Axtell Expressions Puppets & Magic JPG

Axtell Expressions Puppets & Magic JPG
Professional Latex Puppets

About Me

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Ventura, CA, United States
President & Creative Director of Axtell Expressions, Inc.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Steve Axtell On Stage (England 2009)



S.Tyneside Magic Convention - England 2009
Introduced by Tommy the Trumpeter (Ray Spencer) at the Customs House, following a magic performance by Jasper Blakeley

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Steve Axtell Interview at S. Tyneside England

Here is Magic Convention Guide's review of my interview by Martin Duffy.



Steve Axtell Lecture - South Tyneside International Magic Festival
March 14th, 2009 by Richard Morrell

Steve Axtell of Axtell Puppets was interviewed in a very interesting hour long session by convention organizer Martin Duffy.



Steve started off by talking about the background of his company and how he got started as a boy with his interest being sparked by Sesame Street. He went on to talk about how to use a puppet giving several demonstrations with his own products, tips such as to always keep the puppet moving, and to point the eyes down to the audience were valuable advice from an obvious master.



As soon as Steve put a puppet on he was animating it complete with unique voice via his ventriloquial skills. He then went on to demonstrate his now world famous and best selling product, the Axtell Drawing Board, providing some interesting tips and techniques sent in by other users and he talked about the use of his Axtrax system to back this and the puppets. Next he demonstrated his Big Baby and the very funny Human version, this was followed with some tips on his bird arm illusion.



Finally he talked about creativity and how he comes up with some of the ideas, and what he has in the pipeline, and to that end he finished by demonstrating his anamatronic line, all remote control characters that can be freely controlled or left to move on their own, which look amazing, including a dragon that breathes smoke, a giant book and a cute baby gorilla and one final character a life size puppet that looked very much like Paul Daniels!

Article Steve Axtell Coming to England



Here is a newspaper article about my coming to the S. Tyneside Magic Convention in England.



All the tricks in the book

10:39am Monday 9th March 2009


Steve Axtell, puppet master and maker of magic items, talks to Steve Pratt ahead of South Shield’s magic festival.

THIRTY years ago, Steve Axtell was a boy with hopes of becoming a performer. He made his own puppets and did shows at his local church. Then, after he was featured in a story in the local newspaper, his proud mother sent a cutting to Muppet Show supremo Jim Henson.

The reaction wasn’t quite what 14- year-old Steve was hoping for. “When he received my picture he saw I was making copies of his characters. He wrote back and said ‘please don’t make my characters, find your own look’,” recalls Axtell.

Maybe it was a harsh thing to say to a boy, but it was good advice. Today, from its base in California, Axtell Expressions provides puppets all over the world, from big stage shows on Broadway and theme parks to churches and schools.

The company’s puppets and magic items have appeared in movies such as Planet Of The Apes and the show starring America’s Got Talent winner Terry Fator, at the Mirage Hotel in Las Vegas. Several Axtell puppets will feature in the next series of ITV’s Britain’s Got Talent. Ventriloquist Jay Johnson recently won a Tony award for a Broadway show featuring Axtell’s bird arm illusion.

Axtell makes his performing debut in this country in South Shields as part of the sixth International Magic Festival.

The week-long convention in South Tyneside, which features public and schools performances, boasts UK names like Paul Daniels and comedy compere Tim Vine, as well as US stars including Banachek and Bob Sheets.

Axtell gave up his dream of performing full-time when he married and had children because it would have taken him away from home too much.

Instead, he concentrated on designing and manufacturing puppets and magic items. What started out in a garage in Ohio is now a world leader in puppet and magic development.

“The uniqueness of what we do can’t be copied, although others have tried.

Our look is really unique and being used by the top people in the field,” he says. He also goes into areas you might not expect, providing missionaries and Sunday school teachers with puppets for use in their work presenting the gospels.

“It’s a good thing to have in a Sunday school classroom. Take a puppet character, say a duck, and maybe use in the Noah’s Ark story. Or to tell an Old Testament story or just teach how to pray,”

he says. “That’s how I began. We were using them in church before we started in the other areas. We have professional speakers, motivational speakers using them.”

ONE of the trickiest jobs was for a top variety act in Japan. He created the idea for an alien mother who carried two alien babies in a box and one in a backpack. He flew to California to design it with Axtell’s team. The result was a man in a body suit, including fake arms and body parts, that looked and moved like an alien. It didn’t come cheap, costing about $30,000.

He’s now developing a hands-free puppet. New technology is making this possible. “This will allow for the puppets and characters to be just like Disneyland,”

he says. “Technology develops fast. There is the ability for a performer to think and have that thought translated into the speech of the puppet character. But it’s unaffordable at the moment.”

For the past few years, he’s been working with an engineer on animatronic puppets. “The challenge is how to do it and how expensive it will be,”

he says.

The South Tyneside visit marks Axtell’s first time lecturing and performing in Europe. It’s quite a coup for the magic festival, organised by magician Martin Duffy.

The event began after South Tyneside Council looked for a way of attracting people to the region. Duffy had done some work with the council and the idea for a magic convention was born. The first year some 70 people attended, now it’s nearing 200. Its size is dictated by the space at the Customs House, South Shields.

Along with lectures and shows for delegates, there’s a programme of public shows and a children’s programme that has teams of magicians visiting schools in the region.

southtyneside.info/magicfestival