Gordon Cox Theater Editor Here are two wildlife facts you won’t learn in “Life of Pi”: Orangutans are quiet, and zebras stay silent when they’re attacked. Listen to this week’s “Stagecraft” podcast below: You’d never guess either of those things from Broadway’s “Life of Pi,” because the creators and puppeteers of the show use all manner of tools and tricks to make their animal puppets feel life-like — including having them behave in ways that aren’t life-like at all. “Orangutans are very quiet beings,” explained Olivier Award-winning puppeteer Fred Davis on the new episode of Variety’s theater podcast, Stagecraft. “But if we had a very quiet orangutan for the duration of its time onstage, it wouldn’t have the same impact or believability as we need it to.” The solution, then, was to take the limited array of orangutan noises that the show’s creators had observed in videos and documentaries, and, Davis said, “make them more frequently or for different reasons than an orangutan would in the wild.” The production’s puppeteers bring a similar imaginative enhancement to an onstage zebra attack, which in real life would see the zebra fall silent rather than scream. “We had to use not puppetry technique, not animal research, but we had do a third thing: just make it theatrical,” said Finn Caldwell, the co-designer and co-movement director of “Life of Pi.” On Stagecraft, Caldwell detailed the greatest challenge he faced in creating the show’s tiger, a central character portrayed by three puppeteers (including Davis at some performances) manipulating a life-size puppet. “The big ask, which we hadn’t really done anything like in my practice, was really making a frightening puppet,” Caldwell said. “A puppet that would frighten
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