And I wish I could be there. I can feel a kind of rare excitement. Even if all of the judging may not always make sense, this is still the biggest circus event in the world.
SEASONAL CHEERS TO PRINCESS STEPHANIE!!!
On Nobody's Payroll ... Not Yours ... Not Theirs.
And I wish I could be there. I can feel a kind of rare excitement. Even if all of the judging may not always make sense, this is still the biggest circus event in the world.
SEASONAL CHEERS TO PRINCESS STEPHANIE!!!
Whole neighborhoods in L.A. razed. One after another house, gone. Most painfully, family mementos and scrapbooks lost.
My heart goes out to them all.
CIRCUS SPRINGS ETERNAL, does it not? A clump of papers, e-mails and notes before me, ignored or kept back in a gathering year-long stack, promise some kind of attention ahead, as I ramble through them before the current season goes bye bye into the barn ... After a rough shuffle, here is what randomly I face, from the top ..
“A WEIRD AND WONDERFUL LIFE” for the Zoppe Family, headlined a 2022 story from Redwood City’s On Line, Dan Brown, profiling the old world Zoppes, with a focus on the current Zoppe leading the zip, Giovanni. They are doggedly old tradition, circa1842, all except for not using candles. Why not? Answered Giovanni’s wife and marketing director Jeanette Prince, to Brown: “Only because the fire marshal won’t allow it!” In the tent photo, above.
COME ALIVE! ... Staying closer to vintage sawdust, the new musical in London town, Come Alive! The Greatest Showman, is drawing boffo notices and luring good crowds to its little 700-seat big top .. . Seems that the parade flies highest on songs and acts, lowest when stumbling through inane story telling nonsense: Whoever went to a circus for this? Memo to theatre snobs of increasingly idiotic irrelevance: Out, damn dramaturgs, out!
SID KELLNER WAS SOMEBODY ONCE His brief reign as big top tycoon with James Bros Circus, founded with a popcorn machine in the 1950s, left some of us forever enamored of what he might have been. Among them, Don Macks and Alex Smith, the later recalling for me the day at Bentley Bros Circus in Vallejo, 1989, when Sid was guest of honor. Chester Cable "gave great stories about Sid, wrote Alex. "He was a handful," added Winni McKay. I can relate, having toiled for King Kellner, and yet still miss his him to this day.
GIVING NEW RINGLING A RAVE While major media refused to review the circus that dare not speak its name, in effect letting it review itself to Q&A reporters, a few others fearlessly filled in the void. London’s front line circus watcher and critic Douglas McPherson issued golden accolades, impressively noting the absence of many Cirque things that some of us, myself among the doubters, expected to see. “Ringling has not switched camps. There is no story line here, no theme, no message, no attempt to dress circus up as art.”
SO HOW NEW OR NOVEL IS IT? “It’s a traditional circus, perhaps we should say New Traditional," opines Douglas. I like that, although “new” is still being mostly met by an avalanche of unhappy Yelp Reviewers, wanting nothing to do with a sterile makeover. I’d guess there’s a younger crowd ready to be entertained, and that, given ticket and concession pries, the Feld of Felds may be cleaning up, ho ho. Show has dates lined up into spring.
“WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE,” we once sang of the daring young man flying high. That word ease, and example of which -- Belmonte Cristiani, above, long ago -- feels more meaningful to me now, as the ageless delight is more and more strapped to mechanics (lifelines, kids). An abundance of unprotected ease charmed my heart while watching one of my favorite DVDs, highlights of the Ringling show as broadcast in 1968. Then to my eyes, ease was more noticeable than now. Ease in the landings. Ease in the connections. And why might that be?
THE PERILS OF SHUNNING PERIL Could it be that performers in a circus without mechanics are driven out of fear to perform more cleanly so as NOT to risk a fall? Oh, how softer the landings, how crisper the connections back then, before Soviet Circus era safety wire precautions invaded and practically emasculated the rings. Oh, how majestic the artistry! Even Charlie Bauman, such a gracious showman, held court among his chummy tiger friends with the greatest of ease!
HAS THAT ACT A NAME? Increasing frustration, pulling up a website and wishing to see photos and names of the acts. You might find photos with no names, or you might find nothing. Here are three shows that deny us the obvious: UniverSoul, Royal Hanneford, and Zoppe. I understand this annoyance is also offered Brit fans by some of the circuses over over there.
AND OVER THERE IN BRIT LAND, the lions aren't roaring any more than they are over here, and most big tops leave four legged critters out of the lineup. Doggie stars everywhere should go on strike! Has anybody heard of The National Dog Show? Slowly, some of our more timidly produced shows are daring to reboot canine capers. Big Apple Circus brought back a pack of them to its recent Lincoln center opus. all only because, of course of course, yes, yes, okay they were “rescued from dog shelters.” Below, the three human fountains on Big Apple -- a knockout.
CIRQUE DU YOU TUBE Circuses near and far are never far away on You Tube, and that’s an armchair luxury. Cirque du Soleil on the comeback trail is putting out one hour compilations of acts from three of its shows, and what a leap from where they were when last I saw them. Now what I behold is the most persuasive merge yet of circus and ballet. And I thought it couldn’t be done. There’s even a fake animal on the bill. Really, rebranding is in order: Cirque du Ballet – Eye Candy Acrobatics. Would two hours of what I saw hold me? Not so sure, the artistry seemed on the fundamental side, the acts maybe Montreal made. There latest opus, ECHO, a $30 million baby three years in the womb, is drawing wildly mixed notices, the negatives impatient with opulently obtuse narrative nonsense. Below, oh by gosh by golly, a fake horse -- out of desperation?
BILLION DOLLAR BIG TOP Per Fortune Magazine last April, though Cirque’s attendance is up from from pre-Covid levels (sales then dwindling), they “remained saddled” with half a billion-plus in debt. No longer much of a fan, yet I rue, driven by the mesmerizing eye candy alone, not having seen them when they were in San Jose recently. You Tube images are shimmering, bodies flying and floating over and around each other through staple acrobatics. Yelp reviews reveal a growing number of people growing tired of it all.
DOWN THE LANE OF TALBURT A late-breaking entry, inspired by watching on You Tube a video he took of the wining Beatty-Cole performance in 1993, this is to acknowledge his great visual contributions to American circus history. I am watching all the acts, clearly filmed, unlike so many videos taken by patrons from a fixed location, behind poles and patrons passing. Such a pleasure. Thank you, Santa Lane!
A TELLING VOICE I WILL MISS: The passing of Bill Taggart at 94, a prime contributor to my coverage of the last days of Ringling under canvas in 1956, as profiled in my book Fall of the Big Top. His days on the Big Show in the yellow ticket wagon involved show-sanctioned short changing, a rather shocking reality he made known to me and in articles he wrote. He also shared with me a disclosure on John Ringling North's personal proclivities, hard to believe, but then backed away and asked me not to repeat them. Maybe more on this in the coming year.
RARE VALIDATION AT CAMBRIDGE A smiling cross-pond discovery this past year that my first book, Behind the Big Top, originally published by A.S. Barnes Over Here, the Tantiviy Press Over there, was published an online in 2009 by Cambridge University Press. A cap and gown for me? I had felt honored that the book was was reviewed by circus connoisseur par excellence, Antony Hippisley Coxe, excerpts
of which appear at the top of the book's listing. These seem to
include only his warmly affirmative words, not his extensive criticisms
of incredibly inept editing and sloppy research on my part, all justly
held. I look forward to re-reading Coxe's wonderful 1951 A Seat at the Circus.
STILL MISSING CIRCUS REPORT The nice lady e-mailing her pleasure over the fist of seven posts I did on Circus Report founder and long time publisher, Don Marcks (she was a part of his variety shows), and anxiously waiting for more to come, and then, when more came, going silent thereafter. Did I err in showing his more human side, such as a marriage quietly annulled? Many of us still rue the absence of Don's labor of love, Jim Royal among them: "In those pre-internet days, Mr. Marcks provided a very valuable service to our industry." Were Don alive today, I have no doubt that he would be putting out CR online.
LET THE FIFTIES PROUDLY PARADE! Let me send you off whistling up a long long list of circuses touring these shores in the year 1959, as provided by John Swan’s The Circus Review. You might be as amazed as was I, coming across this by accident. And who was the idiot quoted on Pledge Break Society’s (PBS) intolerably sloppy documentary, Circus, clamming that Ed Sullivan "killed the circus" in the the 1950s? Here are all the circuses he did not kill.
Humbug!
UNDER-CANVAS CIRCUSES
Adams Bros. & Sell Circus.
Beers Barnes Circus
Carson & Barnes Circus
Cristiani Bros. Circus
Clyde Betty & Cole Bros Circus
Famous Cole Circus
Garden Bros. Circus
Hunt Bros Circus
Hagen Bros. Circus
King Bros Circus
Kelly-Morris Circus
Mills Bros. Circus
All G. Kelly & Mile Bros circus
John Strong Circus
Sello Bros Circus
INDOORS, BALL PARK CIRCUSES
All American Circus
Bailey Bros Circus
Clyde Bros Circus
Circorama
Dobritch Circus
Orrin Davenport Circus’
Don Francisco Circus
Faabian’s circus
Gil Gray Circus
Gene Holter Wild Animal Circus
Garden Bros, Circus
Hamid-Morton circus
Harold Bros Circus
James Bros. Circs
Polack Bros Circus
Rudy Bros Circus
Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus
Tom Packs Circus
The billowing big tops remain a world unto themselves, operating slightly on the edge of mainstream society and culture. And may they remaini that way – exotic to robotic, real or fake, candles or no.
Keep your cards and e-mails coming. You never know what might appear here next December 31. I am not so prone now to carelessly throw stuff away. In fact, if the stack warrants, I might do a mid-year catch up in '25.
HAVE A HAPPY SNAPPY NEW YEAR!!!
1 IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE
Were I pushed to name the greatest American movie, this would be it. Not until last year watching it and being struck by the brutal darkness that descends upon its final scenes, all thanks to the genius of Frank Capra, did I come to this feeling. Jimmy Stewart's best performance.
2 HOLIDAY INN
Much better than the sequel, White Christmas, this great 1940's musical sails along from song to song, dances up delights, has a good story line with a twist, and great Irving Berlin score. Most of all, for its breezy brevity and swift pacing.
3 A CHRISTMAS CAROL 1938 or 1951
Personally I'd give the edge to Reginald Owen in 1938 from MGM, although others seem to favor the 1951 version with Alastair Sim. Both pack an emotional wallop. Tears are perfectly acceptable on this side of the Big Pond.
4 MEET ME IN ST LOUIS.
A masterpiece from director Vincente Minnelli . The songs include two classics, the miraculously thrilling "Trolley Song," and "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas." Judy Garland in her prime. No film makes a better case for the importance of family over monetary ambition.
5 MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET.
Love the tingle of it all, the busy New York atmosphere, the masterful performance of Edmund Gwenn, who brings off the role as few could. A role he was born to play. Best of all, this brings back a spirit of Christmas closer to the one I grew up in, long before the secular sphere began it's attack on Christmas, religion and the binary family.
6 THE SOUND OF MUSIC LIVE 2015, BRITISH
No, not the overly long movie. And yes, you may miss Julie Andrews more than you can bear, understood, but at least give this one a chance. It stayed very close to the original script, reinstating two great songs on the darker side that had been callously 86d from the film, but did not reinstate the lovely "An Ordinary Couple" Instead, with Oscar Hammerstein gone, Richard Rodgers composed both music and lyrics -- if you can call them that -- for the weirdly awful "Something Good" to replace it.
7 A CHRISTMAS STORY
Maybe? I must confess, I dread the scene where the kid's tongue gets stuck to a pole. Otherwise, I suppose this one rates high, and maybe I should try watching it again.
ELF?
What about more recent hit films? So, I took on this one, my reaction in texting shorthand: first part in Santa’s factory, loved it, Bob Newhart’s humor steals the scene. Will Ferrell to NY to find father, a stone faced CEO bore Ferrell's hyper antics grow flat, hollow fast. Jim Carey should have played the role. No desire to see again. 85% critics on Rotten, 79% pop meter.
Incredibly, there are so many Christmas movies out there, and yet the way they are rated on various "best" listings can differ widely. A gem on one raking can be a dog on another. For my eyes, classic Christmas films remain canonized in a far more socially unified time. And I will say no more, but.... Humbug!
Perfect example: I watched a video, in two parts, of Big Apple Circus, apparently shot by a patron, lasting half as long as the actual show itself, with the Flying Poemas left out. I can see the included acts well enough to know, for example, that how three water exhaling guys turning themselves into Roman fountains -- Jesse Highley, Neal Skoy, and Robert Ryan --- are as ingeniously brilliant as is a labored slack wire workout borderline amateur. But as for the themed production casting the acts in hometown settings, I am left with a felling that maybe The New York Times got it right in calling what looks to me like a disjointed mishmash “underwhelming.” But also left wondering, had I actually seen the new Ringling, might I have liked its production values as much as I did the acts? Nothing beats being there.
Circus Review
Zoppe Family Circuses
At Redwood City, CA
November 23, 2024
Tickets: $12 to $33.
Not so easy, in fact a rather challenging confection to review. Program starts out with barely a whimper (more on this later), clowning lingers on in spots, and the quality of action ranges from spectacular to sketchy. But tell that to the dozens of gleeful children who lapped up the performance. In fact, if I were a parent, I would want Zoppe to be the first circus my child sees. Giovanni and his sons have a way of connecting with kids. His missing hat routine, a crowning example, had the moppets practically flying out of their seats screaming with pointed fingers to get his eyes on the hat.
In another clever bit, the two Zoppe boys – Julien, 15, and Ilario, all of three (yes, three), find a big balloon and have fun bouncing it back and forth — until the uppity ringmaster, unable to wrest it away, reaches up to pop it. They are ordered out of the tent, only to reappear moments later, chasing after another balloon, and this bit goes on and on for, oh, maybe another hundred balloons — the last one releasing a spray of water onto our ringmaster’s head. Great pay off! Grade A clowning.
During the opening ensemble splash, little Ilario on his own runs up to a spot on the ring carpet, as if following script, and lowers himself into a head stand, joined by his father and brother doing the same. Priceless.
Also top tier in my eyes are a troupe of rambunctiously ambitious Ethiopian performers from one of the poorest countries on earth, named Zom Habesha. They light up the show with juggling gusto. I only wish their act had been longer. They also deliver a compelling risley display, giving it more the feel and thrust of teeterboard. It is as roughly executed in spots as it is brilliantly creative in others, as shown in the photo below.
And I am waiting for the dogs to appear. Last year, they were the highlight of the show, as they tend to be on most circuses these days.
There’s gaucho dancing from the Sanchez Family, contortion by two Ethiopian girls, Beki and B, and a cloud swing from Chiara Zoppe, attached to a lifeline. The Daring Horseman, Caleb Caracini Asch, rides masterfully well, joined by Audrey Prince for some nice duo work. She returns in another bit, standing alone on the horse while attached to a mechanic. Seems pointless. Recorded music throughout the program is generally relevant and appealing.
A great discovery for me was ringmaster Patrick McGuire, so refreshingly different. In fact, perhaps the most original new kind of a ringmaster I have seen in ages. He issues few announcements, but expresses himself in magical gestures, moving in and out of the proceedings without ever hovering. And he surprises with a skill for juggling clubs by running up to reach Caleb on his sauntering steed, the two then cross-jiggling. Terrifically stylish.
While still waiting for the dogs to appear, let me take the time to review the very first act on the show. Why it is even there can only be understood by knowing that the clown and the owner are the same person. Guess who gets his way? So we are feted by the spectacle of Giavanni hauling out his trunk into the ring and proceeding to take his sweet time making up his face. The weakest opening I’ve ever endured at a circus.
What, the show is ending? No dogs? ARE YOU KIDDING, ZOPPE? This would be like a kid at Ringling years ago waiting for the elephants to appear and being criminally stood up. No, Zoppe, No! It leaves a gaping hole in the performance. Unconstitutional! Unzoppetutional! On my way out, I stopped to tell McGuire how much I missed the dogs. He said, “Giovanni could not find a dog act.” I don’t believe that.
This company remains true to its most consistent theme — FAMILY. And at finale, they all stand, hand to hand, perfectly still across the ring, without even a hint of milking for applause. A pause, and then the crowd erupts into cheers. You could feel their joy. Heck, you could feel the love.
I’m praying for the return of a dog act next year. If one isn’t there, neither will I.
3 stars
"Animal trainer Alberto Zoppe's two delightful children, Caralynn, 5, and Giovanni, 3, both assist their father in his whimsical dog, poodle, and horse act. When the ringmaster announces their entrance, Caralynn and Giovanni perk up enthusiastically and bounce into the center ring with great glee, like two tots entering an enchanted picnic area. Circus kids never have time to learn what stage fright is."
And all the years later, there's another little Zoppe following the same family muse ... (My year on the show is profiled, by the way, in my book Keep That Day Job! -- if you'll allow me the shameless plug,)
Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bight copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
I first heard those words from the voice of Mary Martin on the original cast album of The Sound of Music, broadcast on our radio one Sunday evening in late December, only a few weeks after the show had opened on Broadway to great reviews. A week or so later, I had in hand my own copy of the snowy white cast album. Decorated in delicate foliage, in colors gold and red and green, how like a lovely Christmas morning gift it felt. In a few weeks, it would reach the number one spot on Billboard’s Best Selling Albums and remain there for 16 straight weeks. Sometimes at the skating rink during club practice, they played it.
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things
In those sunnier days, Rodgers and Hammerstein were the gods of musical theatre, able to capture in song the widely shared sentiments of Americans. One evening in the early 1950s, a televised toast to their magic was broadcast simultaneously on ALL three major networks. Point made?
Cream colored ponies and crisp apple strudels
Doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles
I could never have known how fate would coddle and guide this musical up a most remark road, gradually cementing its charms into the hearts of Americans. The movie that followed a few years later achieved a phenomenal success. Two words may have spelled its everlasting lock on our hearts: Julie Andrews. Years later, people flock to movie houses to participate in a sing-along of the songs as they appear on the screen.
Girls in white dresses with blue satin sashes
Snowflakes that stay on my nose and eyelashes
In 1961, through the soprano sax of jazz musician John Coltrane, My Favorite Things became an almost instant classic, and would become Coltrane's most requested song ever, and his personal favorite of all his recordings. It was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1988 and certified gold in 2018.
A few magical days ago, while listening to a local FM adult contemporary station that plays non-stop Christmas music every season, came the sweetest young voice singing the song. And I felt a rare connection between that night long ago, listening to Mary Martin, and now, hearing the song from a new voice on the radio, making it feel like a perfect addition to the holiday cannon, as if it had always been there.
Silver white winters that melt into springs ...
11.30.22
First posted on July 18, 2010
As an update to this re-posting, let me add that I hold in the highest regard John Ringling North II and James Royal, who have never assaulted me in the fashion described below. They have remained most congenial, responding to my request for photos for my last book, Inside the Changing Circus, sending me annually, unsolicited, a copy of their program magazine with a bag of peanuts.
In the Circus Report that he founded and slaved over for most of his later life, the late Don Marcks once pointed me to a small space on the back cover that sometimes hosted adds. other times went blank. Said he, “How about your column there?”
I was very touched by the unexpected offer from someone who was my direct opposite, but resisted his polite invitation, telling him “eventually, I will write something that will cause you problems, and that will be it.” Don dreaded the discontent of circus owners and as a rule edited on the super safe don’t-rock-the big top side.
I knew Don well, as I knew the small insulated circus world well. They, most of them, are sheltered from criticism by the fans and by media indifference. Indeed, many a performer could last a lifetime under small tops, even in Ringing rings, and never face a legitimate review.
Before we fell into a kind of soft unspoken estrangement, Don once complained to me over the phone (we talked often) about circus fans who sent in glowing notices of Circus Vargas. He was growing tired of it. He printed their predictably rosy notices nonetheless.
Another time, Don told me, “I got a review of Circus Vargas. The guy was pretty critical, so I didn’t print it.”
That was Don, and that is how the circus world would like it to be.
Which brings us to the thorn in your side, that nagging customer who can inject unsettling opinions into your beautiful backyard paradise where every circus is the best it’s ever been, and better than all the others.
It was in Don’s paper that a piece I wrote looking back at Irvin Feld’s career, sometime after Mr. Feld passed away, caused probably a more vicious reaction than had ever greeted anything penned about the circus. Feld employees took out venomous attack ads in Circus Report. About a dozen or more. Some full pagers. Not a soul came to my defense. They bled me yes, and I did not die. And I still will not die. Bleeding is a part of my bizarre mission. When you get away with mouthing off in national print at age 14 (in The White Tops), it tends to go to your head, especially when, many years later, Variety signs on.
My most recent encounter with a hurricane of hostility arrived upon my posting a review here of Kelly Miller Circus. Some of you have no doubt seen it. Maybe you were amused. Maybe you half way agreed. Or considered me a number of things not fit for print — in more ways the one. In the eyes of the offended, I’d made a total fool of myself. That's the risk you take for daring to reveal your feelings, for you risk going against the grain. But how else?
One of the comments slung at my posting by that ever-ubiquitous contributor “Anonymous," whose profanity I did not allow onto the lot, found irony in my “legendary expertise” (a compliment, Anonymous?) being unaware that the names “Nellie” with “Hanneford go together. No, what I really failed to link were the names “Poema” and “Hanneford.”
I looked elsewhere, to one of the three Kelly Miller blogs, this being Steve and Ryan’s. Amidst some controversy, Steve, a classy guy, posted his own comment, “everybody is entitled to their own opinion.” Among other comments, Jon turned what he doubtlessly considered a negative into what I consider rare validation. You see, Jon lumped me together with the snobby New York critics’ crowd. May I take a bow please!? “Mr. Pompous ‘I live and die in New York’” he called me. (Mr. Pompous lives in Oakland, CA.) Well, it beats beings bland. And since I no longer disco into nights of senseless danger, gotta do something for cheap thrills.
Jon described my review as “a homework project.” Now to that, Jon, I can relate. For years, even after landing bylines in Variety and getting published in book form, I still felt like I were trying be a writer; lately, I’ve promoted my self-regard to writer trying to be a writer.
I'll grant that Jon might be on to some prickly things about me, but he goes totally off the rails when he accuses me of a mind set that was “formed before the presentation was presented.” If only he knew what was actually in my mind when I sat down to take in a performance of Kelly-Miller in Brewster, NY — and how what I thought I might find was significantly altered by what I actually found.
As for my carrying on like a know-it-all New Yorker, that tickles me pink lemonade. Why? Because, for starters, I think the NY critics are the toughest, and they think for themselves. Growing up, I admired how, following another opening night, they were forced to form their opinions in hours or less, rushing back to newsroom typewriters or to telephones to call in their notices. No time to stick their fingers in the wind or equivocate their immediate gut reactions down to intellectual mush. I read and treasured Walter Kerr almost every Sunday in The New York Herald Tribune. And when I landed my first byline in Variety, that only emboldened my stubbornly independent ways. Whatever I am, it's me that you get. I just wish, trust me, that you'd get a lot more voices and a lot more opinions -- in declarative review form.
"Pompous" if you please. English class room deficient if you must. But bias in advance? That I fight all the time, admitting that, yes, I too am human, but I think the conscious struggle to fight bias has made me a better, fairer reporter. Two things that remain uppermost in my thinking and approach: Number 1. Keep your mind an open slate, and let the arists in the ring paint their pictures on it. Number 2. The circus, ever since jugglers began in Egypt ,acrobats in China, is forever changing. It is not a fixed form. So, by all means adhere to a golden cliche: judge each show on its own terms.
Which can be a shock to my system as well.
And sometimes, a thrill. Never know what awaits me when, pompously, I embark on another homework review project. Considering how quaintly irrelevant I am obviously viewed by my dissenters, I'm thinking of making my entrances on to the lot in cape and carriage, but the Witness Protection Program refused me that guise.
[photo, at Carson & Barnes Circus in Half Moon Bay, CA,1995, by my nephew Jeffrey Hoffman]
7.18.10
Perhaps The New York Times go-to-the-circus critic, cultural reporter Alexis Soloski, took far too seriously the goings on at the current show, which costumes and links circus acts to Gotham’s “Hometown Playground” — tourists sites, iconic signage, fashions, et all. For she quibbles with the imagery as being out of date – such as poodles in Ziegfeld costumes. They strike me as charming.
“The acts are given vague tie-ins to the five boroughs. An acrobat performs an upside-down routine dressed as a construction worker. Upside down they don’t cat call ... The poodles, all shelter rescues, arrive in a checkered cab.”
I assume they should have been Lyfted in. So does this mean it is okay to use only dogs from rescue shelters in circuses? How weaselly hypocritical a justification, woke! woke!
Any critic who goes to a circus these days expecting high-grade integration of theme or story is best advised to park their brains at the door, and let their do hearts do the watching.
Strangest of all, Soloski takes issue with slack wire performer Mihret Mekonnen from Ethiopia, seen above, writing, “However challenging, it is no substitute for a high one – or very slightly out of date.’
That is the stupidest thing I have ever read in a circus review.
“Big Apple Circus’s exercise in nostalgia feels paler than the real city just beyond the tent.”
Still, our vacillating reviewer wraps on a feel good note: “Sometimes messy, sometime thrilling ... the show is a fine diversion for a fall afternoon.”
Which pales in comparison to the story's headline: "An underwhelming exercise in nostalgia."
Other reviews? I find only one, in DC Theater --- a rave. Frankly, it looks like a lot of fun to me, mixed imagery included.
Don’t be surprised if the Gray Lady spins out another annual accolade: “A New York Times Lazy Critic’s Pick!”
What makes me the happiest? To know that most Americans through so many classes and cultures all over the country share my feelings. It makes me feel better about the country, and better about its future. Even here in the State of Insanity (CA), there is hope.