Arts Entertainment Under The Big Top Shrine Circus clown hammers his way to kids' hearts. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News y 2001 Michigan Press Association "Newspaper of the Year" award winner! ou literally could call Jerry Weiner a home wrecker, but you also could call him Wrecker the Clown. Weiner's business, Jerry's Wreck & Haul, gave him the . idea for the clown character he portrays in the Shrine Circus Xtreme, which comes to the Silverdome May 29-June 2 with both traditional and new wave entertainers. Weiner, whose recreational interest had been athletics ; decided to switch to entertainment in 2000. Softball and racquetball had become too strenuous. "My business involves tearing out room fixtures to make way for house renovations and taking away the debris so the construction crews can do their work," explains Weiner, 63. "I'm usu- ally in a hard hat and thought that would be a good start for a costume." The West Bloomfield resident had never been in the performance spot- light until he decided to try clowning. Starting with the hard hat, he next bought a pair of oversized jeans, which he cut off at an awkward angle. He then added a pair of long socks. A visit to a clown store in Westland ended with Jerry Weiner as Wrecker the Clown: 'My love for children is what intrigued me to become a Shrine clown." Or log on to: 5/24 • 2002 68 www,detroitjewishnews.com his buying a Styrofoam hammer, which he uses to tap young members of the audience. He then lets them tap him back. "The hammer started out as a way to interact with the kids, and it snow- balled," says Weiner, who keeps the clown's name in big print on his hat. ."When the kids see me coming, they run to the edge of the stands, call out `Wrecker' to get my attention and wait to be tapped." Now part of the largest Shrine Circus in North Atherica, Weiner will appear with aerialists and acrobats as well as more edgy, daredevil acts, including motorcyclists on an incline wire and a flying trapeze troupe. The show also features a carnival with an exotic petting zoo, elephant and pony rides and games. The five-ring production will have celebrity ringmasters, such as Florine Mark, president of the largest Weight Watchers franchise. During her appear- ance at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, June 1, Mark will reveal the trick of eating cir- cus foods without adding pounds. Doing For Others Weiner, who became a Shriner after 35 years of affiliation with the Masons, feels proud to be associated with the organization that supports 22 med- ical centers treating