Blackfoot puppeteer spreads humour, anti-bullying messages with Indigenous characters
CBC
DerRic Starlight is a Blackfoot puppeteer from the Tsuut'ina Nation near Calgary who followed his dreams into a career.
"My characters are called the Nuppets," he said.
"Jim Henson had called his The Muppets because they're half marionette and half puppet. So my characters are Native and puppets, so they're called the Nuppets."
Starlight grew up watching The Friendly Giant and other puppet shows on television.
"I used to think that Sesame Street was downtown Calgary," he said.
One Christmas, he received Muppet characters as gifts. He learned how to imitate their voices, and carried that same effort into creating his own characters.
Starlight started writing at age 14, while attending Fairview School in Calgary's southeast. He began acting in short films and television shows such as North of 60, and performing puppet shows for community gatherings.
When he was 17, he went to Vancouver Film School for professional training. Now Starlight books performances at casinos, conferences, special events and schools on a full-time basis, with shows with humour and anti-bullying messages.
In July, he spent three weeks in Los Angeles learning the Jim Henson technique at a puppeteer training initiative for diverse performers.
Carol Mason, Starlight's mother, is a fashion designer from the Blood Tribe in southern Alberta. She said she has always been supportive of her son's career choices, even though she did wonder sometimes if puppeteering would pay the bills.
She makes outfits for his characters.
"It's interesting when you get into the development of them," she said.
"There is detail into what that puppet has to look like and it was cute when he did Buffy St. Marie with long black hair, it had to be silky black hair."
She also appreciates that his characters "are from true-life people."