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Ventriloquist finds her voice through puppets

Kellie Haines, who has Tourette鈥檚 syndrome, is performing at the Penticton Peach Festival
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Ventriloquist Kellie Haines with her friends Magrau, left, and Kamilla. Haines will perform at Penticton鈥檚 Peach Festival at the Home Hardware Kid鈥檚 Zone at Gyro Park. Submitted photo

A present received as a child not only provided her with years of entertainment but a livelihood and the ability to feel and teach others about acceptance and belonging.

The Vancouver ventriloquist and puppeteer, who has Tourette syndrome, said her lifelong passion for performance started with a puppet named Magrau.

Like many children, Haines spent hours talking to her stuffed animals. When she received the puppet Magrau, a blue-feathered, orange-legged bird, as a present at eight years old everything changed.

鈥淚 started talking and he started talking back,鈥 said Haines, who will perform at the during the Penticton Peach Festival.

鈥淚t all came about when I was very young. I was really trying to express myself and working with my puppets allowed me to do that.鈥

First there were little performances for her family and friends of her parents. Then one day she decided to enter into the school talent contest.

鈥淚 was scared and I didn鈥檛 know what to do but I just started. I just did it and the teachers all laughed and the kids all laughed. I did five more talent shows in Grade 6.鈥

The child that was strange and different because she had Tourette suddenly had a following of friends who loved it when she performed with her puppets.

鈥淭hey were all really good with it and they all looked forward to the talent shows and would ask me when I was going to pull out the puppets again and perform. I fit in that way.鈥

However, she felt that isolation again in Grade 9 at a new school with lots of older teenagers.

鈥淎t first high school was a hard phase. I was just not fitting in.鈥

Instead of wallowing in her challenges she decided to focus on something positive 鈥 her ventriloquism and puppeteering.

So, she decided to sign up for the school鈥檚 talent contest.

鈥淚t was a whole gym full of kids from Grade 9 to 13. I remember going up there. The lights were in my eyes. You could see the teachers looking at me on stage thinking, 鈥榰h-oh, what鈥檚 this kid going to do,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚 can remember just feeling that beat after Magrau said something funny and they all went wild. And I thought if I can perform for the Grade 13s and everybody and maybe they will understand and accept me.鈥

And they did.

Haines went on to study drama in university and added singing and movement to her repertoire.

That was several decades ago. Since then Haines has performed all over B.C. and Canada and into the U.S. She鈥檚 also worked in television and film.

In 2015, she fulfilled one of her dreams by working on Jim Henson鈥檚 production called Turkey Hollow.

The movie is set in a town called Turkey Hollow where the Emmerson family heads to visit Aunt Cly. Children Tim and Annie quickly grow bored without the internet, and try to track the howling hoodoo, an elusive monster the locals dismiss as a legend.

鈥淭his was the last work that was not developed yet of Jim Henson鈥檚. His daughter was one of the producers, one of the wizard鈥檚 behind making it. It was a dream come true.鈥

Although it鈥檚 still her goal to have her own show, Haines is happy performing at festivals, libraries, schools and anywhere with or without a stage.

She describes her ventriloquist, puppeteer performances as uplifting moral stories that help the audience learn about acceptance.

In addition to Magrau, she also has a curious frog with red hair named Kamilla.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really teaching people through the puppets and their adventures. When Magrau doesn鈥檛 feel good about himself because he has orange legs and can鈥檛 reach the bars on the climber and he talks and sings about how that feels in the show, it鈥檚 always after that the kids come up and say to him 鈥榥o we like that about you.鈥欌

鈥淚t鈥檚 really about taking your talent and embracing and being okay with being different and proud.鈥

Haines is set to perform at Penticton鈥檚 Peach Festival at the Home Hardware Kid鈥檚 Zone at Gyro Park on Wed., Aug. 9 from 9:15 a.m. to 10 a.m.; Thursday, Aug. 10 at 10:30 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. and Friday, Aug. 11 at 9:15 a.m. to 10 a.m.





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