Wednesday, May 18, 2011

ETIENNE DECROUX: The Principals of Corporeal Mime

























One subgroup of physical theater is corporeal mime. Its objective is to place drama inside the moving human body, rather than to substitute gesture for speech as in pantomime. In this medium, the mime must apply to physical movement those principles that are at the heart of drama: pause, hesitation, weight, resistance and surprise. Corporeal mime accentuates the vital importance of the body and physical action on stage.


It was developed primarily by Étienne Decroux, who was heavily influenced by his training with Jacques Copeau at the Ecole du Vieux-Colombier. He created this method and technique for creative performers wishing to transform their ideas into a physical reality, in order to devise a new style of theater "making visible the invisible," as Decroux put it.


The objectives of corporeal mime are to enable the actor to become more autonomous in creating metaphor-based physical theater pieces, which may include text, but are not based on text, i.e., to give the actor greater access to physical metaphors in work in traditional plays, and to increase the actor's strength, agility, flexibility and imaginative powers.


While Decroux’s movement style was quite different from the commedia dell'arte from which 19th century pantomime took as its model, Decroux was influenced by this classical art form. Decroux worked extensively with Teatro Piccolo in Milan, training actors and choreographing Arlecchino an adaptation of Galdoni's Servant of Two Masters directed by Giorgio Strehler. Concidentally, Jacques Lecoq, another famous mime teacher worked as a movement teacher at Piccolo Teatro until he was succeeded by Decroux.


Unlike classical pantomime, corporeal mime was also no longer an anecdotal art that used conventional gestures to create illusions of objects or persons.


Corporeal mimes seek to express abstract and universal ideas and emotions through codified movements of the entire body (but most especially the trunk--the face and hands are confined to a secondary role in this movement form) Some corporeal mimes write their own texts, as did the Greek mime-authors, integrating the mime-actor's art with the author's. They also include props, costumes, masks, lighting effects and music. Because it contains movement expression along with other elements, it is often loosely alluded to as physical or movement theater.











Tuesday, May 17, 2011

IN MEMORIAM: John McConnell

It is with deep regret that I inform you that friend and colleague John H.
McConnell passed away last night.


He had recently been ill with an undiagnosed ailment.


John is survived by his wife, Dolores, and three sons, two of whom, Eric and
Brian, were with him in the circus business, as well as his
daughters-in-laws.


Funeral arrangements are pending. Doyle Funeral in Morristown, NJ will be
handling the arrangements.
http://www.doylefh.com/


He was active for many years as a circus proprietor, manager and consultant.
He wrote many books including several on circus topics, including the
Hanneford family and the Shrine circus that originated in Detroit.


John was a long time member of the Circus Historical Society and was serving
as a trustee of the organization.


Fred Dahlinger


IN MEMORIAM: Jim Henson (September 24, 1936 – May 16, 1990)












Richard Hunt at Jim Henson's memorial...


Frank Oz...


Carroll Spinney as Big Bird...










Monday, May 16, 2011

CLOWN ALLEY: Various

Mike Bourbon(?) on Beatty-Cole

Gene Lewis on RBB&B in the 1960s

Shorty Hinkle in the Beatty-Cole alley

Unidentified

Unidentified 

Lou Nagy in the backyard of the Clyde Beatty-Cole Bros. Circus.



THE CHICKYS: Mirror Entree



Circus clowning doesn't get more traditional that this...


Sunday, May 15, 2011

Saturday, May 14, 2011

JAMIE'S FIRST CIRCUS: Vidbel's (May 14, 2011)

We took Jamie to his first circus today and to say he was delighted watching Mitch in the ring is an understatement. He laughed and clapped throughout Mitch's act and couldn't take his eyes off of him at intermission.

Mitch gave us an autographed photo which Jamie wanted to look at the whole way home.

Jamie and Shane with Jonathan "Mitch" Freddes



Thank you, Mitch!




Friday, May 13, 2011

THE YES MEN





The Yes Men are a culture jamming activist duo consisting of Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno.[1] Through actions of tactical media, The Yes Men primarily aim to raise awareness about what they consider problematic social issues. To date, the duo has produced two films: The Yes Men (2003) and The Yes Men Fix the World (2009).[1] In these films, they impersonate entities that they dislike, a practice that they call "identity correction". The Yes Men operate under the mission statement of telling the truth and exposing lies. They create and maintain fake websites similar to ones they intend to spoof, which have led to numerous interview, conference, and TV talk show invitations. They espouse the belief that corporations and governmental organizations often act in dehumanizing ways toward the public. Elaborate props are sometimes part of the ruse (e.g. Survivaball), as shown in their 2003 DVD release The Yes Men. The Yes Men have collaborated with other groups of similar interest, including Improv Everywhere and Steve Lambert.[2]

Background

According to Bichlbaum, the Yes Men concept initially sprang from their creation of a fake website spoofing the World Trade Organization. To the surprise of Bichlbaum and Bonanno, many believed the site to be authentic, and the two were consequently contacted to speak at a conference in Austria. Since this time, the Yes Men have continued performing large-scale hoaxes, in what they describe as a collaborative effort with journalists to help the media tell stories which they believe are important.[3]

The Yes Men often deploy a satirical approach: they pose as a powerful entity (typically a corporate or government representative or executive) and make ridiculous and shocking comments that caricature the ideological position of the organisation or person. Furthermore, they acknowledge the idea that many corporate or government entities manipulate their ideology using spin; in response, the Yes Men use this power of spin to their own advantage, and use media outlets to disseminate their personal interpretation of the situation. A sense of humor and shock value is usually employed to make these issues more palatable to the general public and to call greater media attention to stories of interest.[1] Some of these outrageous ideas include the possibility to sell one's vote or that the poor should consume recycled human waste. On most occasions, little to no shock or outrage is publicly evoked in response to their prank.

On occasion, the Yes Men's phony spokesperson will make announcements that represent fictitious scenarios for the anti-globalization movement or opponents of corporate crime. The result often heed false news reports which cover the demise of the World Trade Organization, or Dow Chemical paying compensation to the victims of the Bhopal disaster, which the Yes Men intend to provide publicity for problems concerning these organizations. One of the effects of apologizing and promising support on behalf of an organization is that the organization is then later forced to re-acknowledge the event in question and retract all of the proposed good will. This served to further publicize the negative event of the organization and sets-up the organization to look bad for taking back any support The Yes Men offered under the name of their organization.

The Yes Men have posed as spokespeople for the WTO, McDonalds, Dow Chemical, and the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. The two leading members of the Yes Men are known by a number of aliases, most recently, and in film, Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno. Their real names are Jacques Servin[4] and Igor Vamos, respectively. Servin is an author of experimental fiction, and was known for being the man who inserted images of men kissing in the computer game SimCopter. Vamos is an associate professor of media arts at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York. They are assisted by numerous people across the globe. There are other full time members, such as Whitney Black and Rocco Ferrer, that take a more behind the scenes approach.

Their experiences were documented in the film The Yes Men,[5] distributed by United Artists, the film documentary info wars, and the book The Yes Men: The True Story of the End of the World Trade Organization (ISBN 0-9729529-9-3). Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno also directed a 2009 film entitled The Yes Men Fix the World, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.[6] In 2009 they launched their online video channel on Babelgum.[7]

 

Projects

George W. Bush


One of the Yes Men's first pranks was the satirical website www.gwbush.com, established for the 2000 US presidential election to draw attention to alleged hypocrisies on Bush's actual website. When asked about the site in a press conference on May 21, 1999, Bush responded that the website had gone too far in criticizing him.[8][9][10]

In 2004, the Yes Men went on tour posing as the group "Yes, Bush Can!" and encouraged supporters to sign a "Patriot Pledge" agreeing to keep nuclear waste in their backyard and send their children off to war. They appeared at the 2004 Republican National Convention and drove across the country at first in an RV with a George W. Bush body wrap, and then in a painted van.

Ice Age Petition

 

The Yes Men posed as working as part of the Bush Cheney campaign. They carried around a petition asking for signatures to support Global Warming because America's competing countries will suffer while America only bears minor side-effects.[11]

Dow Chemical

 


Andy Bichlbaum, a member of the Yes Men, appears on BBC World to take full responsibility for the Bhopal disaster.

On December 3, 2004, the twentieth anniversary of the Bhopal disaster, Andy Bichlbaum appeared on BBC World as "Jude Finisterra",[12] a Dow Chemical spokesman.[13] Dow is the owner of Union Carbide, the company responsible for the chemical disaster which killed thousands and left over 120,000 requiring lifelong care.

On their fake Dow Chemical website, the Yes Men said that Dow Chemical Company had no intention whatsoever of repairing the damage.[14] The real company received considerable backlash, and both the real Dow and the phony Dow denied the statements, but Dow took no real action.

The Yes Men decided to pressure Dow further, so as "Finisterra," Bichlbaum went on the news to claim that Dow planned to liquidate Union Carbide and use the resulting $12 billion to pay for medical care, clean up the site, and fund research into the hazards of other Dow products. After two hours of wide coverage, Dow issued a press release denying the statement, ensuring even greater coverage of the phony news of a cleanup. By the time the original story was discredited, Dow's stock had declined in value by $2 billion.[15]

After the original interview was revealed as a hoax, Bichlbaum appeared in a follow-up interview on the United Kingdom's Channel 4 news.[16] During the interview he was asked if he had considered the emotions and reaction of the people of Bhopal when producing the hoax. According to the interviewer, "there were many people in tears" upon having learned of the hoax. Bichlbaum said that, in comparison, what distress he had caused the people was minimal to that for which Dow was responsible. The Yes Men claim on their website that they have been told by contacts in Bhopal that once they had got over their disappointment that it wasn't real, they were pleased about the stunt and thought it had helped to raise awareness of their plight.[17]

At the International Payments Conference on April 28, 2005, 'Dow representative' "Erastus Hamm" unveiled Acceptable Risk, the Acceptable Risk Calculator, and the Acceptable Risk mascot — a life-sized golden skeleton named Gilda — to an audience of about 70 banking professionals.

WTO

 

One of the Yes Men's most famous pranks is placing a "corrected" WTO website at http://www.gatt.org/ (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade). The fake site began to receive real emails from confused visitors, including invitations to address various elite groups on behalf of the WTO, to which they responded as if they were the actual WTO.

Appearing in newly purchased suits, the Yes Men gave speeches encouraging corporations to buy votes directly from citizens. They argued that the US Civil War was a waste of money because Third World countries now willingly supply equivalent slaves. They also urged people to listen to the WTO instead of the facts. They then unveiled a gold spandex body suit that they claimed would allow productivity to increase, as managers would not have to oversee workers in person but could keep track of them via images on an attached screen as well as implanted sensors.

New Orleans and HUD

 



The Yes Men appeared on August 28, 2006 at a "Housing Summit" in New Orleans, taking the stage along with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco. Before an audience composed mostly of real estate developers, one of the Yes Men gave a speech in which he claimed to be Rene Oswin, a fictitious "assistant under-secretary" at the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). In his speech he claimed that HUD would reopen public housing facilities that had been closed since Hurricane Katrina struck in August 2005. He said that HUD had changed its mind about tearing down the undamaged housing units, and would not tear down the housing projects, as they had planned to do in order to replace them with mixed-income development.[18]

HUD has called this prank, which brought attention to the lack of affordable housing, a "cruel hoax." A former resident of the community was quoted by Bichlbaum as saying, "do whatever's most effective, do it, don't worry about how it affects us," however.[19] HUD spokeswoman Donna White said no one named "Rene Oswin" works for the department. White commented, "I'm like, who the heck is that?"[20]

The fictitious Oswin also announced that the big oil companies would contribute some of their record profits to rebuild the wetlands destroyed by the construction of oil tanker canals to prevent the city from being inundated by future hurricanes.

ExxonMobil

 


Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno pose as ExxonMobil executives.


On June 14, 2007, the Yes Men acted during Canada's largest oil conference in Calgary, Alberta, posing as ExxonMobil and National Petroleum Council (NPC) representatives. In front of more than 300 oilmen, the NPC was expected to deliver the long-awaited conclusions of a study commissioned by U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman. The NPC is headed by former ExxonMobil CEO Lee Raymond, who is also the chair of the study.[21] When the Yes Men arrived at the conference they said that Lee Raymond (the promised speaker) was unable to make it due to a pressing situation with the president. The Yes Men then went on to give a presentation in place of Lee Raymond.

In the actual speech, the "NPC rep" announced that current U.S. and Canadian energy policies (notably the massive, carbon-intensive processing of Alberta's oil sands, and the development of liquid coal) are increasing the chances of huge global calamities. But he reassured the audience that in the worst case scenario, the oil industry could "keep fuel flowing" by transforming the billions of people who would die into oil.[22]

The project, called Vivoleum, would work in perfect synergy with the continued expansion of fossil fuel production. The oilmen listened to the lecture with attention, and then lit "commemorative candles". At this point, event security recognized the Yes Men and forced them off stage, and the 'punchline' — that the candles were made of Vivoleum obtained from the flesh of an "Exxon janitor" who died as a result of cleaning up a toxic spill — was not delivered to the audience, but only to reporters.[23]


Milton Friedman documentary

 

In July 2007, in order to obtain interviews with right wing think tanks, the Yes Men pretended to be filming a documentary about Milton Friedman. (In fact, their documentary, The Yes Men Fix the World, did end up speaking about Friedman at length.) After interviewing members of the Competitive Enterprise Institute and the American Enterprise Institute, several of whom appear in the film, the Yes Men were foiled at the Cato Institute by libertarian activists Bureaucrash, one of whose members had been hanging around the Competitive Enterprise Institute two days before and recognized the duo. On their way out, Bureaucrash members threw colored powder at the Yes Men in a reference to the rainbow.[24]

BP

 

On March 10, 2008, the Yes Men responded to a letter from BP (merged from British Petroleum and Amoco) accusing them of copyright violation, with a letter apologizing for having forgotten BP with the spoof site half-completed and that "BP does every bit as much damage to this planet as does Exxon, Halliburton, or any other more obviously nefarious company" and deserves its own properly completed spoof site.[25]

Captain Euro

 

In 1999, the Yes Men visited the offices of Twelve Star Communications, creators of the Eurofederalist superhero Captain Euro, "a comic book character designed to promote European unification with young children." Inside, the impostors discover the hidden, dark truth about European Unification.[26]

New York Times

 

The Yes Men (along with the Anti-Advertising Agency) also claimed partial responsibility for a prank on November 12, 2008, where approximately 80,000 copies of a fake edition of the July 4, 2009 edition of The New York Times were handed out on the streets of New York and Los Angeles.[27][28]

The fake edition shows their ideas for a better future with headlines such as Iraq War Ends and Nation Sets Its Sights on Building Sane Economy. The front page contained a spoofed motto, "All the News We Hope to Print" from the famous phrase "All the news that's fit to print".[29]

Articles in the paper announce dozens of new initiatives, including an establishment of national health care, a maximum wage for C.E.O.s and an article wherein George W. Bush accuses himself of treason for his actions during his years as president.[30][31] There is also a Reuters photo of the fake cover page[32][33][34] and a fake website, http://www.nytimes-se.com/.

Alex S. Jones, a former Times reporter and media scholar, said of the paper, "I would say if you’ve got one, hold on to it...it will probably be a collector’s item. I’m just glad someone thinks The New York Times print edition is worthy of an elaborate hoax. A Web spoof would have been infinitely easier. But creating a print newspaper and handing it out at subway stations? That takes a lot of effort."[32]

New York Post and SurvivaBall

 

On September 21, 2009, one day before a UN summit lead-up to the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009, over 2,000 volunteers distributed throughout New York City a 32-page "special edition" New York Post, blaring headlines (cover story "We're Screwed") that the city could face deadly heat waves, extreme flooding, and other lethal effects of global warming within the next few decades. The paper has been created by the Yes Men and a coalition of activists as a wake-up call to action on climate change. Other articles describe the Pentagon's alarmed response to global warming, the U.S. government's minuscule response, China's advanced alternative energy program, and how the Copenhagen climate talks could be a "Flopenhagen".[35] There is also a fake website.[36] 

On September 22, 2009 the Yes Men demonstrated on the alleged behalf of Halliburton and dozens of other climate threatening corporations an inflatable ball-shaped costume known as the SurvivaBall, claiming it was a self contained living system for surviving disasters caused by global warming. Over two dozen people wore the SurvivaBall costumes as it was demonstrated in the East River.[37] Police shut down the demonstration for lack of a permit. Co-founder of the Yes Men, Andy Bichlbaum, was arrested on an outstanding parking ticket charge and a handful of other Yes Men were served with summons and tickets for disorderly behavior and creating hazardous conditions.[38][39]

The SurvivaBall was also used in a protest at the steps of the capitol. The protesting balls demanded action be taken on global warming to achieve the 350.org goal. Their strategy was to block the entrance until the government comes to a binding agreement on climate change. Further information on the SurvivaBall concept can be found on the mock website http://www.survivaball.com/index.php.

US Chamber of Commerce

 

On October 19, 2009, the Yes Men spoofed the United States Chamber of Commerce, declaring a U-turn on their climate change policy.[40][41] The Yes Men were not able to complete the conference without being exposed as a hoax, although their message that the United States Chamber of Commerce needs to reevaluate their direction in terms of clean energy was their primary concern and was received. Major TV and news organisations carried this story briefly before the hoax was uncovered. The US Chamber of Commerce two weeks later did change their official policy though, according to Al Gore it was "not because of" the Yes Men's stunt. The Chamber has launched a lawsuit against The Yes Men who will be defended by the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

The Yes Men released a film documenting this prank bundled with their 2009 film The Yes Men Fix the World. This has been released as a "P2P Edition" version available for free download using a Creative Commons copyright by available from EZTV among other sources. In the film they say their choice to release this way is to counteract the US Chamber of Commerce lawsuit provision that film of the hoax be destroyed - an attempted example of the Streisand effect.

Canadian environment minister

 

During the 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, the Yes Men put out a statement in which they purported to be the Canadian environment minister, Jim Prentice. The statement pledged to cut carbon emissions by 40% below 1990 levels by 2020. The statement was followed by a response from the Ugandan delegation, praising the statement, that was also faked. Another fake statement was then put out blasting the falsehoods of the original fake statement. A fake story in a European edition of the Wall Street Journal was also posted online. Jim Prentice described the hoax as "undesirable".[42][43]

Niger Delta Hoax

 

On March 28, 2010, a video was released on YouTube with the title "Shell: We are sorry". A man called Bradford Houppe, from the Ethical Affairs Committee at Royal Dutch Shell gave a four minute long apology to the people of the Niger Delta for ruining their land, water, and communities. This video was created in response to the numerous environmental problems and human rights violations that have occurred in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria since Shell began oil exploration in the region decades ago. Shell has yet to make any official statement about this video.

GE Tax Refund Hoax reported by the AP

 

On April 13, 2011, a hoax website with an URL similar to that of the GE press domain (genewscenter.com) designed to look like the GE news center website. The hoax site posted the claim "GE Responds to Public Outcry – Will Donate Entire $3.2 Billion Tax Refund to Help Offset Cuts and Save American Jobs." and it seems that the AP reported the story as fact, as reported by Good.[44]


Find out more about The Yes Men at www.theyesmen.org.





Saturday, May 07, 2011

8 RULES FOR CLOWN GAGS: Paraphrased from Kurt Vonnegut




  1. Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted.
  2. Give the audience at least one character he or she can root for.
  3. Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.
  4. Every moment must do one of two things—reveal character or advance the action.
  5. Start as close to the end as possible.
  6. Be a Sadist. No matter how sweet and innocent your character, make awful things happen to them—in order that the audience may see what they are made of.
  7. Perform to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your clowning will get pneumonia.
  8. Give your audience as much information as possible as soon as possible. Your audience should have a complete understanding of what is going on.

Friday, May 06, 2011

COCO & COMPANY: Cocotina at Bertram Mills (1961)


GIRL CLOWN


Nikolai "Coco" Poliakoff showing his 16 year old granddaughter, Valentina "Cocotina" Rowlands the ropes with the help of Bertram Mills alleymates Jimmy Scott, "Little Billy" Merchant and Nicholas "Little Nicky" Needleman.



Thursday, May 05, 2011

CLOWN ALLEY: RBB&B, Bellvue Hospital (1931)


DR CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN


I've posted some of this footage before, but this is SOUND footage. In it we see Ernie Wiswell performing his Comedy Car act, a pre-Otto and Freddie Boxing gag and Felix Adler performing the Hair Grower as Jack LeClair looks on.



Wednesday, May 04, 2011

ARNAUT BROTHERS: Nightingale Entree, Admiral Broadway Revue (1949)

CAMERA INTERVIEWS - THE ARNAUT BROTHERS THE FAMOUS MUSICAL CLOWNS



After watching the above video please click the title of this post to be taken to video from NBC and the DuMont Network's Admiral Broadway Revue starring Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca in 1949.

Starting at the 8:00 mark, please enjoy Rene and John Arnaut's presentation of the Nightingale Entree, the only version that I've ever seen that doesn't make me cringe.


Wednesday, April 27, 2011

MAGNIFICENT GEORGE






QUOTE: Michael Ware

"Those who have been circus clowns are never the same again. We see the world through different eyes, and I consider that a privilege. I am the custodian of all these stories, and I belong to a fortunate tribe. I walk with ghosts."

~ Paraphrased from Michael Ware



Saturday, April 23, 2011

EVERYTHING THAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE ART OF CLOWN MAKEUP!

The Different Styles of Clown Makeup | eHow.co.uk

Why do online tutorials like this always find people to do these things who know less about clown makeup than my dog knows about the Crimean War?



Thursday, April 21, 2011

THE NEW ERNIE KOVACS DVD BOX SET FROM SHOUT FACTORY IS OUT NOW!

Artwork by Drew Friedman
 
The Ernie Kovacs Collection


Whenever a clip of Ernie Kovacs pops up in a TV special about show-business history, the focus tends to be on one of his whimsical visual gags or kooky characters. The biggest revelation of the long-overdue six-DVD box set The Ernie Kovacs Collection is how funny Kovacs could be when he was just standing in front of a camera and talking, as “himself.” Kovacs started his showbiz career as a stage actor in the ’30s, while still in his teens, then moved on to radio before becoming a staple of local Philadelphia television in the early ’50s, as a host of just about every imaginable kind of TV format—some of which, like the morning show, he helped invent. In those early days, Kovacs worked loose, tossing out asides, puns, and winks. He looked like a Latin lover, but sounded like a traveling salesman.

The first disc of The Ernie Kovacs Collection assembles surviving examples of Kovacs plunging headlong into a new medium, in shows like 1951’s Ernie In Kovacsland and 1952’s Kovacs On The Corner. He wanders through sets full of props—sometimes wandering off the set, making sure to point out the cameras and microphones to home viewers—and picks up objects seemingly at random, to make absurdist jokes. Sometimes the routines are spontaneous, as in one bit where Kovacs gets annoyed and smacks a head of lettuce around while making a salad. Sometimes they’re carefully planned, as in another bit where he hears a gong every time he lifts a hat. The production back then wasn’t slick; the sound dips in and out, and sometimes there’s an unplanned lag before a gag. But it’s impressive even now to see someone try to turn live television into his own Looney Tune, full of surreal surprises and quick blackout sketches. (And this was more than a decade before Laugh-In.)

In the liner notes to The Ernie Kovacs Collection, author/fan Jonathan Lethem sums up the comedian’s weaknesses, writing, “It should be said that much of his work is too conceptual and deliberate and even awkward to be smoothly seductive to the viewer’s hilarity; it often presents itself as humorous while actually being only interesting and uncomfortably odd.” That’s most evident in Kovacs’ 1959-61 panel show Take A Good Look, in which he challenged celebrities to guess why a guest had recently been in the news, with the “help” of short skits that were barely related to the topic. It was a straight-faced parody of game shows, in keeping with Kovacs’ habit of mocking genre conventions and the mechanics of television. (As in this Kovacs fake-commercial: “Eat food. Food fills you up. It gives you all the vitamins you can’t get in vitamins.”) Like Bob & Ray, Nichols & May, and Mad magazine, Kovacs used mainstream media to transmit messages about the inherent silliness of culture both high and low, from the Superman comics Kovacs spoofed as “Superclod” to his version of Romeo And Juliet, where no one can remember who’s a Capulet and who’s a Montague.

But beyond mere wiseacre-y, Kovacs had a sense of how artificiality could be beautiful as well as deceptive. The highlights of The Ernie Kovacs Collection appear on discs four and five, in the form of the specials he shot for NBC and ABC between 1957 and his death in 1962. There, with more resources at his disposal—and with a general understanding by all concerned that it was okay if he failed to reach more than a niche audience—Kovacs tried to distill his act to a pure form of delight, mixing dry-witted jokes with ingeniously strange flights of fancy. He’d have his wife Edie Adams sing while he created psychedelic in-camera effects (in 1959!), or he’d stage Swan Lake with ballerinas wearing gorilla suits, or explore an elaborate scale model of a city with his camera, to the sounds of a Béla Bartók concerto. Kovacs achieved effects on television usually only seen in avant-garde film, and he did it with a welcoming smile.

Monday, April 18, 2011

ICHOF CLASSIC COMEDY VIDEO TAPES!



From ICHOF Executive Director Greg DeSanto...

We were just given a box of comedy gold! We were handed a box of VHS tapes, donated to help raise funds for our outreach programs. These video tapes that need a good home and are all commercially released VHS tapes, not TV dubs or DVD's.


They are:

I Love Lucy-Lucy the Clown

The Best of Barney Fife (six tapes)
The Love God- Don Knotts
The Lucy Show collector's Editions (5 tapes)
Stan Without Ollie Vol. 1 (Stan Laurel solo films)
Curse of the Pink Panther
The Big Show 1961 (circus movie starring Ester Williams)
The Hustler (Paul Newaman & Jackie Gleason)
W.C. Fields-World's Funniest Man (collection of his Mack Sennett shorts)
Red Skelton-Getting Personal (Red on a Canadian talk show from the mid 80's)
A Classic Christmas on the Ed Sullivan Show (lots of variety acts)
Izzy & Moe (Jackie Gleason & Art Carney)
Rings Around the World (circus movie from the early 60's, Gunther, Francesco clowns)
Sally of the Sawdust (WC Fields silent movie set in a circus)
Slapstick Encyclopedia Complete Set, Vol. 1-8. Chaplin, Keaton, Lloyd, Langdon, Laurel & Hardy


Interested in any of the above? E-mail us at info@theclownmuseum.com for more info!



CHALK FACE: An Essay on Slivers Oakley by Jon Pult




Chalk Face


    By Jon Pult

     On March 9, 1916 an item in the New York Times headlined "Slivers, Clown Suicide for a Girl" detailed the squalid end of Frank Oakley, the most famous American circus clown of the early twentieth-century.  He had sealed his windows with bath towels at 308 West 71st Street in Manhattan and turned on the gas. A few years earlier, the Times has lavished praise on Oakley, deeming him in one fawning feature "Laugh Maker in Chief to the American People by Popular Acclimation." While the subheading in the news item about his death refers to Oakley as the "Man Who Amused Millions" there is scant mention of his  sawdust triumphs, of "The Ball Game" or his famed "Lobster Walk-around." Rather, the focus was on Oakley's descent, a pathetic and familiar tale of sex, theft, alcohol, and loneliness.



            Frank Oakley was one of the most influential figures in the transformation--the invention, really --of an American style of clowning, a move away from the European tradition of the talking clown that was suited to the intimate confines of the one-ring circus, and a move toward the outsized pantomime and grandiose slapstick necessary to entertain thousands in three rings under a vast canvas big top. And he was paid handsomely for his pratfalls and “panto”, earning  $1,000.00 a week, while other top circus clowns made less than $100.00. Such was Oakley’s talent and reach that no less an authority on the art of comedy than the great silent film clown Buster Keaton, in 1948, counted Oakley one of the three greatest comedians of all-time. But Oakley’s legacy in the development of the American circus was overwhelmed by Keaton’s chosen medium, the motion picture. Today, while other pioneering circus clowns such as Emmett Kelly or Lou Jacobs are still on occasion able, whether by name or by look, to muster some vague recognition, Frank "Slivers" Oakley is largely forgotten. 



            You can find a picture of Oakley in a recent compendium of circus photographs taken by F.W. Glaser between 1901 and 1927. Flip past the photo of an elephant receiving a pedicure while perched atop two wooden half-barrels (a true testament to the cooper's art), and past a picture of the famous pinhead "Zip, the What-is-it?" playing the violin at the entrance to Barnum's "Congress of Freaks," and there's Slivers, once known far-and-wide as "America's greatest chalk-face comedian." 



            Glaser took the photo on the Barnum and Bailey circus lot in 1903, at the beginning of Oakley’s ascent.  The big top looms close behind, its sidewall canvas sagging from the quarter poles.  Oakley's greasepaint is standard clown white, with Harlequinade diamonds over the eyes. We can guess that the triangular shape on his nose, and his exaggerated mouth are red. His shirt is a collarless number, its front filigreed with the braid of a bandsman, while his pants are a gleaming white and heavily starched. The outer seams of each pant-leg curve in a sort of wild crescent, his lower extremities suggesting empty parentheses. Finally, his shoes are in the shape of huge and exaggerated bare feet.



            In the photo, Slivers holds his hand to his ear as if to hear something.  His dirty palm (the remains of greasepaint or the result of a bout of rousting?) faces the camera.  In his left arm, he cradles the handle of a bucket. His expression is deadpan, however, and his stony mien suggests that Oakley is wholly unaware that he is about to be hit with a cane wielded by fellow clown Alex Seabert.  Seabert sits precariously on the back end of a mule.  His curly shoulder-length wig (obscuring much of his face) and his outsize puttynose are in the tradition of the grotesque.  He's wearing a tutu of the sort that might be worn by a lithe funambulist, his muscular calves sheathed in white tights. In the left corner appear the words "Oakley and Seabert" in an ornate hand, but there is no record as to whether this is perhaps the penultimate moment of their act, preceding a roaring "blow-off." 



Oakley, a reedy Swede, was born in 1871, and by the time he appeared in this photograph, he was a bright star in Barnum and Bailey's "Greatest Show on Earth."  This in an era when being a "star" of the circus meant something, when the great traveling tent cities --Barnum and Bailey, Ringling Brothers, the Great Forepaugh Shows -- were at the center of America's cultural life. In his prime, Oakley performed for 20,000 people a day. And in that first decade of the twentieth century, when the circus still held sway, the sawdust spectacle perhaps most revered was Oakley's pantomimed baseball game.  All the rings in the massive tent stood empty to make way for a lone and silent rail of a man, a "Sliver," acting out a scene from the nation's pastime. The “Ball Game” act was so popular that the sheet music to the tune that accompanied the performance, "Slivers: Rag Eccentric," was for sale at shops across the country. 



Few other artifacts remain to attest to Oakley's facility under canvas. There are a scattering of photos, cartoon renderings, and newspaper clippings. A thumbnail description of Oakley's “Ball Game” survives in a Detroit obituary, and the routine seems to have been wholly based on exploring Americans' hatred of umpires.  After setting up a diamond in center ring, Slivers acts out the great cry of the American sports fan- “Kill the Umpire!"-in a jaunty panto. 



            At the start of the routine, according to the Detroit writer, Oakley emerged as a catcher, with his "bird cage" mask and heavily padded mitt.  He popped his fist in the glove a few times and set up, crouching behind the plate. He feigned receiving a pitch, and then in the midst of the motion of tossing the horsehide back to his battery-mate he suddenly wheeled to argue the call with the imaginary ump, throwing off the mask, gesticulating wildly and jawing with his adversary. Later he took a turn at bat, and, after working the count full, "hit" one in the gap, but was thrown out trying "to stretch a three-bagger into a home run."  Another rhubarb with the umpire ensued.  By all accounts, at this point the crowd watching Slivers was delirious. One circus memoir of the period references the need for extra medical personnel because so many in the audience were passing out from laughter. "The entire act was in pantomime," the writer states. "No one but Oakley was on the stage. But so realistic was every move and gesture, so convincing, that he never failed to carry the house." 



There is no film of Slivers performing the “Ball Game” routine, but considering Buster Keaton’s comments about Oakley, it’s not hard to conclude that the masterful solo baseball interlude in Keaton’s classic 1928 film “The Cameraman,”  replete with threatening gestures, crazed pratfalls, and  pick-off plays, is an homage to Oakley. With the aid of that cinematic paean, the press clippings, and the photos of  the stained and billowing tents laid out on the scruffy lots where Slivers performed -- the gilded cage wagons with their exotic cargo of giraffes and hippopotami, the elegant equestriennes, the army of clowns -- we can try to put Oakley inside, put him under canvas, and imagine what it might have been like in mid-summer, in Omaha or French Lick, around the turn of the century, the “Circus Age,” when whole towns would shut down for the arrival of the big show.  The heat amplifying the heady smells of elephant dung and sawdust, the din of the crowd, peppered with the cries of candy butchers-"Cracker Jack . . . Lemonade."  Anticipation, the floor of the big top empty, and then release as the band, forty men strong, plays the first strain of his spry namesake rag.  Here comes Slivers "the only clown in the circus history for whom the three rings were ever cleared."  Thousands of faces focus on the silent figure in the center of the big top. "Hardly human is Slivers," a Detroit newsman writes, "He is, rather, a vitilized caracture (sic); a Sunday comic supplement character, life-sized and animated; he endures blows, buffets, kicks, falls without a sound. The children, and at a circus everyone should be a child, watch him with rapture." They have probably all been waiting for this day, circus day, and this moment. Slivers Oakley, the clown pictured on the heralds that have been pasted all over the town for weeks.  Peals of laughter. Surprise. Like that of a young Studs Terkel who said of  the sight of the vaudeville clown A. Robin, "the Banana Man", on the stage of the Palace Theatre in Chicago: "Me flesh and blood, him on the stage flesh and blood, ecce homo, behold the man."





In 1907, his last season with Barnum and Bailey, Slivers was at the height of his popularity and fame, but according to an interview he gave the Times in March of that year, that height didn’t bring happiness. The headline read “Mr. Slivers on the Serious Business of Being a Clown,” and right below, a subheading: “There are Bruises and Hurts and Moments of Mental Anguish, But the Public Laughs at Them All and Wants the Clown to be Funny in Private Life as Well.”  In the article, Oakley describes a multitude of indignities suffered at the hands of children of all ages: “It’s funny how people can’t understand that we clowns are fellow human animals with just about the same outfit of feelings that the rest of ‘em have.” And later, “I’m afraid I’m a social failure.”  



Professionally, however, he was at his peak.  After studying the audiences in the large theatrical palaces of New York, Oakley, at the end of the 1907 season, left the circus and translated his act from center ring to center stage.   And for a while he was a success. Although a mere speck on the grand expanse of stage of the New York Hippodrome, he was able again to  “carry the house.” 



            But things didn't go as planned. He was married, but soon divorced. Then the story becomes sordid. He played the vaudeville circuit and took to drinking. For a time he bummed around Detroit and "during a spree he got in a row.” When the police were called, and he told them that he was the famous clown Slivers, the Detroit Free Press reported that they “were not impressed in the least."  And then in Utica, New York in 1913, came the beginning of the end.  At a vaudeville house he met Viola Stoll, seventeen, a young "hoofer".  Oakley was forty-two.  Stoll was a kid down on her luck. The show business wasn't working out for her, so she set up house with Slivers in Manhattan. He showered her with jewels, $4,000 worth that he had bought for his ex-wife. The Times explained that after a few weeks she felt "a revulsion" towards the older man.  She took a train to St. Louis, with the jewels, and Oakley had her arrested. She was sentenced to three years in the reformatory. 



But Oakley never stopped pining for young Stoll. Six months before her scheduled release he sought out her mother. He had a message for Viola, he wanted to marry her, to make an honest woman out of her. The mother relayed the message, but two-and-a-half years of confinement had changed Viola Stoll. She wanted no more of the stage and even less of  Oakley. She found the prospect of life with a "traveling clown" unappealing.  She wanted to be a dressmaker.  He didn't take the news well. And then the headline, "Slivers, Clown Suicide for a Girl."





            While the Times focused on the tawdry intrigue in its report on the suicide, an uncredited writer for the Detroit Free Press composed a sort of elegy to Oakley, detailing his many triumphs including a long loving paean to “The Ball Game,” before more thoughtfully noting his troubled end:  "Shattered by whisky, penniless...America's greatest chalk-faced comedian finished his act in tragedy. For years, Slivers’ salary was close to $1,000 a week. Night before last he tried to borrow a quarter and failed.  And so he who was the peer of clowns passed unknown and in poverty, and an art went out with him."





            After 1925, Oakley’s name, at one time among the best known in show business, didn’t appear in the pages of the Times again until 2004.  On October 17 of that year, an article in the Real Estate section reported the opening of the 300 block of West 71st Street, which since the turn of the century had been a dead end. It remains so for Slivers Oakley and his legacy, both a literal and figurative one. While the article, in discussing Oakley and the site of his death, details the Stoll affair and the suicide, there is no mention of his importance or renown, merely that he was “known as Slivers the clown and toured with the Barnum and Bailey circus.” An art went out with him, indeed.