Sunday, December 28, 2008

Clem Toca!

Clem Toca is an important part of circus history through its music.
If you wish to share any stories and memories, please do!
I had the pleasure of meeting him for the first time this past fall, and found him to be an engaging fellow. His reputation of musicianship has intrigued me and frankly I want to hear more about him.
Please share.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Mel Hall, Unicyclist

Melvin Hall (September 11, 1915, Boxville, Kentucky - April 17, 2001, Balch Springs, Texas) was an American unicyclist.

He was the son of Robert Hall, who was at one time a member of "Tiger Bill's Wild West Show" in the early 1900's. Robert Hall built Melvin his very first unicycle when Mel was about ten years old.

Mr. Hall made an uncredited appearance in the film, Sensations of 1945, where he can be seen riding a giraffe unicycle and mounting and riding upside-down on a unicycle pedalling with his hands.

Mr. Hall performed with the graceful and smooth style of a ballroom dancer, always in tuxedo with tails or an eton jacket.

He taught his four children to ride unicycles and they performed in the 1950s and 1960s as the Unicycling Whiz Kids, in many different venues, often as warmup for prominent entertainment headliners of the day.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

"Keep Waiting"

The original cartoon was the left half of this one. I'd received it in an email several years ago. I crafted the right half of the cartoon you see here.
I just felt the concept needed to be balanced, y'know?

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Circus Musing

"The THEE-UH-TAH, the THEE-uh-tahhhh, what's HAPPENED to the THEE-uh-tahh?"

That plaintive question can be applied to the circus in America and elsewhere
... What's happened to the circus?

There are many good folks who are endeavoring daily to carry on the traditions...
and there are again, so many good folks, good acts that have passed and are passing into history... and there would seem to be fewer and fewer new folks carrying on in that tradition of excellence.

We could blame many different causes... radical racketeering type groups, burgeoning regulations, the economy, lack of interest in traditions, modern media and entertainment....even laziness... but, circus hasn't disappeared...not yet... not by a long shot...

Granted there are some out there who might appear to be clueless as to what makes for a skillful and classy show... granted there are those who just "walk through" the steps in performance... granted there are some out there who are just plain discouraged.

Showmanship requires vision, nerve, skill, ability, the will to produce and display performances that enthrall, captivate, and inspire.
The circus needs a true sense and spirit of showmanship in order to shine.
The circus needs a true sense of community and belonging, a sense of
SHARED VISION and FOCUS.
Without focus on the goal, the results are paltry.
Without shared vision and focus, there is no professionalism.
Without the professionalism, there is no excellence.

The circus is about, should be about one doing the very best to deliver
performances that grab the senses, the imagination, and inspire dreams.
These things elevate the circus to an art.
In its best sense, the circus should be about artistry,
To merely put on a costume and display skills is amateur at best, and can waste one's talents ...
Show spirit, heart, joy in living, and joy in presenting your skills and talents... as a gift for your audience to uplift... inspire... and create wonderful memories.
We hold our good memories dear and close to our hearts...
and we long for the "good old days" when such memories were gifted to us through the fine and wondrous performances displayed by talented, energetic, and polished artists of the times when the circus came to our towns.

Those wonderful memories were created in the present tense back then.
Wonderful memories are created today, in the present tense... for today.. for the future.
It would just seem that there are fewer such memories being created for the future.

We may hear sad and wistful comments, a longing for acts "like we used to have" back in the day....
and we may bemoan the difficult atmosphere that exists where it is harder for circuses to do what they have done in years past.
We may even bemoan the pedestrian efforts of some who proffer what they would pass off as showmanship.
We have given in to despair in some ways... we have become fatalistic, complacent... even.. well, even lazy.. this laziness grew over time within the circus community.
It can be reversed IF we want it to.

There needs to be a renewed attitude among showpeople that says,
"Watch me! You ain't never seen anything like this before, and you may never again!"
This attitude demands practice and polish and the will to never settle for anything less than the best you can give.

But this is not the end of it... not the end of the circus... I don't believe it for a minute.
Maybe circus is just in partial hibernation or retreat, for lack of a better term...

The circus is never over unless and until EVERYBODY gives up on it.
You can bet there are plenty of folks out there who are not willing to let that happen.
There CAN be a renaissance of the circus tradition.
There CAN be a rebirth of this worthy art form.
Good memories are created in the NOW.
It's up to any of us out there who haven't thrown out their "give a damn", whether you are one who would be an artist or an audience.

Give a damn.