Friday, April 02, 2021
Lou Jacobs: Hunting Gag 1982
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
Petit Gougou & Eddy Sosman
Monday, March 29, 2021
Vidbel: Scott O'Donnell and Mike Snider
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Davis Vassallo: Bounding Rope
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
Ringling: Closing of Clown College 1998
An interesting read from 1998 talking about the future of Ringling clowning after it was announced that Clown College would be closing.
Seinfeldian skits, eh?
Clowns, then and now Circus: In the future, these well-trained performers will be more contemporary, just as they used to be.
If circus clown Bryan Fulton had to change the image of his Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey colleagues, he'd inject a little testosterone.
"I'd kinda like to be a superhero, all suave out of makeup," says Fulton, a 19-year-old Baltimore native wearing knee socks, shorts, checked blue and red vest and oversized red tie. "Then, I'd go into a phone booth and come out as Super Clown."
Fulton, in Baltimore for performances through Sunday, may have his chance, because the 127-year-old circus is changing the way it approaches clown training.
The Ringling Brothers Clown College, which was established in 1968 in Florida, is closed, and the circus is developing a Clown College Graduate Program. The program is still in the planning stages, but representatives of Feld Entertainment, which owns Ringling Bros., say it will include more specialized, theatrically oriented Masters of Comedy Workshops. The workshops will be tailored to the interests of performers looking to expand on basic clowning skills, including the approximately 1,500 graduates of Clown College.
The number of college programs and workshops nationwide that teach clowning basics have rendered the original Clown College unnecessary, according to spokesman Rodney Huey.
"There's no need to get those kids right out of high school," Huey says. "It's a different world."
The new workshops will also make clowning more contemporary, since other elements of the circus have become increasingly modern. Acts now involve basketball players unicycling to techno music, professional daredevil in-line skaters and an audience-participation "Macarena."
In the future, clowns may appear in Seinfeldian skits satirizing everyday life and doing contemporary gags centered on computers and the tribulations of today.
Throughout their history, clowns have been relating to contemporary events, according to LaVahn Hoh, a drama professor at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville who teaches the class "The Circus in America."
In the American one-ring circuses of the late 18th century, talking was common for clowns, says Hoh, who also taught at Clown College. In the late 18th century, a clown named Dan Rice appeared with his pig Lord Byron and mused on politics, and the pig would snort.
Rice, who wore a red and white suit and top hat, was the model for Uncle Sam. But as circuses evolved into three rings in the 19th century, gags had to become broader to work in the larger setting, and the talking clown became extinct. Still, Hoh says, clown acts remain relevant.
"There are a lot of stock bits that clowns do that poke fun at society," Hoh says. He said the pie-throwing routines have always been a vicarious outlet for aggression toward society.
Dominique Jando, associate artistic director at the one-ring Big Apple Circus in New York City, disagrees, saying clowns in the three-ring format can't relate to the audience. He sees Ringling's new clown training as an opportunity to instill the skills that were developed in the more intimate one-ring format.
Jando says the three-ring circus developed because entrepreneur-owned circuses were very popular in America in the late 1800s, and the owners thought that by adding more rings they could attract bigger audiences.
"That's an American accident," Jando says of the three-ring circus. "That killed clowning in this country."
Clowns shouldn't be the broadly humorous, exaggeratedly made-up characters in today's circuses, Jando says. Instead, he thinks they should be witty commentators on the human condition with whom audiences can identify.
Rice and the clowns of his age satirized society, and so did the bald-headed buffoons of ancient Greece who are considered the earliest ancestors of the clown. They were secondary characters who mocked the more serious actors in farces and mime acts. The look evolved in the acts of medieval minstrels and jugglers. In the late Middle Ages, the Italian commedia dell'arte's Harlequin introduced acrobatics into the clown repertoire.
The first professional stage clowns came from the Elizabethan theater. Shakespeare has been credited with coining the word "clown." During this time in Germany, the clown costume we've come to know -- floppy shoes, waistcoats and hats -- developed. But the makeup wasn't grotesque, Jando says. American clowns are the only ones with cartoonish makeup designed for recognition from a distance, Jando says.
The circus clown as we know it today appeared in 1805 in England. The late 19th century saw the birth of the American circus clown.
In the '60s, former Ringling Bros. owner and producer Irvin Feld noticed that the clowns in his circus, most of whom learned their skills through apprenticeships, were getting old. So he created the now-defunct Clown College, an eight-week program that accepted only about 30 of nearly 2,000 applicants annually.
The curriculum of clown college included such basic skills as unicycling, juggling and stilt-walking. Clowns also learned how to apply makeup, develop characters and write bits for the circus. In Clown College, a.k.a. clown boot camp, students worked six ** days a week for nearly 12 hours a day, says John Lynch, a Ringling clown who was trained at Clown College along with Fulton and Alan Rios.
Fulton has a bit of the surfer-clown look about him with his flat shock of orange- and yellow-streaked hair. He's an Auguste clown, meaning he uses a flesh-colored paint base with red and black features.
Rios, 28, has Jackie Gleason mannerisms and wears flannel pajamas and wins the lovable cornball award. He's also an Auguste.
Lynch is the sweetly goofy one in paint-splattered denim with three sprouts of hair and a trout in his back pocket. He's a whiteface clown.
"I'm not the traditional whiteface clown. I have Auguste tendencies," says Lynch, 32, who's been with the circus since 1995.
"Clowns with split personalities, next 'Oprah,' " says Fulton, who's been with the circus since 1997.
Lynch, Rios and Fulton do pseudo stomps and slaps, break into spastic dances and revel in cornball jokes with Three Stooges style.
Aside from learning skills and developing characters, at Clown College they were also instilled with the clown's code of honor.
They must always be in full costume in a professional setting and cannot engage in any un-clownlike behavior.
"We follow unwritten rules. You never see or hear a clown curse; no smoking," says Rios, a New York native. "It's like seeing Mickey Mouse without his head on. That can damage a kid."
However, pop culture representations of clowns, which are another facet of American clown history, can be equally damaging, Hoh says.
"We can take something as harmless as a clown and turn it into an ax murderer," he says. Or a strangler like the clown doll in "Poltergeist." Or a bawdy idiot, as in the movie "Shakes The Clown." Or washed-up sellout Krusty on "The Simpsons." Or the evil Pennywise of Stephen King's "It."
"They're very damaging to what clowns should portray," Hoh says.
If Americans understood the clowning tradition and considered the circus an art form, they might not produce such distorted images in the media, according to Hoh.
But Rios, Lynch and Fulton aren't too threatened by their creepy counterparts.
"It's funny. We can laugh at it," Rios says. "We all have a sense of humor."
And that will never change.
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus
Where: Baltimore Arena, 201 W. Baltimore St.
When: Through Sunday, with performances tonight and
tomorrow at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 11 a.m., 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 1: 30 p.m. and 5: 30 p.m.
Tickets: $10.50 to $35
Call: 410-347-2010
Pub Date: 3/19/98
Monday, March 22, 2021
Aga-Boom: Airplane
Friday, March 19, 2021
Hilary Chaplain
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
Clown College: Act I Finale
Monday, March 15, 2021
Wednesday, March 10, 2021
Nuts & Bolts 1985
Monday, March 08, 2021
Hamid Morton Clown Alley 1950s: Army Gag
Photo shared on Facebook by Joanne Wilson.
Slim Collins, Saso, Ray Cosmo
Bumpsy Anthony, Shorty Sylvester, and Dime and Connie Wilson
Would love to hear more info on Slim, Saso, Ray, and Shorty.
PS- Sorry about the text layout; I'm not sure what happened. I blame Gremlins.
Friday, March 05, 2021
Le Retraite du Clown I Pio Nock [1964]
Tuesday, March 02, 2021
Ringling: Schoolhouse Gag
Monday, March 01, 2021
Friday, February 26, 2021
The Art of Tommy Cooper
By the end of the 1970s, Cooper slipped into heavy smoking and drinking, which affected his career and his health, effectively ending offers to front new programmes and relegating him to performing as a guest star on other entertainment shows. Ill health eventually claimed his life when, on 15 April 1984, Cooper died of a heart attack live on television.
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
James "Tiny" Lambros
Photos courtesy of David Powell.
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Ringling: Charivari 1980
Monday, February 22, 2021
Thursday, February 18, 2021
Obituary of Glenna "Polly" Chase
Thanks to Andrea Lynne Emeigh for the heads up.
Glenna “Polly” Chase, passed away peacefully Sunday morning, Jan 31, 2021.
In a September 2020 interview with the Daily Sun, Chase said she had seen much in her 95 years, but she never expected to be counted as one of the world’s oldest living little people.
Growing up, Polly said she had wonderful parents, four brothers and two sisters, all of average height and all of whom she outlived.
She said she was never bullied or picked on but admitted having four brothers may have had something to do with it.
She graduated from Corsicana High School in 1944 and worked various jobs around town, as a secretary at Northside Baptist Church, in the offices at Sears, Roebuck and Collin Street Bakery and as a manicurist in a beauty salon.
She did not know any other little people until one fateful day when the circus came to town.
She met her future husband Clayton when he was working as a clown for Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.
“It was love at first sight,” she said.
The couple married in 1948 and there was a story and photo of the front page of the Corsicana Daily Sun.
Clayton got a job at Chance Vought Aircraft and they moved to Dallas for about five years until heart trouble forced him to retire.
They moved back to Corsicana and started Clayton Chase Grocery and Market at 403 S. 20th St.
Polly was a resident at Legacy Rehabilitation and Healthcare and said she enjoyed it there, but could have used a little more room.
She considered her former caregiver and CNA Shawnda Witherspoon as one of her best friends.