S3E23 How is Puppetry Like the Torah? With Ora Fruchter

02/12/2025 50 min Temporada 3 Episodio 23
S3E23 How is Puppetry Like the Torah? With Ora Fruchter

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Episode Synopsis

Don't miss Art/Lab's special guest Rabbi Adina Allen (a guest in episode 20 of this season) IN PORTLAND THIS THURSDAY at the Eastside Jewish Commons. Go to artlabpdx.org for the registration link.    In this week's episode, I talk with puppeteer and theater maker Ora Fruchter about what actually happens when an object comes alive on stage. Ora walks me into the inner mechanics of puppetry in a way that has nothing to do with tricks or clever engineering. Instead, she talks about breath, presence, and the strange collaborative agreement between performer and audience—the shared moment when everyone decides that a piece of tissue or wood is breathing. Hearing her describe how she "listens" to an object and lets it guide the next movement was one of the most arresting parts of our conversation. As we keep talking, something deeper opens up. Ora grew up in a Modern Orthodox world steeped in text study, and although she doesn't label her art "Jewish," the parallels are unmistakable. She and I explore how puppetry resembles Torah in its basic structure: nothing comes alive unless the community brings its imagination to it. Meaning isn't delivered; it's co-created. The act of witnessing becomes the act of animating. That connective, interpretive, breath-driven space is where Ora locates her spirituality, and it's where she feels most present and most herself. We also talk about her family, which turns out to be a full ecosystem of artists—writers, musicians, rabbis, makers. Ora shares the new collaborative project she's building with her siblings: Boy of the Sea, based on her sister's invented Jewish folktales, a set of stories that feel both ancient and entirely original. She describes the early stages of translating these tales into puppet theater and how she's thinking about ancestry, Shabbat tables layered across time, and the echoes of past generations that move through the work. Finally, we explore another show she's developing with a collaborator in Portland, You're Doing It Wrong, a family performance about animals and natural creatures who are inexplicably terrible at what they're "supposed" to be good at. The piece, like much of Ora's work, uses humor and lightness as a way into more serious questions—how we handle discouragement, how we show up for each other, and how we stay human in difficult times. Throughout the episode, I found myself struck by how naturally Ora weaves craft, spirituality, and community into a single practice. It's a conversation about puppetry, yes, but also about presence, lineage, imagination, and the things that really make us come alive.   Links Art/Lab: artlabpdx.org Ora's Website: orafruchter.com The South Philadelphia Shtiebel (synagogue of Ora's sister Rabbanit Dasi Fruchter): southphiladelphiashtiebel.org Sandcatchers (Ora's Brother's Band): sandcatchers.bandcamp.com City of Laughter (Novel by Ora's sister) Book Review in NYT. Click Here. Ronnie Burkett: https://www.johnlambert.ca/ENGLISH/ronnie-burkett/   The Genesis is created, produced and edited by Rabbi Joshua Rose and is supported by Art/Lab: Innovating Jewish Arts and Culture. Theme music composed by Rabbi Joshua Rose

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