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Italy: Iranian Puppets Dance To Music Of Italian Master

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  • Italy: Iranian Puppets Dance To Music Of Italian Master

    ITALY: IRANIAN PUPPETS DANCE TO MUSIC OF ITALIAN MASTER

    Adnkronos International Italia
    Oct 3, 2008
    Italy

    Rome, 3 Oct. (AKI) - Forty Iranian puppets are to dance on stage to
    the music of Italian composer, Giuseppe Verdi, in a rare production
    being staged in the northern city of Turin on Saturday.

    The puppet show, directed by Iranian Behrooz Gharibpour, brings to
    the stage William Shakespeare's 'Macbeth' presented with the music
    of Verdi at the Incanti Festival.

    Twenty-five girls control the puppets in the theatre production. The
    company previously staged an Iranian tragedy by poet Abolghassem
    Ferdowsi at Rome's Argentina Theatre using the music of Armenian,
    Lori Tjeknavorian.

    But it is rare for puppets to be seen interpreting a
    tragedy. Gharibpour, who studied theatre in Rome at the end of
    the 1970s, said there was a mistaken view that puppets were only
    "superficial" distraction for children.

    "Often when you think of puppets, you immediately think of children,
    and when you speak about children, you think of everything that is
    stupid or superficial," Gharibpour told Adnkronos International (AKI).

    "Puppets and children are serious things, above all I consider children
    philosophers with limited experience."

    The director said unlike Europe where the tradition of puppetry was
    disappearing, in Iran, China and Japan puppet theatre was a serious
    act, directed at adults and to present tragedies.

    Former consul for cultural affairs at the Italian Embassy in Tehran,
    Felicetta Ferraro, is very enthusiastic about the Iranian puppetry
    and its interpretation of Macbeth. " A true masterpiece," said the
    former diplomat.

    The company's Macbeth ran for three months in Tehran to a full house.

    "Macbeth is a double masterpiece," said the director. "Because it
    combines a master work by a great writer like Shakespeare and a great
    musician like Verdi."
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