Trip to Russia
March was a very busy month for us. Ten days after we returned from consulting in Mexico we headed for two weeks of consulting in Russia (Moscow). We had a very informative and productive trip. Consulted at RACU during the week and then on the weekends we did a bit of sightseeing.
While we were in Russia I, Barbara, was able to attend a puppet show at a very famous puppet theatre. In fact, I am told it is known all over Europe. Following is a brief description from their website:
Obraztsov Puppet Theater
History of the Theater
The Obraztsov Theatre is the largest puppet theater and puppetry teaching center in Russia. The center houses the theater as well as the Russian State Museum of Theatrical Puppets (containing over 3,000 puppets from over 50 countries, making it one of the largest puppet museums in the world), a library entirely devoted to the art of puppetry, and various manuscripts and documents related to puppetry in the center's pedagogical department.
The theater is named after Sergei Vladimirovich Obraztsov (1901-1992), the great Russian puppet master who established puppetry as an art form in the Soviet Union and who is considered to be one of the greatest puppeteers of the 20th century. Obraztsov was born in Moscow in 1901, the son of a schoolteacher and a railroad engineer, and began a life filled with fascination for art and performance. He studied painting at Moscow's Higher Art and Technical Studios and later became an actor and worked at the famous Nemirovich-Danchenko Music Theatre (1922-30) and then at the avant garde Moscow Art Theatre (1930-31). Throughout his acting career he pursued a personal interest in puppetry and gave regular independent vaudeville-style puppet shows. In 1931 he was chosen by the Soviet government to be the first director of the State Central Puppet Theatre in Moscow and developed the theater's productions and performances over a period of some 60 years.
Puppetry has been a popular form of entertainment for centuries in Europe. During the 16th and 17th centuries puppet shows became popular amongst the European aristocracy and puppets were used extensively as vehicles for caricature and satire. It was only in the 19th century that puppets began to be used as a means of entertaining and amusing children in parks and theaters.
Repertoire
The theater presents shows for both children and adults, with matinee performances full of humor and ideal for children and evening shows more likely to be silent or mimed. The theater's repertoire consists of more than 10 productions for children and 5 for adults, and includes An Unusual Concert, Schtok's Divine Comedy, Livanov-Bardin's Don Juan, Pushkin's The Queen of Spades and The Tale of Tsar Saltan, Hoffmann's The Nutcracker, Gernet's Aladdin's Magic Lamp, and Mowgli based on Kipling's magical The Jungle Book.
Following are our Russia pictures:
View from our 12th floor apartment in Moscow. With stayed with an American family while there.
Allison and Betsy cooked us dinner one night. It was delicious!!!!!
Ray, Barbara and Anastasia (she was a student at RACU who took us around to the sights). This is a canon in the Kremlin. The canon balls supposedly weigh 1,000 pounds each.
Painted plate
Matrushka doll (enamel) Comes in many sizes, colors, etc.
RACU temporary facility
Orthodox church in Moscow
Orthodox church in the Kremlin
Ray and Cody (Cody is the dog! :-o) Cody is a puppy and was relentless
Betsy (where we stayed) studying and playing a game at the same time
MacDonald's at Mega Mall, Moscow, Russia
MacDonald's - they had over 40 ordering stations at this MacDonald's
Enjoying goodies at McCafe in Moscow
St. Basil's (Ray, Barbara and John)
GUM department complex in Red Square
Orthodox church in Red Square
Metropol Hotel where James Bond movie (From Russia with Love) was filmed
Bolshoy Theatre in Moscow
New RACU building with apartment building (white) behind it
Front entrance/atrium at the new university site
Ray, Galina and Alex at the new construction site
Barbara with Galina at the new construction site for RACU
Ray with Galina (RACU interim librarian) in the "old" library
Russian American Christian University "old" library
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