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Stage Property -Puppet Theatre

unknown (made), ca. 1900 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is one of a group of marionettes and marionette properties owned by James Tiller, the son of Ambrose Tiller II, who inherited them from his father and revived them for a while before selling them. His father was the second son of the marionette company proprietors Ambrose Tiller and Eliza Cheadle, and in 1901 Ambrose II started his own company, Tiller's Mechanical Mannikin Show and Theatre of Varieties.

Ambrose II married Sarah Chipperfield, of the circus proprietors' family, and had nine children. By 1909 he had added a bioscope to the show. They toured much of East Anglia and Lincolnshire, performing at fairs and setting up their booth in inn yards. By 1914 the emphasis had changed and his travelling show was known as 'Cinema and Mannikins'. The show continued until the early 1930s, but during this time Ambrose and his sons built a cinema at Long Sutton, which they managed until the 1950s. This may be one of the later marionettes made by Ambrose Tiller to add to the troupe, possibly in the 1930s.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Carved and painted wood
Brief description
Trick property fascia board advertising Yarmouth Bloaters which transforms to a sea-serpent. Used as a prop by the Tiller marionette company with a donkey and cart which carried the sign. Wood with metal hinges and strings. c.1900.
Physical description
Rectangular wooden board formed of two planks of wood painted green with the words YARMOUTH BLOATERS written on them in black paint. To either side of the board is a shaped piece of wood joined to the central board by a hinge, that on the right being in the shape of the head of a sea-serpent, painted in green and pink, and that on the right being the curled, forked tail of the sea-serpent. On the top of the sign another shaped piece of wood is attached, painted in two greens to resemble the dorsal fin of a sea-serpent. That is also hinged to the Yarmouth Bloaters board. Each hinged piece folds away and in sttached at the back via strings to a metal spring so that the advertising board can transform into a sea serpent.There is a single wooden contraol with three strings attached to ewach side of the central board and to the top of the dorsal fin.
Dimensions
  • Maximum width, extended width: 99.5cm
  • Maximum height, including dorsal fin height: 43.0cm
  • Of advertising board, with panels folded in width: 43.1cm
  • Of advertising board, with forsal fin folded in height: 26.2cm
Credit line
Given by the Museum of Entertainment, Whaplode St. Catherine
Object history
"In 1901, Ambrose II, second son of Ambrose Tiller and Eliza Cheadle started a company of his own, Tiller's Mechanical Mannikin Show and Theatre of Varieties. He married Sarah Chipperfield and had nine children. By 1909 he had added a bioscope to the show. They toured much of East Anglia and Lincolnshire, performing at fairs and setting up their booth in inn yards. By 1914 the emphasis had changed and his travelling show was 'Cinema and Mannikins'. The show continued until the early 1930s, but during this time Ambrose and his sons had built a cinema at Long Sutton, which they managed until the 1950s. In the 1950s James Tiller (son of Ambrose II) revived the marionettes for a time, but eventually sold his part of the marionette troupe to the Museum of Entertainment at Whaplode St. Catherine, Lincolnshire." (Extract from: John McCormick with Clodagh McCormick and John Phillips: The Victorian Marionette Theatre. University of Iowa Press).
Summary
This is one of a group of marionettes and marionette properties owned by James Tiller, the son of Ambrose Tiller II, who inherited them from his father and revived them for a while before selling them. His father was the second son of the marionette company proprietors Ambrose Tiller and Eliza Cheadle, and in 1901 Ambrose II started his own company, Tiller's Mechanical Mannikin Show and Theatre of Varieties.

Ambrose II married Sarah Chipperfield, of the circus proprietors' family, and had nine children. By 1909 he had added a bioscope to the show. They toured much of East Anglia and Lincolnshire, performing at fairs and setting up their booth in inn yards. By 1914 the emphasis had changed and his travelling show was known as 'Cinema and Mannikins'. The show continued until the early 1930s, but during this time Ambrose and his sons built a cinema at Long Sutton, which they managed until the 1950s. This may be one of the later marionettes made by Ambrose Tiller to add to the troupe, possibly in the 1930s.
Associated object
S.41:1-2005 (Object)
Bibliographic reference
The Victorian Marionette Theatre. John McCormick with Clodagh McCormick and John Phillips: University of Iowa Press.
Collection
Accession number
S.41:2-2005

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Record createdJune 18, 2007
Record URL
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