With apologies to Mary Poppins: 鈥淥h, it鈥檚 a jolly 鈥榦liday with Ronnie/Ronnie makes your 鈥榚art so light/When the day is grey and ordi-nary/Ronnie makes the sun shine bright.鈥
Ronnie Burkett, brilliant Canadian puppeteer, takes a few digs at prim and proper Mary Poppins playing across town at the Stanley Theatre so it鈥檚 fair game to paraphrase lyrics from the Sherman brothers to celebrate one of our own. Proudly sporting a Movember 鈥榮tache, Burkett warns those of us who love his bittersweet existential shows that The Daisy Theatre is just going to be silly fun. And not necessarily good clean fun: 鈥淚 hope I offend all of you.鈥 Off to a good start, he refers to Heather Redfern, the Cultch鈥檚 executive director, as 鈥淗eather Rugburn.鈥 Naughty boy.
Born in Lethbridge, Alta., Burkett says he has been captivated by puppetry since the age of seven; at 14, he began touring his shows around Alberta. The Ronnie Burkett Theatre of Marionettes was formed in 1986 and Burkett now plays on major Canadian as well as on international stages. His breakthrough show was Tinka鈥檚 New Dress in 1994 and what followed was a flurry of awards including the prestigious Siminovitch Prize for Theatre in 2009. New Yorkers love him: 鈥淥ne of the geniuses of the world鈥 seeing his troupe every few years has just become a necessity of civilized theatergoing,鈥 raved The Village Voice. To know him (and not in the Biblical sense, although there are those 鈥 oh, well, let鈥檚 not go there) is to adore him.
Inspired by the illegal underground puppet shows of Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia, The Daisy Theatre is partly scripted, partly improvised and includes variety acts, music and monologues. Mostly, it鈥檚 Burkett getting down, dirty and funny with his fans. And The Daisy Theatre will be different every night so you can be charmed more than once. Ever seen a puppet stripper? Wait 鈥榯il you see Miss Dolly Wiggler wiggle her T&A whilst singing, 鈥淲hen it鈥檚 time to snack/They love my rack.鈥 Things go from naughty to naughtier with aging diva Esme Massengill聽 (鈥渢he lovechild of Tallulah Bankhead and Mr. Magoo鈥) dragging her wasted body on stage where she laments (or enthuses): 鈥淚鈥檓 on my knees again in Vancouver.鈥
The Daisy Theatre is not all wicked. Old prairie widow Edna Rural from Turnip Corner, Alta., spins a love story 鈥 peppered with the oft-repeated 鈥淟ord, love-a-duck鈥 鈥 so poignantly you will imagine her farmer husband Stanley is right there beside her.
Burkett has never been so open to his audience as he is in this show. On opening night, he had to stop, briefly, to get over a laughing fit. His asides are hilarious: when one puppet apologizes for his awkward moves, the puppet explains, 鈥淚鈥檓 sorry. I鈥檓 hung this way.鈥 Burkett breaks up and tells us, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a line I use a lot.鈥
The heart of the show is Schnitzel, a strange, pale little creature who encourages us to find our wings and fly. But just as things get a little too sweet with Schnitzel, Burkett pulls the rug out and gets us laughing again. He doesn鈥檛 do sentimentality. It鈥檚 amazing how fixed our focus is on those little puppets, 鈥13 inches of fun-in-the-dark on the East Side,鈥 quips one of 20 or 30 puppets waiting their turn in the shadows. Burkett is visible the whole time, manipulating the strings or as satanic puppet Murray Teufel says, 鈥渏erkin鈥 me around.鈥 When Burkett steps down onto the little stage with the puppets 鈥 as he does now and again, the puppets look normal; he looks like The Friendly Giant.
And he is: he鈥檚 a giant on the national and international stage. He鈥檚 having a rollicking, fun-filled time at the Cultch 鈥 and audiences are, too. To know Burkett is to be enchanted by him and his exquisite little wooden, papier m芒ch茅 and cloth friends.
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