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Czech puppets over the centuries
(author Alice Dubská, Czech puppets over the centuries)
The International Institute of Puppet Arts in Prague


Czech puppeteer has achieved this significant status for a number of reasons. First and foremost there is still a widespread, although by no means completely historically accurate, conception of the role played by Czech puppeteers in the period of the national revival, that exceptional process, at the end of the 18th ant beginning of the 18th centuries, whereby the modern Czech nation was formed, and the leading forces of the nation combined to fight against the gradual decline of the Czech language and to give rise to a new national self-confidence within Czech society. The amateur puppet movement, widespread in the first half of the 20th century, also evokes feelings considerable respect and, after the period of the folk puppeteers in the 19th century, forms the second critical phase in the history of the development of Czech puppetry.

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II. From puppet production in the middle ages to baroque Marionettes

The majority of historians divide the history of the Czech puppet theatre into three main phases of development:

  1. the phase of the traditional folk marionettes or, more precisely itinerant puppet players, beginning in the last quarter of the 18th century and finishing at the end of the 19th century

  2. the phase of amateur puppeteers in the 1st half of the 20th century

  3. the phase of the modern professional puppet theatre, meaning, in this country, the period after 1948

This division into periods isn't completely straightforward and is to a certain degree even unsystematic. After all, itinerant marionette players were active in this country until the 50s of this century, the activities of the amateur puppeteers covers all three of these phases and the same is true of professional forms of puppet theatre. The basic principle behind this schema of periods however can be justified as in each given phase of development precisely these ways of performing Czech puppet theatre undeniably determined its form and above all provided the decisive impetus for its further development. If we return to the second half of the 18th century, where the majority of historians locate the beginning of Czech puppetry, we must stress that it is in essence the beginning of the continuous and related development of Czech theatre, corresponding in its basic features, form, organizations and function to our modern understanding of theatrical system. This doesn't mean of course that puppets and puppet theatre (or occasionally only elements of it) were not presented in this part of Europe before that time.

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III. Czech country folk puppeteers

In the second half of the 18th century theatre practitioners of the most varying types were still touring the Czech lands, and a still plentiful number of puppeteers among them. Their paths took two main routes: one led from Saxony through Teplice to Prague on to Moravia and from there to Hungary or Transylvania, the other went from Italy and Austria to Bratislava or straight through Moravia to Bohemia or Poland. Czech names are however beginning to appear in the official applications for permits to perform puppet productions, and espite an insufficiency or historical evidence we can assume that from the 70s of that century the first Czech performing puppeteers appeared in this country.

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IV. In the second quarter of the 19th century

There were more then 200 puppeteers working in the territory of the Czech lands. For more some it was just a means of making a living, while others formed a deeper relation to the profession and the lifestyle which went with it. For the most part they were members of larger dispersed families, in which the father successively handed his successors not only equipment and experience but also a strong passion for puppets. The important puppeteering family of the Maizners, who were all dedicated to puppet theatre in a direct line until the 60s of this century, worked mostly in the east of Bohemia. They were puppeteers with a high level of self-confidence, link to tradition and patriotic sympathies. It is thanks to them that some of the very oldest puppet scripts have survived along with a collection of very valuable puppets from the workshop woodcarving family of the Suchardas.

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V. The Amateur Puppeteers

The picture of Czech puppetry at the end of the 19th century would not be complete if we didn´t mention the increasing activity of amateur puppeteers. They tried to take advantage especially of the personally unassuming nature of the puppet theatre for their own theatrical activities as early as the middle of the 19th century. This tendency grew more in the last decades and by the beginning of the 20th century we can talk about movement, which basically launched the phase of modern puppetry, despite the fact that initially the amateurs were totally under the influence of the traditional folk puppeteers. Public amateur activity was precursored by a marked expansion of domestic, so-called family puppet theatres.

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VI. The development of permanent puppet venues in the 1920s

The revolutionary historic changes which occurred with the end of the first world war, the collapse of the Austrio-Hungarian monarchy and the formation of the Czechoslovak Republic, influenced all areas of social life. With conditions of peace and a newly acquired state independence there was a great liberation of the creative powers of the whole nation. For Czech puppeteering, whose natural progress had been halted by the war, there came a period of the most intensive expansion to date. Every year hundreds of new theatres appeared which played regularly on Saturday and Sunday for young spectators - by the end of the 1930s they numbered almost three thousand. Performances took place everywhere: in large towns (20-35 groups were active in Prague at that time), and even in small villages.

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VII. From Kašpárek to Spejbl and Hurvínek

Skupa began to make his presence felt as an actor, director and author. He soon showed an ability to take control of master the puppet theatre in its entirely and went on to become the exact personality, with a complex sense of theatre, which Czech theatre was lacking. His great talent as an actor led Skupa to an unerring understanding of the laws of the puppet theatre. He often deferred his artistic aims to the capabilities of the puppets, and thus sought to limit the artistic hegemony which was characteristic of that period. For the first time in the modern history of puppetry in this country a new hierarchy was established among the production elements, in which priority was given to the puppet and its specific characteristics.

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VIII. The arrival of new development trends in the 1930s

In 1929 on the occasion of the International Puppetry Exhibiton representative European puppeteers met in the Realm of Puppets and founded the international association of puppeteers UNIMA and Jin?ich Veselý was elected its first president. The efforts in the 1930s to find new styles was instigated by renewed interest in the staging of plays for live actors. Unlike in previous years, this decision wasn´t made in an effort to spice up the repertoire. Many young directors produced particularly challenging texts with a distinguished tradition of performance in order to test their directorial abilities.

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IV. Czech Puppeteers under the Nazi occupation

The historical events of 1938, when the Munich agreement led to the dissolution of the Czechoslovak Republic and, in spring 1939, the occupation of the whole Czech lands by nazi Germany, together with the ensuing outbreak of the second world war, had a profound effect on the whole of the Czech nation. The initial skepticism and despair was soon replaced by a national determination not to submit to the pressure of the German occupants and protect the threatened national identity, especially in the field of national culture ant the arts. Needless to say, this new situation also had consequences for Czech puppetry. With the annexation of the border regions, Czech puppeteering lost almost a quarter of its puppet theatres. The outlawing of the Sokol organisation in 1940 had a particularly harsh effect on Czech puppeteering, as its puppet component was one of the most active elements of Czech puppetry at that time.

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