Mother
Mother is one of the characters in the fairytale Little Red Riding Hood, which was made into a children’s television programme at NRK in 1967/68. The fairytale was one of several educational programmes about puppetry that were broadcast in the series I Kosekroken (“In the cosy corner”). Little Red Riding Hood was was produced with a studio audience of children from Nøklevann school in Oslo. Ebbe Ording was the producer of the programmes, and the presenters and puppeteers were Bjørg and Arne Mykle.
Agnar and Jane Mykle are considered pioneers in professional puppetry in Norway. By integrating Little Red Riding Hood in I Kosekroken, NRK helped to preserve the Mykles’ work for posterity.
Information
(Objekt ID 145800)Object type | Puppet |
Production date | 1967 |
Category | Glove puppet |
Themes | Children, Television figure |
Size | Approximately 55 to 60 cm |
License | The descendants of the Mykle family. On loan from Asker Museum. |
Teaterfigur
Teaterfigurer, bedre kjent som teaterdukker, har spilt på norske scener i generasjoner, til stor glede for publikum i alle aldersgrupper.
Five episodes of I Kosekroken were produced, 20 minutes each in length. In the first programme, Fingerleker (“Finger games”), the presenters used their hands and fingers to perform. In another episode, Dukketeater på loftet ("Puppet theatre in the attic"), they took away the puppetry stage and used clothes, chests and other objects in the attic as a backdrop.
Bjørg and Arne Mykle were primary school teachers. They had learned puppetry and puppet making from Arne’s father Agnar and his wife Jane Mykle (Arne’s stepmother). The younger Mykle generation would later take over their parents’ puppets and productions from Agnar and Jane Mykle.
SOURCES:
Helgesen, Anne: Descriptions for the TV puppet exhibition "Alle tiders barndomshelter" ("Childhood heroes through the generations"), Slottsfjellsmuseet/Figurfestspillene, 19–28 January 2024.
Helgesen, Anne: Animasjonen – Figurteatrets velsignelse og forbannelse. Norsk figurteaterhistorie ("Animation – a blessing and a curse for puppetry: A history of Norwegian puppetry"), PhD dissertation in Theatre Studies, Oslo University 2003, p.139
Ownership: Mykle’s descendants / on loan from Asker Museum
Transmitted to Sceneweb: 06.02.2024.
The glove puppets produced by Jane Mykle were generally made using the same method. The technique is described in detail in the book Dukketeater! (“Puppetry”; Gyldendal, 1954) that she wrote with her husband Agnar Mykle.
The technique is as follows: the heads are formed in clay or plasticine. Newspaper or cotton gauze is moulded around the head with glue. When the moulded head (and neck) has dried it is cut in half, and the clay or plasticine is removed before it is glued together again. Any uneven spots can be repaired with plaster, before the head is primed, painted and given character. The puppet must have an undergarment that is made to fit the puppeteer’s hand, so that all the fingers have a function: the head is controlled by the index finger, the thumb controls the puppet’s left hand (on a puppet held on the right hand) and the other three fingers control the puppet’s right hand. The head and the undergarment are joined together at the neck.
The overgarment, whose appearance and details give the puppet character, is also joined to the neck. Mother wears a creamy yellow blouse and a green, patterned waistcoat or similar, with an eyecatching scarf around her neck. A dark skirt is attached to the top with a wide green band. An embroidered bag typical of the Norwegian national style is also attached to the waistcoat. Mother has red hair and a smiling face. Her hands are mitten-like, made of a beige material.
The above description is based on photographs, and detailed knowledge of the Mykle family’s glove puppet tradition.
The construction/ production of the puppet is described above. The figure has to fit the performer’s hand well so that the figure can be animated well. It should not be heavy and the materials that form the body should be soft and easy for the puppeteer’s hand to move. A heavy puppet made with stiff materials is difficult to animate and the performer’s arm will quickly become tired. Performing with puppets requires small movements – only a few centimetres to move a puppet’s hand; it is really theatre in miniature. Glove puppetry can be wonderful when the performer is an expert at his/her craft.
The above description is based on photographs and detailed knowledge of the Mykle family’s glove puppet tradition.
Agnar and Jane Mykle stayed in Paris in 1947/48, studying puppetry with the well-known artist Marcel Temporal. He revived the popular French puppetry tradition, also known as the Guignol tradition, which featured standard characters and vividly temperamental acting, mainly with glove puppets.
The younger Mykle generation, Bjørg and Arne Mykle, started to perform in Oslo’s Frogner Park, at the summer flower exhibitions called “Form og Flora” in the 1960s, and at the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History (Norsk Folkemuseum) on Bygdøy. Their productions Little Red Riding Hood and Hansel and Gretel alternated with each other.
Jane Mykle (person) | – Designer, Puppet Maker |
NRK (organization) | – Creator |
I Kosekroken (production) | – Glove puppet |