Almost 75 years ago in 1946, the first Christmas after the war, Augusto Grilli's the little theatre received 12 puppets. Grilli's eyes still light up when he recalls the childhood gift that sparked a career and a lifelong passion. It was love at first sight.
He turned out to have a talent for marionettes -- puppets with strings -- and soon became something of a star in his school in Turin, northern Italy.
A drawer is filled with heads, while hundreds of eyes look out from an old wooden box. The little gold and white theatre is today carefully preserved in one of the countless plastic boxes waiting to be taken to the new International Puppet Museum. The dream is to open a museum in 2023 in Turin.
The Grilli family has a collection of more than 20,000 objects from around the world, everything from theatres, marionettes and glove puppets to shadow figures and silhouettes.
As well as hosting exhibitions, the museum will put on shows in a 120-seat theatre, hold restoration workshops and maintain an archive.
Puppetry has a rich history in both Asia and Europe, taking many different forms on both small and big stages.