“My father tied the strings to my fingers and taught me how to dance the puppets,” says 74-year-old Premram Bhat, recalling a time around six decades ago.
“He used to take me with him from the time I was about nine years old to the various villages he visited to perform puppet shows,” he adds. “I used to play the dhol. Slowly, I got interested in puppetry. My father Lalooram Bhat taught me how to move them, and I too started handling the puppets."
Premram lives in a jhuggi on a footpath in west Jodhpur’s Pratap Nagar area. His wife Jugnibai, 70, their son Suresh, daughter-in-law Sunita and their four children, ages ranging from 3 to 12, all live together. The family belongs to the Bhat community (listed as an OBC in Rajasthan). Community elders say many Bhat families migrated from the state’s Nagaur district about 100 years ago and settled in various cities of Rajasthan like Jodhpur, Jaipur, Jaisalmer and Bikaner.
"I have not had any training in making puppets or in puppetry. I learnt this art only by watching my father perform,” says 39-year-old Suresh. He too used to accompany Premram to the villages, and began assisting in the shows when he was around 10 years old. At home he would help make the puppets. “And by the time I was 15 years old I had learnt to dance the puppets well. I would go by myself to the villages and do the shows,” he adds.




