Saturday, June 9, 2012

Puppets


19 Nocturne Avenue (I love that name) has a long history of producing audio drama, and the first play of theirs that I heard, Puppets, is an impressive testimony to their years of experience.  Julie Hoverson seems to be the creative powerhouse behind much of 19 Nocturne Avenue, and Puppets is no exception.  The anonymous host is obviously in the style of OTR suspense radio classics like The Witch’s Tale and in the UK, The Man in Black.  While I found Puppets very interesting and quite enjoyable, it was also confusing—due, I think, to the ambitiousness of the production, which excelled in areas like sweeping, atmospheric music and delightfully gruesome sound effects.  

The story is a lot to take on.  It’s historical (set in 1920), refers to the grand guignol theatre tradition which even frequent listeners to suspense may not be aware of, uses a flashback style of narration, and has a Maupassant-like ending.  I was, in fact, familiar with grand guignol, not least because of Big Finish’s Eighth Doctor play, Scapegoat.  Setting aside the fact that Scapegoat is not one of the most effective plays in that range, it at least presented a clear distinction between the backstage scenes and those presented to a crowd whose reactions ranged from the jaded to the disgusted.  However, the nature of the story being told in Puppets could not make those distinctions clear and therefore created a great deal of confusion; confusion that could lead to frustration rather than ambiguity that forms tantalizing questions.  With this fundamental issue taking place, the fact the story was told in a non-linear fashion also contributed to a sense of groping in the dark that had nothing to do with the audio pictures, which were theatrical, engaging, and grim, created in part by solid performances, and the effects which I mentioned earlier.  Even the BBC Dracula (1998) dared not be so aurally graphic in its depiction of Lucy’s staking as Puppets did in the severing of a characters hand, which included the sound of evacuating blood pulsing obscenely!   

Scapegoat and Puppets seem to have the same “wheeze” going on regarding the reality of the murder and violence enacted onstage, but in fact they differ greatly, leading to the aforementioned Maupassant ending, which was entirely unexpected and very clever.  


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