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King Charles meets giant gorilla puppet at climate reception
King Charles meets giant gorilla puppet at climate reception

Euronews

time27-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Euronews

King Charles meets giant gorilla puppet at climate reception

The encounter was part of The Herd, a global public art project using giant animal puppets to symbolise wildlife displaced by climate change. Created in collaboration with students from Wimbledon College of Arts, the puppets are touring cities worldwide to raise awareness about environmental issues. Their London stop will see them appear in locations including London Bridge, Soho, and Camden. "Through theatre, we can engage with the major issues of the day. We're looking particularly for a way in which this very, central event in our lives, climate change, can be expressed not in scientific terms," David Lan, one of the producers behind The Herds, tells Euronews Culture. He adds: "What we think we might be able to do is allow people to engage emotionally with what is already happening all over." Amir Nizar Zuabi, the artistic director of the project, who also worked on The Walk, agrees with this sentiment. He notes: "I don't know if what we add to the conversation will change the world. Most probably it won't. Doesn't matter. It's worth trying. But the idea of creating a project that deals with climate change from an emotional stance, from a sensory experience and not from, 'This is the science'." Check out footage of the encounter in the video above.

A gigantic stampede of life-sized puppet animals is coming to London this weekend
A gigantic stampede of life-sized puppet animals is coming to London this weekend

Time Out

time23-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time Out

A gigantic stampede of life-sized puppet animals is coming to London this weekend

Do you remember The Walk? Staged in 2021, the show-slash-festival-slash touring artwork was based around Little Amal, a-not-so-little (in fact gigantic) puppet refugee girl who 'walked' from war-torn Syria to dear old Blighty. Now the producers behind it – including former Young Vic boss David Lan – have a new show with a similar, but different, and even more visually striking idea. The Herds is effectively a migration of puppet beasts from the heart of Africa: elephants, giraffes, antelopes, lions, wolves, wildebeest and more. They set out from Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo earlier this year, travelling overland from Africa and on into Europe with their final destination of the Arctic Circle. By all accounts they're travelling in large numbers and their appearances are pretty damn spectacular. Why is this happening? Well just as The Walk was designed to raise awareness of refugees' stories, so The Herds is themed around climate change and habit loss, with the animals – all made from recycled materials – 'fleeing' habitat loss in their native countries. If that sounds heavy: well yes, it is, but the events scheduled for London actually look pretty fun. After making their arrival at Tower Bridge on the morning of Friday June 27, the beasts will be 'fed' at the Scoop amphitheatre near the bridge by local primary school children at 10am in a performance entitled Cornflakes and Hay created by the nearby Unicorn Theatre. That afternoon they'll move into the West End and stampede around performers from Matilda the Musical and the Royal Opera Company (from 4.10pm) in a bit entitled Hold On for Deer Life. The next day they'll take in Camden and Coram's Fields, while they'll round off their trip to our city (they're off to Manchester next week) on Sunday 28 with a visit to Stratford (3.15pm at Westfield!) and finishing with a late night (9.30pm) adventure in St James's Park called Caught in the Light that's free but that you'll have to register for. All in all a pretty magical weekend for London: The Herds will only visit once; don't pass up your chance to see it.

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to arctic Circle in climate action
Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to arctic Circle in climate action

Arab News

time12-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Arab News

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to arctic Circle in climate action

KINSHASA, Congo: In the Kinshasa Botanical Garden, a troupe of cardboard animals stand at attention in a clearing. Their handlers, puppeteers dressed in black, begin to move slowly through the woods, eventually picking up speed and breaking out into a run. These were the first steps of 'The Herds,' a moving theater performance made up of cardboard puppet animals that flee from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the Arctic Circle in a bid to bring attention to the climate crisis. This week, the puppet animals started their journey in Kinshasa, the capital of the DRC in central Africa. The story goes that the animals will be forced out of their natural habitats due to global warming and displaced north, stopping in cities along the way and being joined by more animals. Just meters away a real-life example of climate change: Part of the botanical garden lay under floodwaters left over from massive flooding earlier this week that left half the city inaccessible and killed dozens. The sight brought 'The Herds' story to life in a bleak way. The main event planned in the center of Kinshasa on Friday was canceled because of the heavy rain. A wildebeest, a gorilla and a giraffe were among the life-size puppets to begin the 20,000-kilometer (12,400-mile) trek that will cross about 10 countries between central Africa and the Arctic by August. Their journey will take them through Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, France and Norway, among other countries. 'This project tries to give the public a powerful emotional sense of what's happening to the planet,' project producer David Lan said. The trek includes 'now 20, later 40, later 70 animals from all over west Africa, Morocco, Europe who are traveling to escape from the damage done to their ecosystem,' he added. It is financed by several European countries as well as private foundations. The puppets are made of mostly recycled materials: cardboard for the skin and rubber for the joints, according to Siphokazi Mpofu, of the South African collective, Ukwanda Puppets, which created the first puppets. 'Some animals will die on the way,' due to high humidity for instance, 'just like in real life,' Mpofu said. As it travels, the herd will be joined by new puppets representing local species, such as vervet monkeys in Nigeria, wolves and red deer in Europe, and reindeer in Norway. 'The Herds' comes from the team that was behind 'The Walk' in 2021, in which a 12-foot tall puppet of a refugee girl called Little Amal drew attention to the refugee crisis by traveling to 15 countries — from Turkiye to the UK, Ukraine, Mexico and the US. Tshoper Kabambi, a Congolese filmmaker and producer, is working on 'The Herds' as its DRC producer. He said 'The Herds' main goal is to raise awareness. 'Nature is very important to us. But humans have a tendency to neglect nature,' he said. 'We want to raise awareness among people about everything that is happening. You have seen the floods all over the world, global warming, deforestation.' 'The Herds' will stay in Kinshasa until Saturday before moving onto Lagos, Nigeria, and Dakar, Senegal. 'The Herds' organizers say the significance of starting in Congo lies in the fact that the country is home to the second biggest rainforest in the world. The Congo Basin serves as one of the planet's 'lungs,' the other being the Amazon Rainforest. They say much less attention has been focused on Congo's rainforest, but it is still in dire need of protection. Congolese artists were an integral part of 'The Herds' opening act, just as artists from other countries will be as the project moves north. Amir Nizar Zuabi was on that team and is now the artistic director of 'The Herds.' He was also a part of 'The Walk.' 'I think one of the big impacts of this project is the fact that this project is happening in 20 different cities,' he said. 'It will travel through different cultures, different places, and it accumulates. And it will tell the story of the Congo also in Norway, because we have partners everywhere.'

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action
Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action

A wildebeest, a gorilla and a giraffe were among the life-size puppets to begin a 20,000-kilometre (12,400-mile) trek across the globe Wednesday from the DR Congo capital, to raise awareness about migration due to climate change. The animals are part of The Herds project and aim to have crossed around 10 countries between central Africa and the Arctic by August. Their journey will take them through Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, France and Norway, among other countries. "This project tries to give the public a powerful emotional sense of what's happening to the planet," project producer David Lan told AFP in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The trek includes "now 20, later 40, later 70 animals from all over west Africa, Morocco, Europe who are travelling to escape from the damage done to their ecosystem," he added. It is financed by several European countries as well as private foundations. The puppets are made of mostly recycled materials: cardboard for the skin and rubber for the joints, according to Siphokazi Mpofu, of the South African collective, Ukwanda Puppets, which created the first puppets. "Some animals will die on the way," due to high humidity for instance, "just like in real life", Mpofu said. As it travels, the herd will be joined by new puppets representing local species, such as vervet monkeys in Nigeria, wolves and red deer in Europe, and reindeer in Norway. cld/djt/kjm/cw

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action
Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action

A wildebeest, a gorilla and a giraffe were among the life-size puppets to begin a 20,000-kilometre (12,400-mile) trek across the globe Wednesday from the DR Congo capital, to raise awareness about migration due to climate change. The animals are part of The Herds project and aim to have crossed around 10 countries between central Africa and the Arctic by August. Their journey will take them through Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, France and Norway, among other countries. "This project tries to give the public a powerful emotional sense of what's happening to the planet," project producer David Lan told AFP in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The trek includes "now 20, later 40, later 70 animals from all over west Africa, Morocco, Europe who are travelling to escape from the damage done to their ecosystem," he added. It is financed by several European countries as well as private foundations. The puppets are made of mostly recycled materials: cardboard for the skin and rubber for the joints, according to Siphokazi Mpofu, of the South African collective, Ukwanda Puppets, which created the first puppets. "Some animals will die on the way," due to high humidity for instance, "just like in real life", Mpofu said. As it travels, the herd will be joined by new puppets representing local species, such as vervet monkeys in Nigeria, wolves and red deer in Europe, and reindeer in Norway. cld/djt/kjm/cw

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