"Take the Cannoli ... "
Flynn Creek Circus: A Show You Can’t Refuse
This past Saturday I saw the 2017’s Flynn Creek Circus
across the Bay in Sausalito on a day that can charitably be described as an
outdoor sauna. Fortunately, this irresistible circus provided the perfect
distraction from the crispy afternoon. In this new show "Inter-Active,"
Flynn Creek ventures into improv territory as it as it plays with audience
volunteers and allows the audience to choose the acts it wants to see. The cast has
commandeered the show, taking it into the realm of the imagination in which the
worlds of the circus and “The Sopranos” collide. Presiding over these mixed (and very talented) nuts is Amelia Van Brunt as the Dick Tracy style Detective Kachinko, as well as Pesto, an immense henchman who also has curiously tiny hands; and Ross Travis as a supposedly bubble-headed blonde reminiscent of Blanche Dubois, and Riggy Rigatoni, the dreaded mob boss. And if you ask what the Mafia and the circus have in common – you haven’t been paying attention. That’s exactly the point: when you experiment, you take audiences to places they’ve never been before.
Featured is Duo Have a Ball, a wildly inventive and sexy
ball-bouncing/passing duo, Clementine Stadler Bert as the (dancing) Entertainer,
and Mike Leclair as the flirtatious Bartender. These two play with the nature
of the five ball bouncing and cascading patterns, displaying a disarming
ambidexterity in a complex array of permutations and body positions (Clementine
even bounces balls in Chinese splits!). They conclude bounce passing ten and eleven
balls and tossing away their high level skill with lighthearted abandon.
Jan Damm is the comic Other Bartender who, with Leclair, astounds in a rapid-fire diabolo passing duet in which the diabolos are blindly snatched out of thin air only to be rebounded into their orderly patterns. Their mood is fun and they belie the effort an act such as this takes. They can keep two diabolos apiece going and we are also treated to Mr. Damm’s successful three diabolo pattern.
Ariele Ebacher, as the Boss's Daughter, who has done a
classic tight-wire dancer act, thrills here with a wire act in which she walks
the wire in brilliant red heels. As a prelude to the wire act she walks on wine
bottle tops. Once on the wire, where she is completely at home, she displays
fluidity with a dancer’s grace, leaping over the wire and flexibility in the
form of splits on the thin strand and once again effortlessly.
As a fitting Ninja legend, Miles Stapp performs an intriguingly
mysterious acrobatic act, outmaneuvering his foes in a graceful, but deadly
battle. Miles was trained by Master Lu Yi and appeared in his company, Acrosanct.
His acrobatics are beautiful to see and possess that Chinese quality that enables
the acrobat to suspend time and space in the middle of a trick.
Shem Biggie, playing "the bad boy from a good family," has
matured into a full-fledged rope aerialist, integrating both depth and
technique into a unified performance. Shem injects an impressive display of
strength and power, performing an original sequence of moves, including
atypical mid-sequence body tableaus. I look forward to following his continued
development as an artist.
Exhibiting impressive leg-flexibility, Maya deLoche as the
Gushy Secretary delivers a classic aerial hoop act. Maya exhibits an elegant
array of splits that exceed accustomed hip flexibility. Her glowing smile melts
the audience’s collective hearts as she smoothly transitions into and out of
her aerial voyage.
Passion 2 Balance’s Goulia Rozyeva (absent her hand-to-hand
partner, Nelson Pivaral), as a doddering elderly woman, performed solo
hand-balancing on her walker. Her believable character elicits a mixture of
empathy and laughter.
Goulia and Nelson’s daughter, Sasha Pivaral, as the Mob’s
Hitwoman, incorporates the bow-and-arrow trick shot with her feet from a contortion
handstand, shooting the arrow to a bull’s-eye. Her dramatic contortion
handstands and splits are the essence of cantilevered body poetry. Her enigmatic
smile and rockstar charisma elevate her performance to crystalline art.
Kicking the show through the roof is the magnificent Duo
Daring Jones, David Jones and Blaze Rose Birge, has garnered accolades across
the globe. The term “world-class act” has been promiscuously overused by
reviewers, but is a perfectly accurate fit for these superb artists who are
quite simply the best in this genre. Keeping their act fresh, Blaze and David
have added astounding new moves and increased speed to their already supersonic
aerial drops, slides, twists, and spins. They absolutely must be seen to be
believed!
Not to be missed is their latest reinterpretation of the classic
knife-throwing act, reversing traditional roles, and eschewing the sinister for
the light-hearted.
Bravo! to Flynn Creek Circus for having the audacity to re-envision
the circus audience’s expectations and giving this assemblage of zanies and
virtuosos a sphere in which to radiate.
Photographs by Gary G. Thomsen