We are visiting a Northern Italian city called Como. Our primary activity there is taking long but
casual walks to check out the surroundings.
It is on one of these excursions that we spot a large billboard by the
side of the road, a pasteboard advertisement for the Togni Brothers Circus. (For
“gn”, read “ny”.)
We like small circuses.
We are determined to go.
I do not remember how we got tickets, but I recall insisting
on the “best available.” Which we received. We would be sitting Second
Row, Center.
On the night of the performance, it is raining quite
heavily. "Downpour" would not be an
exaggeration. But the inclement weather
in no way inhibits our enthusiasm.
We like small circuses.
What we did not know, however, and discovered only
afterwards – once again, I do not recall how – was that days before the
performance we were attending, the Togni Brothers had had a familial falling
out and the brothers had split up, the departing Togni taking several of the
circus’s acts with him when he
left. It was only during the performance
that we discovered exactly which acts those were.
We enter through the flipped-up flap of the deteriorating circus
tent, and are ushered to our seats. We
are indeed sitting Dead Center, two rows from the circus’s diminutive single
ring. As it turns out, however, there is
nobody sitting anywhere behind us. Maybe
because of the inclement weather, or maybe due to reasons we were at the time
unaware of, there are about twenty people in attendance.
All of them seated in the first two rows.
Looking around, we take note but are unfazed by the rainwater
cascading down through the numerous holes in the top of tent. For us, threadbare equals charm.
During a pre-show moment of reverie and repose – “Look at
us! We’re at a little Italian circus!” –
suddenly, and without warning, a large chimpanzee wearing a tuxedo jacket and a
diaper vaults unceremoniously onto my lap, draping a hairy, simian arm around
my shoulder.
I don’t know if you’ve ever had a large chimpanzee jump into
your lap, but, one, they are quite heavy, two, any wild animal landing in your lap can be startling, and three, I
can now tell you from personal experience, the impeccable formalwear
notwithstanding, those chimpanzees really smell. And, as it is now sitting in my lap, its
dirty sweat-sock aroma is quickly being transferred to me.
The point of the dolled-up chimpanzee is for some enterprising
photographer, partnered with a monkey owner, to take your picture with a
primate in your lap, and then, sell it to you in a cardboard frame as you
leave. When I indicate as best I can, speaking
no Italian, that I am uninterested in a commemorative snapshot of this
unexpected man-monkey encounter, the chimp is hastily whisked away. Though its stench, unfortunately, remains
behind.
Finally, the lights go down, and the performance
begins. It is only then it becomes
apparent that the Togni brother who had taken off had absconded with the troupe’s
most gifted performers, leaving rookies, castoffs and also-rans to delight us on that
blustery, winter night.
I cannot explain why I find extreme incompetence hilarious. But I do.
Having bombed myself on occasion as a standup comedian, I try hard to be
respectful of their ineptitude, my deferential efforts bringing tear-inducing
anguish to my lower lip, which I am required to bite hard, to keep from
exploding into hysterics. Nothing, however,
can keep my body from quaking with hilarity.
And my wife is not far behind.
Did I mention we like small circuses? Well we do.
Small circuses – our all-time favorite being The Pickle Family Circus out of San Francisco – make up in talent
and intimacy what they lack in big-budget spectacularity.
European circuses are world famous. As a child, I sat in wonder before my TV set,
enthralled by the flawless performances of jugglers, acrobats, bear acts and
unicyclists that the great impresario Ed Sullivan imported from “The Continent”
for his “really big shew.”
Unfortunately, it would be otherwise on that stormy Italian night,
watching the acts the departed Togni
brother had chosen, wisely, to leave behind.
Maybe it was the weather, the thunderclaps and lightning
throwing man and beast precipitously off their games. Maybe it was just an “off” night. Maybe these were novices or rarely used bench
players thrown prematurely into the spotlight.
But…
The jugglers drop everything they juggle.
The miniature ponies balk nervously at rearing up and resting
their fore-hooves on the pony in front of them, forming a hopping chain of
two-legged ponies.
The trained poodles prove equally stubborn, yapping
uncontrollably and refusing to dance.
The girl twirling sixteen hula hoops smiles gamely, as the
four bottom hoops first slow, and then circle clankingly to the sawdust-covered
floor.
The acrobat, back-flipping up from the teeder-todder, lands
awkwardly on his partner’s shoulders, sending a three-high stack of acrobats
crashing ignominiously to the ground.
The tightrope walker, after two uncertain steps on the high
wire, loses his balance and cannonballs into the net.
The most talented participant of the evening turned out to be the
monkey. Whom I did not appreciate at the
time.
The finale is earns a smattering of applause. And then we left.
We still like small circuses.
But we will not be returning to this one.
2 comments:
I loved The Pickle Family Circus was a small circus founded in 1974 in San Francisco, California, USA. The circus formed an important part of the renewal of the American circus. They also influenced the creation of Cirque du Soleil in Montreal. Neither circus features animals or use the three-ring layout like the traditional circus.
Best regards,
Richard
I prefer The ringmaster is the most visible performer in the modern circus, and among the most important, since he stage-manages the performance, introduces the various acts, and guides the audience through the entertainment experience. In smaller circuses, the ringmaster is often the owner and artistic director of the circus. Many modern-day ringmasters become an integral part of the performance, singing and dancing along with the other entertainers. He is called "Monsieur Loyal" in French, after the name of Anselme-Pierre Loyal (1753-1826), one of the first renowned circus personalities.
Best regards,
Michael
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