'Little Waldingfield History Society was delighted to welcome Peter Batty
to the Parish Room where he regaled us with a host of stories collected over
many years as a Punch & Judy man, both from presenting the shows and from
close association with other Punch men, or Professors.
Peter gave a history of the tradition. Mr Punch made his first recorded appearance in England on 9th May 1662, now traditionally reckoned to be his birthday. Samuel Pepys observed a marionette show in Covent Garden performed by an Italian puppet showman, which he described as 'very pretty'.
Peter then mentioned some of the daft comments made by the politically
correct brigade and how this has changed over time, noting that Punch performers adapted shows to the spirit of their age:
§ Celebrated Victorian showmen lamented that audiences had
become genteel and wanted the Ghost and the Coffin dropped from the show,
though this is now much less likely today.
§ Simplistic arguments that Punch and Judy promoted domestic
violence were akin to saying that Tom and Jerry promote cruelty to animals. Luckily
for us, Mr. Punch has a keen nose for spotting humourless and flawed logic, and
his opinion of them is as low as theirs is of him!
Peter wryly observed that Mr. Punch
reminds critics slapstick is the weapon that gave its name to physical comedy; it
is the clown's weapon used to assault each other and the dignity of opponents.
Everyone agreed this was
our most entertaining evening to date, with an action-packed story following the
antics of Mr Punch, Judy and the baby, Joey the clown, the policeman, the
sausage-eating crocodile, the hangman (aka Jack Ketch), the devil and many
more; all in all, a rare treat.
The subject of our next talk will be Suffolk Poachers and Smugglers, at
7.30 pm on February 13th at the LW Parish Room, which will be
presented by William Tyler.'
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