Puppet master's work showcased in new exhibition
A new exhibition will showcase the work of a man described by George Bernard Shaw as "the chief living puppet master".
Waldo Lanchester was well known for work with the Lanchester Marionettes, and once performed for the future Queen Elizabeth II when she was a child.
Lanchester's contribution to the world of puppetry will be celebrated with an exhibition at Bantock House Museum in Wolverhampton, beginning this weekend.
He was "puppetry royalty", according to Michael Dixon, chair of the British Puppet and Model Theatre Guild, and curator of the show.
In 1927 Lanchester, who died aged 81 in 1978, formed his first company, the London Marionette Theatre, with H.W. Whanslaw, founder of the guild, and created the first puppets ever to be broadcast on television.
Lanchester then moved to Malvern, Worcestershire and, in 1936, founded the Lanchester Marionette Theatre with his wife Muriel from their home at Foley House.
"Puppetry had sort of died off at the turn of the century, and in the late 1920s, early 1930s, there was a renaissance," said Mr Dixon.
"And Waldo Lanchester was at the forefront of that."
In 1938, the Lanchesters performed for King George VI and his daughters - the future Queen, Elizabeth, and her sister Margaret.
And George Bernard Shaw wrote his final play, Shakes versus Shav, for the Lanchester Marionettes to perform at the Malvern Festival, in 1949.
The Lanchesters later retired to Straford-upon-Avon, where they opened a puppet centre opposite Shakespeare's birthplace.
The exhibition at Bantock House will feature a range of marionettes, all hand-carved from wood, from the beginning to the end of the Lanchesters' puppetry career.
"Obviously he's not very well-known these days, he's not world-famous or anything like that," said Mr Dixon.
"We're really proud to be showcasing his work and showing the quality of his work to a different generation."
The Lancester Marionettes exhibition runs at Bantock House Museum in Wolverhampton between 11 January and 30 April.
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