It takes as long to train to be a puppeteer at the world-famous Salzburg Marionette Theatre as it does to become a doctor.
The puppets and their startlingly lifelike movements take years to master, which is why the Austrian theatre's work has UNESCO World Heritage status.
"It's like playing an instrument. You can't think about which string to pull during the show," said Edouard Funck, a puppeteer and costume designer.
Some complicated puppets have dozens of strings, requiring up to five people to operate them, said the 34-year-old French-born performer.
Their movements are so subtle that audiences sometimes believe a puppet has "moved her lips", said Funck, when it's just "the illusion that is created on stage".
- Lengthy apprenticeship -
The theatre's founder, Austrian sculptor Anton Aicher, invented a special control bar to manipulate the puppets a century ago.
The puppeteers make the puppets themselves, spending their mornings designing, carving and dressing them before returning later to perform.
Despite the lengthy apprenticeship, the theatre has no problem finding recruits, said Funck, who dreamed of being a puppeteer as a child.
"I love the characters, the movement of the puppets -- this is true artistry," she said.
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© Agence France-Presse
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