Quantcast Muleskinner
College Media Network

Professor ' personality shown in puppets

Wayne Dean: Digitalburg

Issue date: 9/4/08 Section: Life & Leisure
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
A student spends many hours crafting puppets that resemble UCM theatre professors.
Media Credit: Dustin Freund: Digitalburg
A student spends many hours crafting puppets that resemble UCM theatre professors.

Richard Herman poses with his look-alike puppet.
Media Credit: Dustin Freund: Digitalburg
Richard Herman poses with his look-alike puppet.

Long hours and secrecy enabled Kathleen Reid to put together one last memorable production for the UCM theatre department.

At the end of January, Reid started working on caricature puppets of each staff and faculty member. She worked a couple of hours a day early on and progressed to 15-hour days as her deadline approached, she said. No one knew about the puppets until they saw themselves portrayed in a puppet show written by Paul Rundle.

The puppets were first revealed at the annual Theatre Awards Banquet. During the banquet, awards were given out and a slide show chronicling the past school year was shown. Then, Reid went up on stage and announced something else was in store.

The puppet show opened with all the professors in a staff meeting debating on what shows should be run next season. Each professor's personality came out in his or her suggestion.

After getting nowhere, the staff turned to the glue that keeps the office together, office professional Colette E. Tilden.

It was fitting that the puppets on stage looked to Colette's puppet for the answer, Reid said.

"It really turned into a tribute to Colette," Reid said. "Most of us wouldn't have graduated without her. Some people even say Colette is the reason they graduated.

"At all the events, she gets a standing ovation."

Reid said her favorite puppet was of lighting and design instructor Jeff Peltz. Peltz's puppet had the slim-framed glasses and a cigarette in hand. It completely captured Peltz, she said.

When department head Richard "Buzz" Herman first saw his puppet, he was proud of his student.

"I was just amazed by the detail," Herman said. "I even wear those same clothes."

Karen Page's puppet had her fiery red hair, while Herman's puppet had a last-minute addition in the form of a crutch.

Herman broke his leg while riding his motorcycle in his front yard a week before the banquet, Reid said. He now has to walk around on crutches.

Reid waited until the last minute to decide to do puppets for her senior honors project. Make-up and design instructor Ronnie Chamberlain said most students just do a boring paper for their honors project.

"I wanted to get my grand ($1,000) for completing my honors project," Reid said. "I was up really, really late at night and it just hit me."

An avid Sesame Street watcher, Reid knew she had to do it right. Spending at least six to eight hours a day perfecting the puppets, she knew she was getting close to finishing when she laughed at the puppets as they all came together.

Working with new materials gave Reid some experience making puppets. She did, however, have help from friends to bring everything together. Michele Fanfone helped with the hair and creating some outfits for the puppets.

Making it to scale was the hardest part, Reid said.

The puppets are on display outside Highland Theatre between UCM's Wood and Martin Buildings. Reid gave the puppets to each professor, and no one was sure what the future of the puppets would be.
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

jeff paul

posted 2/11/09 @ 1:57 AM CST

Those puppets definitely have a pretty uncanny resemblance to their puppetmasters!! That kind of... freaks me out a bit, haha. Reid did a great job. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Is this summer moving by too fast or too slow?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement