Walking down a distant cobble stone street in a distant arrondissement in Paris, I came across a narrow alley over which a weather beaten, powder blue, oval sign with faded black letters that simply spelled
M A R I O N E T T E, squeaked and waved and rusted in the breeze.
The door to the shop was open and I could see in as the aged proprietor was bent over one of his creations trying to mend the twisted and knotted strings of the handsome male dancer marionette. He looked up and noticed me noticing him.
At first I felt embarrassed for spying on the old man at work but realized he did not see it that way. He smiled and with his arthritic hand motioned for me to come into the shop. He invited me to poke around at my leisure and to feel free to ask him or his wife any questions that I might have.
On the wall, hanging in a line behind him, were beautiful hand made marionettes including people (kings - queens - mothers - fathers - children,) performers (jugglers - dancers - magicians - singers,) animals (pets - farm - zoo - circus,) and other marionette objects as well (buildings - trees - stop lights - cars.)
Many of the toys in the toy shop were made by the old man and his wife. He did the carving and she did the sewing. He did the forming and she did the painting. You could tell that he was a little more organized in his work and she was a little more messy. But they were a good team and their skills complimented each other.
Not much conversation took place between the old man, the old woman, and me. They continued to work at their projects and I wandered around the shop investigating one marvel after another; one pile of puppets, one collection of tiny treasures, one rack of neatly lined up cars, one cabinet of furry huggable Teddy Bears, one box of colorful tops and striped balls, one marvel after another.
Through the open door of the shop, from somewhere in the courtyard outside, I began to hear the chiming of the clock tower. The clock first announced itself and then counted the hour at 5:00.
"That clock is always a little off," commented the old woman to no one in particular. The old man and old woman stirred from their separate project preoccupations and carefully, slowly stood up, stretching in place.
When they noticed me, it was almost as if they had forgotten or maybe never knew that I was in the shop with them. "Well," announced the old man to no one in particular, "Must be time for our tea."
"I guess I must be going then," I commented almost apologetically for having invaded their spaced and I began moving towards the door.
"No, no!" reacted the old woman. "You must join us for tea and some freshly baked scones. Do you prefer blueberry or raspberry? Please come upstairs and join us!"
"Well, I would be honored," I replied, "I have so many questions to ask you about all the wonderful things you have in your shop and about your loving work with the toys. Then after our tea, I will pick out a few items that I would like to purchase."
"Oh my. Oh my!" they both uttered in unison. The old man continues, "Nothing in the shop is for sale you know. Did you think this was a toy shop? Well it is a shop, but not that kind of shop."
"This place here is our workshop, not a for sale shop," continued the woman. "It is where we spend our time all year making and fixing toys of all sorts. Sometimes neighbor children bring in their broken items and we try to fix them but mostly the toys we work with are for giving away to the orphanage up the hill. The children there are so sweet and so need love and attention. We spend most of our days making and fixing toys for them."
As we climbed the narrow, creaking stairway to their living quarters, the old man whispered, "If you would like to have a toy or two I suppose that would be OK. You strike me as a person, like my wife and me, who still has a lot of the child about them. Do you take milk in your tea?"
• • •
This fiction story introduced itself to me in a dream the other night. The parts of the dream which I remembered had to do with the Paris passageway, the shop, and the live puppy which I at first thought was one of the puppets in the shop. The rest I created as a writing exercise.
This is my first attempt at this kind of writing. In my mind I pictured what each step of the story might be like and then I wrote that paragraph. The next paragraph was created after I purposefully thought about it or after an idea that just seemed to come to me unexpectedly showed up; like the ending that the shop is not really a shop. After a paragraph was written, I either searched the internet or my own photographs for an illustration.
I created the old man and old woman and in some ways I am not only the visitor to the shop but also both of the characters I created, also I love raspberry and blueberry scones!
Post Script Comments: He was right about there being a lot of the child still in me! It is very apparent in my home as well as in my attitude. Check out my museum, Michael's Museum: A Curious Collection of Tiny Treasures, which has been a permanent exhibit at Chicago Children's Museum on Navy Pier since May of 2011.
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Your story Marionette is absolutely fabulous. The story, the pictures and positive aspect of this blog is one of the best I've ever read from you and you've written so many great blogs with great pictures. If this is what your dreams gift you with, I think you should sleep a lot!!!
ReplyDeleteYou are so talented Michael,
B
DeleteThanks B. You are the first reader and first comment for the story. I really have fallen in love with it in the two days I have worked on it. In many ways it is about who I am and what is important to me. And yes, often my dreams present themselves in full Broadway Musical or Opera format with plot, action, sets, lighting, music, costumes, etc. Most often I forget them pretty quickly and other times they are so complex I figured I would never be able to recreate them. Thus the writing exercise for this post. Love you B
It is all delightful: the story, the photographs, the puppy, the boy Michael at the end. My mother loved little brown eyed boys.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the feedback. I am feeling really good about the story. The older woman who ran the mom and pop grocery store in my first neighborhood as a 5-9 year old called me "Brown Eyes!"
DeleteWhat fun! Actually I believed it was all true until I saw the British flag illustrating the time in Paris! Ha. You are quite the creative soul, Miguel.In an interesting way you are doing something very similar to Jake---using photographs as the structure/composition for your art. Very provocative. Lots of potential here!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Jan. You know London is not that far from France:-) Maybe I'll use another photo?
DeleteMichael..........this is perfection! It's absolutely delightful in every way. I fell in love with it! You should be very proud of it, and I am proud of you!!
ReplyDeleteLove,
Linda
Thanks Linda. This was an experiment for me and I am excited about it. Love back.
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