George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
Fenwick Library, MS2FL 4400 University Dr. Fairfax, Virginia 22030 Business Number: 703-993-2220 Fax Number: 703-993-8911 speccoll@gmu.edu URL: https://scrc.gmu.edu
Greta Kuriger Suiter
Repository
George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
The Chessé papers contain materials such as photographs, watercolor set and costume design sketches, playscripts, and programs
relating to Federal Theatre Project marionette productions in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Some of these plays are Child
of God, Crock of Gold, The Emperor Jones, Hansel and Gretel, Marionette Varieties, Rip Van Winkle, The Tempest, and Twelfth
Night. The papers also include magazine articles from the 1970s that highlight Chessé's mural painting at the Coit Tower in
San Francisco.
Ralph Chessé was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on January 6, 1900. He attended schools in New Orleans and Chicago including
the Chicago Art Institute, but was primarily a self-taught painter. In 1924 he traveled to San Francisco where he met the
puppeteer Blanding Sloan. It was after this meeting that Chessé began working as a puppeteer. In 1929 he opened his first
puppet theatre, The Marionette Guild on Merchant Street. In 1934 Chessé was selected, with a mural design titled "Playground",
as one of 26 artists by the Works Progress Administration to paint a wall fresco inside of Coit Tower. During this same year
The Marionette Guild had to close due to lack of funds.
Chessé joined the Federal Theatre project in 1936 as Director of the Puppetry Unit. There he oversaw a crew of 17 people.
Their first production was The Crock of Gold in 1936. Other early productions included The Mikado, Alice in Wonderland, A
Marionette Variety Show, and Emperor Jones.
The Federal Theatre Project was a division of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which provided employment for large
numbers of artists, writers, and performers during the Great Depression (1929-1939). The Federal Theatre began in 1935 and,
until its end in 1939, flourished as the first and only federally sponsored and subsidized theater program in the United States.
Directed by Hallie Flanagan (1880-1969), it was a way for theatrical professionals to gain employment during the Depression.
Jobs were provided for many people, including actors, playwrights, scene designers, scene builders, seamstresses, lighting
experts, ushers, box-office men, and stagehands.
In 1937 Chessé moved to Los Angeles to take over as State Director for California. This was a larger unit employing 50 people.
He remained in Los Angeles until 1939 though was still in communication with activities in San Francisco. In Los Angeles productions
included Rip Van Winkle, Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, and a Variety Show. On June 30th 1939 the puppetry unit received
notice that the Federal Theatre Project had been terminated. Also in 1939 Chessé brought marionettes to the World's Fair held
in San Francisco.
After work finished with the FTP Chessé moved his family back to San Francisco and had a long and successful career that included
various jobs. At different points in his life Chessé made a living by teaching puppetry for adult education classes at San
Francisco State College, producing a children's television program called The Wonderful World of Brother Buzz, making puppets
for TV, theatre, and opera, and acting in plays and films. In 1984 he moved to Ashland, Oregon where he was an avid painter
up until his death in 1991.
The Chessé papers contain materials such as photographs, watercolor set and costume design sketches, playscripts, and programs
relating to Federal Theatre Project marionette productions in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Some of these plays are Child
of God, Crock of Gold, The Emperor Jones, Hansel and Gretel, Marionette Varieties, Rip Van Winkle, The Tempest, and Twelfth
Night. The papers also include magazine articles from the 1970s that highlight Chessé's mural painting at the Coit Tower in
San Francisco.
The Works Progress Administration oral histories collection, the Federal Theatre Project collection, the Federal Theatre Project
photograph collection, as well as numerous other personal papers.