Bread and Puppet Theater is still working to ‘make the revolution irresistible’
Generations of peacenik Americans first saw Bread and Puppet Theater during anti-war protests. Giant white birds on rods soared high over marchers against U.S. military actions in Vietnam, Central America, Iraq and Gaza. Performers milled on the street with bobbing paper mache heads of Uncle Sam and other caricatures.
First founded in 1963, Bread and Puppet has been a mainstay of radical political performance, with its annual Fall Circus touring the country for more than fifty years. Human performers hand out freshly baked sourdough bread to audience members after each show.
“The role of the artist is to make the revolution irresistible,” says Abril Barajas, with a big smile. The puppeteer, who recently turned 30, is among 15 in the troupe traveling to 33 U.S. cities with this year’s show, entitled “Our Domestic Resurrection Revolution In Progress.”
It’s a wordy title, Barajas admits, but Bread and Puppet’s founder, 91-year-old Peter Schumann, loves wordplay. “Peter is all about the revolution and so are we,” Barajas says, with reverence. “It’s still his show. He’s still directing every single show. And he’s prolific as ever. I actually would say a lot of what lends to our longevity is the fact that we have a director that we all really trust.”

Rooted in 14th century traditions of traveling plays, Bread and Puppet gives a contemporary glowup to medieval mystery cycles, with a tongue-in-cheek version of the Biblical story of creation, as well as pointed political sketches that lampoon greedy billionaires, support American labor unions and criticize Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The 2025 show is staunchly pro-Palestinian, with a mourning puppet in a black abaya carrying a child-shaped shroud and performers waving flags bearing red poppies, a symbol of Palestinian loyalty to the land.
“We see people walk out,” Barajas acknowledged. “We see people like, realize what we’re talking about and walk away.”
Damien Mars did not walk out. He, along with his partner and teenage daughter, was among hundreds of people applauding a recent performance at an outdoor park in Ypsilanti, Mich.
“I really needed this,” he said. “Because I’ve just been so stressed about everything I see on TV. It’s kind of cathartic just to be here and experience it.”
The puppeteers hope such catharsis will lead to action. However, Abril Barajas said she and her circle of radical Bread and Puppet artists increasingly worry about their own free expression.
“We’re all trying to figure out how to walk that line so that we can keep doing our work, because the work is important” she said. “And also preserve the ethos of what we believe in.”
That ethos includes anti-capitalism, pointed criticism of U.S. foreign policy and old-school 1960s style talk of revolution. All of this at a moment when the White House has released a memo linking domestic terrorism to “anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity; support for the overthrow of the United States Government; extremism on migration, race, and gender; and hostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.”
“Yeah, there’s fear, for us,” Barajas acknowledged. “We’re nervous. We’re being careful, in the ways we know how. But it’s like that whole thing where bravery is being afraid and still doing it.”
After all, she added, puppets persist and tell stories, even when their stages disappear.
When Christmas is a little too bright … look to Krampus
If Santa Claus is the good cop of Christmas, then Krampus is the bad one: a creature from European folklore who scares children into behaving themselves, complete with goat horns and gnashing teeth.
Syria marks a year since Assad fled, but struggles to heal
Syria is struggling to heal a year after the Assad dynasty's repressive 50-year reign came to an end following 14 years of civil war that left the country battered and divided.
Former Trump attorney Alina Habba resigns as top federal prosecutor in New Jersey
Habba's decision comes as the Justice Department has lost a string of court cases ruling that U.S. attorneys have not been appointed legally, including in Nevada, California and Virginia.
Trump administration announcing $12 billion in one-time payments to farmers
Trump administration announcing $12 billion in one-time payments to farmers
Maureen Corrigan’s 10 favorite books of 2025 — with plenty for nonfiction lovers
Fresh Air's book critic says her picks tilt a bit to nonfiction, but the novels that made the cut redress the imbalance by their sweep and intensity. Karen Russell's The Antidote was her favorite.
FBI agents sue after being fired for kneeling during racial justice protest
The FBI agents kneeled during a protest in 2020 not to reflect a left-wing political view, but to de-escalate a volatile situation, they say in court papers. The FBI fired them in September.

