Sara Peattie

From WikiProjectMed
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Sara Peattie (b 1951) is a giant puppet artist and runs Boston's Puppet Free Library. [1]

Education

Peattie is an alumna of Antioch College[2]

Career

Peattie began her puppetry career in 1969 at the age of 18 when she studied under Peter Schumann, cofounder of the politically radical Bread & Puppet Theater.[1] She left high school and travelled with Bread & Puppet Theatre to Europe for a year where she participated in street actions in Eastern Europe and to protest the Vietnam war[3] and "tangle[d] with police forces".[4]

Puppeteers Cooperative

Peattie founded The Puppeteers Cooperative in 1976 with fellow puppeteer George Konnoff in San Francisco. The Puppeteers Cooperative is a nonprofit association of puppeteers, theatre artists and musicians the help build community outreach and education.[1]

Puppet Free Library

Peattie founded and manages Boston's Puppet Free Library. The library is located in the basement of Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Boston. It houses a collection of large puppets that can be lent to users for parades and other events. It also houses Peattie's studio. The puppets are often used by schools and in parades, including Boston's First Night New Year's celebration. The puppets are generic characters (e.g., giant cats, flowers, dragons)[3], as opposed to specific persons (e.g., Donald Trump) or characters (e.g., Pinocchio).[4]

Publications

Peattie is the author of the booklet "68 Ways to Make Really Big Puppets".[5]

Honors

In 2016 Peattie received the annual Paul Vincent Davis Award from the Puppet Showplace Theater in Brookline, MA for her lifetime contribution to puppet making.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c Emily Niedermeyer (March 16, 2023). "'It's sweet when puppets remain alive': Boston puppet library animates local events". The Huntington News.
  2. ^ "Puppeteering workshop offered". Xenia Daily Gazette. April 9, 1996. p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c Cristela Guerra (July 1, 2016). "Borrow a bit of magic from Boston's Puppet Free Library". Boston Globe.
  4. ^ a b Kana Ruhalter; Arun Rath (February 26, 2024). "Boston's free puppet library features creations the founder 'dreamed into existence'". WGBH.
  5. ^ Ira Kantor (Fall 2007). "Creations From The Cooperative" (PDF). Puppetry International. p. 35-37.