when I went to see War Horse. You utterly believe it’s a living breathing horse. It was great to discover that Mervyn had been a part of that journey too. I knew then that we were already onto a winner with Hymen.

As You Like It runs in the Royal Shakespear­e Theatre until August 31. See rsc.org.uk

 ??  ?? Hymen being constructe­d at the RSC’s Scenic Workshops Hymen, The God of Marriage, during a performanc­e of As You Like It
Hymen being constructe­d at the RSC’s Scenic Workshops Hymen, The God of Marriage, during a performanc­e of As You Like It

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