Right now, the campaign to rescue the lost marionettes is 70 hours - TopicsExpress



          

Right now, the campaign to rescue the lost marionettes is 70 hours away from the deadline. I suppose nows as good a time as any to tell you why I took part in such an unusual endeavor in the first place. I initially said yes to helping my friends, Joseph Richard Lewis and Lew Ojeda because I saw this as an opportunity to take part in a documentary film production. Needless to say, the documentary is still in production, but there were many events that have transpired since the beginning that had me in a constant state of surprise. I didnt expect that I would be moved to tears upon seeing a video of Ralph giving life to a little marionette on his porch. I didnt expect how tragic Ralphs circumstances were. Losing a friend and partner, having a puppet parlor go up in flames, not being able to see 60 years of a lifes work because its locked up in a vacant apartment in Chicago, and despite being an absolute pro at marionette performance, receiving little to no help. I didnt expect that I would think about my grandparents every time I saw Ralph, who cant see any of this because theyre not here anymore. The day I went into the building to film the lost marionettes, I didnt expect that there would be so many (anywhere between 1,000-3,000). I didnt expect that my footage of the lost marionettes would be shown on CNBC. I didnt expect that our story about Ralph Kipniss would receive coverage from the Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Reader, and various news outlets across the country. I most certainly didnt expect that someone like Neil Gaiman would take time out of his life to watch some 4-minute long video I made, let alone pledge and endorse this campaign. (I still find that to be completely surreal.) But most of all, I didnt expect what this could do if the campaign is successful. This campaign still has a chance. Donations are at $10,000 and climbing! That said, it has a long way to go ($25,000), and it will take a miracle. If this campaign fails, whoever pledges get to keep their money. If it succeeds, heres what could happen. This campaign is not just about some guys doll collection. This goes beyond Ralph Kipniss. There could be a story in Chicago news that isnt about murder, rape, schools closing, privatizing education, or Ventra. It would be about a community of people coming together, in a time of economic peril, to do something good. It would keep an incredible amount of hand-crafted, hand-painted wooden works of art from going in the garbage. It would help preserve Chicagos heritage. It would preserve Ralphs legacy that can be passed down to others. It would preserve an art form for future generations. An art form that has been around for hundreds, if not thousands of years, by different cultures for different means. Is all that not worth $1? kickstarter/projects/lewojeda/rescuing-the-lost-marionettes-of-ralph-kipniss
Posted on: Sun, 10 Nov 2013 17:51:44 +0000

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