Performed by Yeung Fai and Yoann
Pencolé
Dolphin Theatre 14 – 17 February
The Chinese master glove puppeteer
Yeung Fai has set out to achieve many things in Hand Stories, and he’s
succeeded handsomely in all of them.
The work is a history of his
family over three generations of puppeteers (there are more – Fai and his elder
brother are the fifth generation of practitioners) and, by extension, of modern
China.
That history is rich, and
threaded with silken beauty, but the danger of sudden, capricious oppression is
ever-present, and has brought tragedy and exile to Fai and his family in its
wake.
Hand Stories is also about
education and training, and Fai exposes his techniques, often in scenes with
his “apprentice”, Yoann Pencolé.
And, of course, there’s the
puppetry itself, from sheer beauty to boisterous brawling, comedy, pathos, the
human condition worn on a master’s hand.
As the scenes play out, we pass
down the line from father to son to son’s sons, signified by the lighting,
passing and extinguishing of lamps.
It’s a fragile link, and one
always with the potential to be broken; twice, in the Cultural Revolution of
the ‘60s and ‘70s, and again during the Tiananmen Square protests in 198, the
state (represented by a golden-scaled, rapacious dragon) tore the family apart.
Fai’s father died in a “re-education camp” during the first, his brother only
barely escaped to the US in the wake of the other.
Fai himself now lives in Paris,
and his work cannot be seen in his own country.
Of course, for all the personal
history and political commentary, an audience still wants the skills of the
puppeteer and the peculiar sensation of witnessing the imitation of life in
tiny figures. And Fai is, perhaps uniquely, able to deliver.
The first tableaux (one of his
grandfather’s devising) is the courtship of a reluctant beauty by a portly
suitor. The woman is flawless – every pitch of head, every attitude of hand,
perfection. The suitor, too, is perfect in his movement, his ardour and
frustration growing as she rebuffs his advances. The comedy is wonderful,
drawing the first of many howls of laughter from the audience.
Just as interesting is the
emotional transfer from puppeteer to puppet. Fai doesn’t operate passively in
the gloom behind the puppets; he leans in, he participates in their emotions.
And he does so constantly
throughout, through an exhilarating martial arts battle between two pint-size
warriors (who needs Shaolin monks when you’ve got these little blokes), the
rampages of the dragons and, in an inspired routine, the battle of a traveller
and a tiger, played away from the audience so we could see the “backstage”
workings of a puppet show.
Throughout there were examples
of Fai’s unique mastery; he hurls costumes in the air and they fall into place
over the puppet, he throws and spins plates in his puppet’s hands. It’s
marvelous to watch.
The show loses does lose
momentum once, in a sequence about his brother’s tribulations in the US
featuring a puppet guardian angel who communicates in Queen songs. Fai isn’t on
such solid ground here, and the sequence is a little forced and uncomfortable.
Hand Stories is back on track soon
enough, as with delicious incense and soft lamplight, Fai passes his secrets on
to his apprentice, and the deep mysteries of the generations overcome another
crisis and go on.
I hope there are many more
generations of these great artists to come.
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