In the foreground, holding the surfboard - Rick Cobbin (?)
and surrounding the Bill Ballantine designed Datsun B-210 we have (from left to right) Ron Severini, Antonio "Tony" Hoyos, Dennis Hall (?), Ray "Anchor Face" Lesperance, Sandy Severini, Maude Flippen and ?
I posted something the other day in the comments section about the importance of a clown's originality in character, material and costuming... I take it all back now.
I'm stealing this; lock, stock and barrel ; )
This is "Monsewer" Eddie Gray, certifiable lunatic and member of the notorious Crazy Gang.
From Wikipedia...
"Monsewer" Eddie Gray was a stage comedian who performed in Music Halls.
He was born on 10 June 1898 in Pimlico, London as Edward Earl Gray. He became a professional juggler, but by the time he was twenty, he had extended to comedy. He discovered what became his trademark of "Cockney-French" while performing in Paris, France, when he spoke on the stage in his very bad French. The audience, however, liked it and he used it in his act from then on. His stage costume included a pair of horn-rimmed glasses and a looped moustache. He joined with the comedy pair Nervo and Knox in the Crazy Shows, but went solo in the early 1920s. He rejoined them again in 1957 when he was associated with the Crazy Gang shows at the Victoria Palace Theatre in London.
He married Marie Loftus Jones in 1927 and they had two sons. He died on 15 September 1969 in Worthing, Sussex.
Photo courtesy of Billy Vaughn. Comments courtesy of Pat Cashin and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Mr. Vaughn
Sadly, Ringling no longer employs this many clowns across all three of it's current units and any one of the clowns in the photo used more makeup on a three show Saturday than the current Alleys will use all season.
"Gone are the days..."
Many very healthy babies have been thrown out with far too much crystal clear bathwater in the pursuit of "updating" what should be "timeless".
Me and Robert "Mr. Robb" Zeiser on the night of Feb. 1st, 2008 at the AMC Empire 25 on 42nd St. The building that houses the lobby is the former home of the Empire Burlesque and Robb and I are standing on what was the stage where Abbott and Costello first appeared as a team.
I was going through some pictures last night and came across this one that I hadn't yet posted. It's a photo of Shane with Grandma (Matthew Pauli) on a recent visit to the Big Apple Circus in Bridgewater, NJ.
By Dennis Hevesi for the New York Times Published: April 23, 2008
Werner Groebli, who as Frick of the famous ice-skating comedy team of Frick & Frack, cracked up and wowed audiences for nearly 30 years with tricks like skating in circles while bent backward at the knees so that his body hovered almost parallel to the ice, died April 14 in Zurich. He was 92.
David Thomas, one of Mr. Groebli’s skating partners after the original Frack, Hansruedi Mauch, retired in 1953, announced his death. The cause was complications after breaking a leg at a nursing home outside of Zurich.
Soon after they first met and started acting silly together at a local rink in Basel, Switzerland, in 1936, Frick & Frack became famous, captivating crowds with 8- to 10-minute routines. A British producer caught their act in St. Moritz and signed them for a show in London; soon Hollywood called, and big American ice shows. After Mr. Mauch retired, the act became known as just Mr. Frick, with a series of partners playing second fiddle.
Frick and Frack were both virtuoso skaters, but the usual smooth flow around the rink was not for them. Mr. Groebli, in particular, reveled in square, stiff, clockwork-like moves, particularly evident in his toy soldier routine. Or Frack would toss Frick an invisible rope and, seemingly without moving a muscle, Frick would slowly glide forward as though being pulled, the propulsion coming from pressure on the outer edge of his skates. Or the two would skate by each other, missing a handshake, hook their legs, recoil and turn back face to face.
“Frick & Frack do not depend on costumes, grimaces or falls to get their laughs,” a Time magazine article said of the pair in December 1939. “With the pantomime of Charlie Chaplin and the rubber legs of Leon Errol, they take the elements of figure skating and distort them into crazy positions to create some of the most astonishing feats ever performed on skates.” (Leon Errol was a comic who often played a wobbly drunk.)
Mr. Groebli’s trademark move was that spread-eagle cantilever, bent backwards inches above the ice, from which he would rise by attaching his bamboo cane to an invisible hook in the air to hoist himself up, hand over hand.
Frick & Frack were particularly popular in the 1930s and 40s, when the Olympic champion figure skater Sonja Henie became a Hollywood star. Their lasting fame had something to do with the act’s name, which has entered the language as a synonym for two inseparable friends.
But they were almost Zig and Zag. Those were the first monikers they used when trying out clown routines as teenagers in Basel, their hometown. They used fictitious names because their parents did not approve of their carnival-like careers.
“I was to follow a career in architecture, and Frack’s parents wanted him to be a banker,” Mr. Groebli said in an interview in March 1999.
Why Frick and Frack? No particular reason, Mr. Groebli said. Frick, he added, is a small town near Basel; Frack means frock coat in the region’s patois.
Frick & Frack performed in London in the 1930s and came to the United States in 1938 as part of the St. Moritz Express ice revue, which performed in the open-air Tropical Ice Gardens in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles, and on the road. They were paid $200 a week and given the opportunity to improve their English as well as the hope that they might break into movies. In 1939, they were hired by the original Ice Follies, which they stayed with for 11,000 performances.
The pair and their slapstick routines, with mock collisions and blade-close misses, reached the height of their popularity in the 1940s, when Frick & Frick appeared in two films, “Silver Skates” (1943) and “Lady, Let’s Dance” (1944).
Werner Fritz Groebli was born in Basel on April 21, 1915. He is survived by a sister, Gertrud Zuberbuhler of Basel. His wife, the former Yvonne Baumgartner, died in 2002.
Mr. Groebli continued to perform with the Ice Follies until an accident forced him to retire in 1980, when he was 65. Mr. Mauch died in 1979. (The Ice Follies merged with Holiday on Ice in 1979.)
After his retirement, Mr. Groebli was named to the United States Figure Skating Association’s international hall of fame in Colorado Springs, Colo. Mr. Thomas, who was Mr. Groebli’s ice partner from 1973 to 1978, said he brought a quirky spontaneity to his performances, especially when something went awry.
“If the spotlight was off the mark, he would do a silly little dance to find it,” Mr. Thomas said. “If he fell, he would jump up and look around to see who tripped him.
“Or, if the orchestra was off beat — it was on a platform by the ice — he would go over, lift the drape, march into the orchestra and start using his bamboo cane like a baton.”
Mr. Groebli also liked to know exactly how long the crowd applauded.
“I used to count it for him,” Mr. Thomas said. “I’d go out there and say, ‘Frick, it’s 39 seconds.’ ”
Nick Ravo contributed reporting for this article.
To view the original NY Times article, please click the title of this post.
Michael Bongar (who I got to chat briefly with at a gig a few weeks ago) and his New York Follies' clowns (featuring Billy Vaughn at right) during the filming of the film Her Alibi, seen here with the film's star Tom Selleck.
Photo courtesy of Tommy Holbrook; comments courtesy of Sandy Weber
From my friend and yours, Mr. Sandy Weber... According to "The World of Clowns" by George Bishop, where there is a photo of the 1943 alley this is Hughie Kyle (though I know there are several mis-namings in this book).
Some some controversy has arisen as to the identity of the tramp clown in yesterday's Circus World photo from Billy Vaughn. Kenny Ahern, quite respectfully, contends that it is not Bill Hamilton as identified by Mr. Vaughn.
As I was not there (and have no idea how Mr. Hamilton's makeup may or may not have evolved), I will leave it to those that were to properly identify those that were...
Photos and comments courtesy of Kenny Ahern
Hi Pat,
Here is a photo of the 1984 Circus World Clown Alley
L-R stairs: Jim " Dee Jay" (?), Scooter (?), Jamie Ryan, Jorge "Taco" Del Moral, Heidi Vogel (sp?), Mike Tieffer (sp?), Little John, Bill Hamilton, Joe (?) CW the Clown
Would like to learn who they are. Maybe someone will get a kick out of seeing these from over 62 years ago.
This alley shot of the clowns listening to a phonograph was taken in April of 1946 on the Clyde Beatty Circus.
Kenneth Waite is the clown in the white ruffles in the foreground.
The clown with his hand to his ear (second from the right) is Pinto Colvig.
I wonder if they are listening to a Bozo record reader?
For those who do not know, Pinto was a circus clown who worked as a gag and voice man for Disney (where he co-wrote the smash hit Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?) and the Max Fleischer studios before moving to Capitol records and becoming the original Bozo the Capitol Clown.
Pinto is the father of Vance Colvig, the KTLA-TV Los Angeles Bozo the Clown who we featured here recently.
Joe Jackson (possibly Sr. but I would have to guess that it's most likely Jr.) in two photos, first (above) with his famous trick bicycle and second (below) reclining while having a portrait done by Angna Enters at the New York World''s Fair in 1940.
So this week we learned that both Abe Goldstein and Joe Jackson appeared at the fair. Anyone out there know if any other clowns appeared?
I know that Jackie LeClaire and Ernie Burch both worked the Ringling-produced circus show while Emmett Kelly Jr. worked the Kodak Pavilion at the 1964 NY World's Fair.