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India has a special reason to celebrate World Puppetry Day, 21 March as one of the country’s first modern puppets, Ardhawatrao, turns 100 this year.
Yashwant Padhye, a Mumbai-based magician, was inspired to create Ardhawatrao after he witnessing a ventriloquist performance.
Ardhawatrao became a household name in the country thanks to its regular appearances on Doordarshan.
Padhye, who now runs a puppet-making workshop with his son Satyajit, says that puppetry calls for patience, while the younger generation wants instant results.
However, Satyajit says that despite the stiff competition from the Doraemons and the Chhota Bhims, ventriloquism is not a dying art.
Satyajit, a Chartered Accountant by profession, decided to join his father to carry forward the family tradition. He is working to enhance the art of puppetry by using technology. Puppetry is a lot like stand-up comedy, he says. “The future is bright,” he adds.
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