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SA horse puppets triumph at Tony's

Cape Town - The bits of moulded cane and metal on the Cape Town factory floor are destined to be stars: majestic horses that flick their tails, rear up and gallop with astonishing life-like ease.

The parts - hollow legs, heads and chesty frames - are future giant puppets created for the hit British play War Horse, which has taken both the West End and Broadway by storm.

The World War I drama scooped up six Tony awards in New York on Sunday, including best play and a special Tony for its South African creators.

The host of The Tony Awards, actor Neil Patrick Harris also rode onto stage atop one of the puppets.

'Astonishing'

"We used to cry pretty well every performance," said Basil Jones, co-founder of Cape Town's Handspring Puppet Company, whose horses measure more than two metres.

"It's astonishing. It's amazing to see how at interval the entire house feels like it's weeping."

The story tells of a boy's horse shipped to France in World War I and his owner's search for him.

The main characters, Joey and Topthorn - each fluidly operated by a trio of puppeteers with two inside their giant frames and one at the head - have spellbound and stirred audiences since opening in London in 2007.

"I think we wouldn't be in this business if we didn't believe that puppets had the power to do that. But War Horse has been the show that's proved it strongest," said Jones's partner Adrian Kohler.

Global Acclaim

After turning to adult puppetry in 1985, Handspring is no stranger to global acclaim, and has joined forces with South African artist William Kentridge in productions like Woyzeck on the Highveld and Faustus in Africa.

The company was approached after their play Tall Horse starred a giant giraffe operated by traditional Malian puppeteers on stilts.

But the horses not only had to mirror their real-life counterparts with heaving flanks and ear-wiggling abilities, they also had to support human riders - a first-time challenge for the 30-year-old company.

"It's good if the look is sculptural, but primarily it's got to move and the actors inside of it have to have the space to move and the ability to see all around. So those were starting points and they determined quite early on the nature of the materials we used."

"We were terrified because we just weren't sure at all that worked, and fortunately it did and it worked very well," said Kohler about the first carrying capacity test in front of 20 people in London.

"It was the workshop that convinced the theatre bosses that this was a project that they should greenlight because the horses were able to walk and trot and carry people."

‘A great honour’

Stringently trained and even sleeping in stables, the teams of puppeteers develop instinctive skills that transform the constructions into what reviewers have called "enchantment", "superlative puppetry" and "the stars of the show".

Hollywood director Steven Spielberg recently shot the film version.

"It's a really great honour for our company," said Jones about Sunday's special Tony.

The Tony Awards, which are given for best Broadway achievement, are considered the theatre equivalent of the Oscars.

"Both the makers and the performers are part of what Handspring is and each has a totally different set of skills, but they are both of a very high order. So that's where the award goes really - to them."


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