Polaroid Photo

Fri
19
Jan '07

Aimeecon

For some reason, writers can’t seem to get together without calling it a con. I guess so we can write it off. Tonight, Ken Scholes invited a slew of writers down to the Barley Mill Pub to meet Aimee Amodio, who is every bit as funny and delightful as Ken promised. So nice when a gentleman keeps his word like that.

Also paying court to Miss Amodio were Jay Lake, Damian Kilby, Kai Jones, Cat, Benjamin and… here is where my facility for names falls apart, because I can’t remember the name of the last lovely gentleman. Ken will correct me, I’m sure.

It’s so nice to shoot the breeze with other writers without the pressure of an actual convention. I think we were all in the same time zone, except Aimee. Poor sleep-deprived east coaster.

Fri
19
Jan '07

Maggie

My cat Maggie is sitting on my lap while I write for the first time since Monday when Zamboni arrived. Zamboni is a very well-behaved, but exuberant black Labrador. She hasn’t met cats before, so her natural reaction is to lunge and back.

We’ve been bringing Maggie downstairs and praising Zamboni is she doesn’t lunge or bark. Today I carried Maggie down, and Zamboni only whined and sniffed, then wandered off and lost interest. That’s great progress, so Maggie can sit in my lap while I work again.

Fri
19
Jan '07

Life with a touring puppeteer: 1998, Day 15


Thursday, October 22, 1998
Day Fifteen


Sungura neck

Ah- life on the road… Sungura broke again. But it was a new problem this time! How exciting. He has two joints in his neck. One at the base of the head and one at the base of the neck, where it joins his body. Up until now I’d been dealing with the fact that the bicycle cable, that controls the first joint, kept pulling out of his head. Now the joint at the base of his neck gave. He was spending the entire show looking not just down, not just at me, but slightly upstage as well. It’s hard to deliver the line “Do you know why I’m so happy?!” when your puppet can’t look up.

Inside Sungura's neck

So between shows I opened up his neck and this is what I discovered. The surgical tubing which acted as an elastic stop had torn. You’re looking for the grey and beige tube that’s almost exactly in the middle of the picture. Notice the grey color. That’s not original, it’s just how old this tubing is. It’s also supposed to loop around the key-ring and back up to the hose clamp.

New Tubing in Sungura's neck

Fortunately we travel with some useful supplies and I did have tubing to replace it with. It was held on with a hose clamp, so it was a simple matter to loosen it and insert the new tube.

A repaired Sungura

Lo! He can now stand upright again. His head moves great. I hadn’t realized until this point that the damage had also been interfering with left/right movement as well. But his neck movement is so smooth now that there is a noticeable improvement.

Sungura examing the ceiling

Unfortunately, since I fixed him right before the show I didn’t get a chance to really work him before I started performing. I’ve been working so hard to compensate for the damage, that when I had a functioning puppet again, I made all sorts of horrible mistakes. For instance, his head tended to lock in the up position you see to the right.

But I got used to it and it’s sooooo much better.