Puppeteers bring stories to life for young Lincoln readers
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[July 27, 2016]
LINCOLN
- Lincoln Public Library Youth Service Librarian Melissa Oxborrow
likes to mix things up for the Thursday morning entertainment for
the library’s summer reading program. She likes to blend ever
popular favorites from previous years with new performers. When
asked about this week’s show entitled Clothespin Puppets, she said
“I don’t know what to expect. They are a new act for us.”
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Oxborrow need not have worried. The couple behind the puppetry, Dr.
Mike O’Brien and his wife Jenna brought a fun and imaginative
program to the library annex that had their young audience
captivated.
Mike is a theatre professor at Parkland Community College, and Jenna
is a music and art teacher for kids in kindergarten through third
grade. They perform about forty shows a year traveling from their
home base of Gibson City to libraries and schools in Illinois
focusing on family reading and young authors programs.
When asked about the focus on puppetry in their show, Mike explained
that he became fascinated with the history of puppetry. “Puppetry
has a long tradition all over the world, hundreds of years, but not
so much in the US because of our young country,” he said. He became
so fascinated with puppetry that he completed a PhD in the subject.
“Puppetry is a way of telling a story visually that captivates the
audience,” he said.
Clothespin Puppets is a family affair for the O’Briens. Mike and
wife Jenna presented the program Thursday morning, but Mike is often
accompanied by their daughter Maggie. They also construct all of the
sets and the charming puppets.
Mike and Jenna choose eight children’s books for each show and then
transcribe the written stories and illustrations to the stage
complete with sets and puppets in the image of characters in the
books. The dialog comes straight from the books, and the O’Brien
acting company does all the voices of the characters. “We are story
tellers based on kid’s books,” Mike said.
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Their rendition of the fable Repunzel and her long golden hair was
filled with fast rhyming that brought the house down, and taught an
important lesson about clear communication.
The Clothespin Puppets mark the end of the Lincoln Public Library
summer reading program “Read for the Win.”
Now the young readers get to tally up their reading results to
determine if they match the goals set at the beginning of the
program. This is an exciting time.
The Lincoln Public Library provides the books and entertainment and
the young readers provide the motivation to read and the curiosity
that can only be cured by reading a book.
[Curtis Fox]
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