Hupshj!

A Musical Fish Farce

Hupshj! – A Musical Fish Farce is a production by Thoring Productions.

In Hupshj! – A Musical Fish Farce the audience can join Torres the Salted Cod, Mia the Jellyfish, Bodil the Urchin and Diemitri the Russian King Crab at the bottom of the sea. None of them are satisfied with their lives. But then the ocean scientist Flink (literally: Clever) shows up, and he isn’t nearly as stupid as he looks.

Hupshj! – A Musical Fish Farce was produced in collaboration with the municipality of Stavanger, The Cultural Rucksack and the food festival Gladmat in Stavanger.

Source: Thoring Productions. 13.12.2010. http://www.rags.no/produksjoner.html

Information

(Objekt ID 1274)
Object type Production
Produced by Thoring Productions
Audience Children, Families (from 0 to 6)
Language Norwegian
Keywords Musical theatre
Running period January 1, 2005  —  December 31, 2006
Website

Requirements to venue

Minimum stage width 5m
Maximum stage width 10m
Minimum stage depth 5m
Maximum stage depth 10m
Maximum stage height 4m
Blackout Yes
Rigging time 90 minutes
Downrigging time 60 minutes
Audience 100
Contributors (10)
Name Role
Ragnhild Thoring – Playwright
Ragnhild Thoring – Direction
Ricardo Odriozola – Music
Tove Sundt-Hansen – Stage design
Tove Sundt-Hansen – Costume
Steffen Bekkelund – Actor
Kristian Arntzen – Actor
Rolf Kristian Larsen – Actor
Beate Iversen – Musician
Siv Kristin Klippen – Musician
Performance dates
Show
Press coverage

"After the first minutes of Hupshj! I thought this was a show for the very smallest, one which adults would have to suffer through to feel as if they were contributing something cultural in the lives of their children. How wrong can one be? I haven’t laughed this well for a long time. The very comical characters are show winners with their madcap interpretations of Finn the Shark, Anemone, Rocking Gunnar, and Ståle the Eel. And the Russian King Crab who is lost in the Norwegian Fishing Zone!"

Hanne Tenfjord Skodje (2006, 29.07) Review titled Kongekrabben gikk seg vill (literally: The King Crab got lost). Stavanger Aftenblad