Thursday, November 19, 2009

Les Kiriki Acrobates Japonais

This is a very interesting idea.
We are looking down on the acrobats as they lie on the floor and go into what looks like multiple, impossible acrobatic poses. Very inventive. Very engaging and entertaining. Only on film, though.
Lovely body configurations. I haven't seen this before.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Solid Potato Salad

Here are some tricks that aren't being done anymore. The Mystic Pixies do the running around the circle on chest. However, the three person pull from back bend is not done. It is only done with two people. The fact that they sing like the Andrew Sisters AND do acrobatics is unusual. It is usually either one or the other. So, they are new circus in feel and temperament. There are many acrobatic vaudeville tricks that used to be done by female acrobats or "close-benders," as they were called in vaudeville.
Illusions, changing walk-overs, swing-throughs, tinsicas, walking in splits and changing legs with each step (very difficult) and aerial forwards (or walk-overs) done in place is another great trick.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Human Shadow Puppets

A friend just sent me a clip of Pilobolus. This company has been around since the 1970's, I believe. They started in Connecticut under the direction of Moses Pendleton. Originally they were an innovative combination of dance and mime. I was impressed by this foray into human shadow puppetry. They use their bodies and some objects to create amusing and effective images. I am glad they are still working. There just aren't that many mime companies doing such creative work.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

New Trends in Juggling

Here is an example of the new style in juggling as exemplified by Wes Peden. On a video it is hard to tell much in the way of stage presence or style, but technically one can see what this new juggling is all about. The props "dance," not necessarily the juggler. The patterns are difficult and intricate. Numbers are used. I am told he can pass 13 clubs, a record I think. This act goes beyond the work of the jugglers in Finland, who juggle difficult patterns but don't project much in the way of audience connection. The style is slightly choppy or, perhaps, it is just how it is photographed and presented. I would have to see him in person. However, it is clear that he has worked long and hard on perfecting these tricks. I'm impressed by the new style. It is clear that juggling will continue to evolve and expand.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Here we go baby!

Here is something that is just plain fun. Eddie Izzard as Mr. Kite in Across the Universe, in the song Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite. He manages to be larger than life, and yet retain his identity. Nice feat!
A fun pickup for a sometimes sleepy movie. I was surprised, and hope you will be too.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Training

The secret is training. In Quebec City, the curriculum is 25-30 hours/week, not counting personal practice. So, how can a school hope to do it for less hours? Obama said that if you give Americans a challenge, they will rise up to it. So, it needs to be presented as a challenge. Get the funders. They're out there just itching to give money to something as sexy as circus. But, circus needs to grow up as an art form. It needs not only great tricks, but great music and great choreography. These artists are out there, I have met some. Don't try to guess. Collaborate. Elaborate. Let's not just pretend to "do circus" without any understanding of what that means. Doing a handstand is not doing an act. Many will be called, but few will be chosen, just like in any art form.
Think outside the box.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Acts from North Korea

Acts from North Korea are amazing. I refuse to believe that acts that are high level are impossible to have in America. All it would take would be time and space and the right equipment. And the right teachers. Why is there only "indie" circus? Meaning mediocre, but clever? Why is the packaging of the mediocre all that happens?

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Reflection

The biggest thing that holds the circus school back is the confusion between amateur and professional. It is a natural reaction to like the students who are trying to learn and make an act. However, in order to have a truly professional program, honesty needs to rule, instead of emotion. Students won't get jobs because they are liked. It is a harsh reality, but that is what the outside world expects. Friendship is a great thing, but if one is in the business of making sure students learn at the highest levels, then the rules will change. It's not that I am advocating that one should be mean, it's just that I'm saying that one should be honest and realistic. It's the only way to pull the circus up and out of its morass.

Monday, January 26, 2009

1/24-25/09 Shows

I saw a rehearsal of the JCC show done by what was referred to as The Pickle Family Circus, even though that show died a few years ago and this was really a conglomerate of different student acts from the SF School of Circus Arts and the Clown Conservatory. Since no one ever takes any official criticism for any shows, I will write this review:
The circus show "Recess" played for three performances this past weekend at the Jewish Community Center. The people at the center insist upon calling it "The New Pickle Circus" even though there is no such animal and whatever the show thinks it is, it is running on fumes from the past. The performers were likable enough. That wasn't the problem. The problem was that the performers, by and large, are not held to professional standards. This shows in an overall feeling of sloppiness. Some acts, the contortion duo and the straps duo, were simply not quite ready for performance. Their acts looked incomplete and it was confusing as to what they wanted to convey. The clown who started off the show, telegraphed one of the early gags and this killed the opening somewhat. The opening jump rope charivari was a bit sloppy, as acrobats snagged the rope several times. Were they trying to perform too early? Or were they just unprepared emotionally and mentally?
The clown act with the rolla bollas was promising, but felt incomplete. The stacking of boards on one cylinder makes the trick easier, not harder. The act needs two double-rolling cylinders and the performer is working on this. It will be better with this addition.
A young man with a great look did a tap-dancing/juggling act. The tap-dancing needs to be show dancing and the juggling needs to be more difficult. If these things happened, the young man would work internationally.
The solo trapeze act was competent, but not especially difficult. The hoop act and juggling displays needed more work, but were enjoyable when the tricks worked.
The duo clown couple (music number) was confusing. An audience member was embarrassed and that shouldn't happen. Volunteers should be kidded, but not embarrassed.
Only the hula hoop female act was almost professional quality. She has improved by a quantum leap and I think the act will be very marketable and fun.
I always enjoy seeing a show, but professional standards are not set by me. I don't make the rules. Out in the marketplace is a different story from a show done for an audience that is not too picky.

Monday, January 12, 2009

There Are Countries and There Are Countries

America is not in step with Canada, France, Russia, Ukraine, Hungary, etc. Those countries support the arts and consider circus an art form. The US, by contrast, does not support the arts in the same way. I think what they do is the equivalent of pennies-a-day for all the arts. The National Endowment for the Arts is a joke. They just recently considered circus as an art. But, the American public still has a hard time with considering circus as a legitimate art form. In Europe, the public understands that circus is an art form for families, that families can enjoy. This puts circus in America in the awkward position of having to scramble for funding.
The Big Apple Circus in New York City tapped into the world of very wealthy donors who are circus-lovers, so they are well-off and have a healthy endowment and donor-base. That is the most successful circus in America. Circus Flora, in St. Louis, does OK, but they have a very short season because that's all the money they can get. Circus Sarasota in Florida is also doing well, but they are tying it into money being raised for the Ringling Mansion Restoration Project. Circus Vargas in Vermont, Circus Juventas in Minneapolis and the Circus Space in Seattle are amateur circus groups that have been able to get funding. But, being able to fund a circus school in which young men and women can learn circus skills to an advanced level is still extremely difficult. When will there be any parity worldwide?

Friday, January 9, 2009

Clowning

Clowning is a strange animal. Dimitri's daughter, Masha, said it: "So many clowns; so many bad ones." Why? I think it's because we, as Americans, need to orchestrate our attempts at clowning so that no one ever fails. But, if no one ever fails, then no one can be great either. That's the problem. Everyone wants to "have it down," but a CLOWN NEVER HAS IT DOWN. NEVER.
So people might as well get used to that. To feeling uncomfortable and at a loss - FOREVER! There is no getting around it. Unless one is on the edge at all times, who will care in 2009? People have seen everything. Perhaps there will always be a place where the classic routines are performed WELL, and are preserved. That's OK, I think, but if one is talking about cutting edge clowning, one is in a land beyond Beckett.

Les Chiche Capons is a hot, new, modern clown group from France. I hear they are histerically funny. They are not like anyone else. 'Nuff said.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

7th Revision

I wrote a book about ten years ago. I revised it many times and am revising it for the 7th, and I hope the last time. It is going well because I have a real comic writer helping me make it funnier. I think this is what it needed all along. The subject matter is deadly serious, so humor strategically placed, will make it more readable to the average person. I am having fun and that, in itself, is an indication that I am going in the right direction.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Does Over 40 Years of Experience Count For Anything?

My observation is that students of circus today want to re-invent the wheel, at least in America. They "guess" and do an act without realizing that years ago there already were people doing the same act. This was true of two young men who tried to do an act with one person on roller-skates and the other on those athletic shoes with wheels in the heels. They did not do anything interesting or difficult. It was as if just wearing the wheels was enough. Well, it wasn't. There was no build to the act, no finish trick and no entrance, nor exit. The audience, made up of parents and friends, was kind. However, the applause was sparse. No one seems willing to listen either. No one seems to care what someone who has seen a lot observes.
And elephants cannot paint pictures!