August 27, 2009

The Great American Circus!

I have always loved going to the circus. I have fond childhood memories of my grandfather always taking us to the circus. I was just remembering how the clowns were instrumental in getting the audience ready before the main performance. Then the clowns would return when the background was being changed. They would also come out when performers experienced a mishap. My favorite routine has always been the clown car entrance. Watching an unbelievable number of clowns come out of a very small clown car. This classic routine never fails to bring much laughter to the audience.

The point I'm trying to make is while the clowns are most entertaining, they have always been used to grab our attention and distract us. Doesn't this sound much like political grandstanding? Grandstanding means behaving in a way that makes people pay attention to you instead of thinking about more important matters. No offense to clowns. You're doing what you were meant to do: Entertain!

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Clowning frameworks

Frameworks are the general outline of an act that clowns use to help them build out an act. Frameworks can be loose, including only a general beginning and ending to the act, leaving it up to the clown's creativity to fill in the rest, or at the other extreme a fully developed script that allows very little room for creativity.

Shows are the overall production that a clown is a part of, it may or may not include elements other than clowning, such as in a circus show. In a circus context, clown shows are typically made up of some combination of Entrรฉes, Side dishes, Clown Stops, Track Gags, Gags and bits.

Interludes

Clown Stops or interludes are the brief appearance of clowns while the props and rigging are changed. These are typically made up of a few gags or several bits. Clown Stops almost always end with a blow-off. Clown stops will always have a beginning, a middle and an end to them. These are also called reprises or run-ins by many and in today's circus they are an art form in themselves, originally they were bits of "business" usually parodying the act that had preceded it. If for instance there had been a wire walker the reprise would involve two chairs with a piece of rope between and the clown trying to imitate the artiste by trying to walk between them with the resulting falls and cascades bringing laughter from the audience. Today they are far more complex and in many modern shows the clowning is a thread that links the whole show together.

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