a special feature the suncay daily b~ackistage! v with circus people Number 75 Page Four Sunday, February 1 1, 1973 OfsU By MARTIN PORTER AND SO I WENT--to the stench of elephant shit and cotton candy, to the sound of brass bands and Caramel Corn vendors, and to the sight of box- ing afghans, triple flips and grease- painted jesters. But the circus was not the same. I remembered myself ten years earlier in New York - mouth drooping, heart pounding, and laugh- ing hysterically.. . now I was bored. I feared that I had fallen over the edge . . . into the realm of sophistica- tion and respectability. No, I had not outgrown the circus! The ringmaster bellows, "Ladies and gentlemen and children of all ages." No, I had not outgrown the circus! It was this fear that drove me back to the Shrine Circus at the Michigan State Fairgrounds in Detroit; driven back with a clearer head and a realiz- ation that I had to look at the circus with a new perspective. Behind every surrealistic superman and cantanker- ous clown was a real person. Talk to them as real people not as performers; then see the circus again . . . I had been expecting too much. And so I went. THE SCENE is confused and the ac- tion moves quickly. Clowns in street clothes look like es- capees from a Fellini nightmare as they dart back and forth from the are- na to their dressing rooms. Two bare- chested musclemen speak rapidly in Spanish as they volley a ping pong ball on a makeshift table. Elephants are drawn to the rings, a pensive game of chess is in progress, and a shapely young girl in a red glitter costume passes by. Everything is out of place, but nobody seems to notice. Activity backstage at a circus seems distorted to one used to viewing a cir- cus from the stands. The clowns aren't funny - even though their paint-on smiles are still intact; the strong man sits reading the Free Press, and the girl in the red glitter costume doesn't swing through the air. She is out of breath as she says, "Most people think we are inferior because we live in trail- ers, travel around and dress in flashy- funny costumes, but in many ways our lives are better . . . we become braver, respect our associates and have closer families. In my family our lives depend on each other." permen, Co wns, and real handle the crowd, and today's crowds are more. sophisticated - you can't bamboozle them . . . but clowns are in luck - people today want to laugh more than ever." Oopsey, Robert McNea, is 43 years old and proud that he is "one of the few people around who is doing exact- ly what I like." He is upset that some people look at the clowns as inferior to the other acts in the circus and ex- plains that "I am an artist and I am funny only because I work at it . . . clowning is one of the oldest art forms, going back to the Roman Colosseum . . . even the very act of painting a face is an art." People assume that Oopsey is funny all the time but this is not the case. "I was born a Gemini - two people - I don't want to be a clown to my four kids and wife . . . you have to have a split personality to make it as a clown and a 'person' at the same time ... "As Shakespeare said, 'it takes a wise man to play a fool'." Oopsey seems satisfied with his last comment. He realizes that he has ade- quately proven that he is more than a bumbling fool. This is very import- ant to him. His big red painted smile becomes broader as he says goodbye. TARZAN ZERBINI is allegedly the star of the Shrine Circus, and al- though he is reluctant to admit it. his words and actions give him away. Zer- bini, who resembles an Italian John- ny Weissmuller, drills a whole in a prop as he describes his act. "I have stuck my head in lion's mouths, carried tigers on my back .. . all without props . . . Clyde Beatty had whips, guns and chairs - Zerbini has nothing." Zerbini is the latest in a chain of eight generations of lion tamers. He has been working with wild animals all his life and feels that "it would take thirty years to explain how to train the lions and tigers in my act . . . I people am with them 24 hours a day and.only perform for 25 minutes." Even though he admits that wild animals are unpredictable Tarzin de- nies that he is afraid. "If you die in a lion cage or if you die in a car, you still die someday." Zerbini unconsciously expands his chest as he adds, "I was hurt only once, when I was mauled by a lion I received 200 stitches and was back in the cage two days later . .. I am not afraid of anything." His chest expands once again. What can you say to someone who is not afraid of anything? Is he a liar? Can you dare him to jump out of. an airplane without a parachute? Do you ask him if he is crazy? No, these are not questions you ask someone with claws for fingernails, fangs for teeth and who gnaws on tiger bones between acts. i Photography by David Margolick Oopsey: "Clowning is one of the oldest art forns ... even the act of painting a face is an art." Sasha Armour is 15 years old and looks and acts at least twenty. Now dressed in blue jeans she in no way resembles the girl in the red glitter costume that flew on the trapeze just moments before. Along with the rest of her family, Sasha is part of the aerial act of the show. Although she could not adequately decide if she is happy having lived her whole life in the circus, she seems secure in stating, "I know that I am different than other people my age, this is the same for everyone in the circus . . . I guess we are all just a bit insane." jUGO ZUCHINI sits resting his chin on a strong muscular arm. He sits quietly, undisturbed by the confusion around him. His black eyes are sta- tioned on a chess board. It takes a few seconds to associate this small mus- cular frame and dark Roman face with the man I had seen shot out of a can- non just moments earlier. A bright silver truck (1946 Diamond chassis) pulls onto the side of the cen- ter ring. The silver red tipped cannon sits nestled on top. A man dressed in a skin-tight white suit and red hat climbs into the cannon. The ringmaster asks for complete silence, the band raises the suspense-a loud exnlosion -a human form is thrust 150 feet through the air - the band strikes a triumphant tune - a man behind me whispers, "He's got balls." .. . Zuchini is more than happy to in- terrupt his chess game to talk. He leads us to'dressing room No. 5, closes the door, places himself on the edge of a wooden table and begins by empha- sizing the fact that he is a college graduate from the University of Flor- ida with a degree in engineering. His father, Edmund, who owned a circus in Italy, designed the very act that he nerforms today. The family was brought to the United States in 1922 by the Ringling Brothers. "I admired my father all my life and felt that the best way to honor him was to follow in his tradition." Zuchini is far from eager to describe the mechanics of his act since "it would take a lot of the suspense out of it." Suffice it to say that he is shot through a tubular piston by air pres- sure. "The Human Cannonball" wears no nadding excent for a white leather suit and a red leather mask. In all the years that he has been performing, he has incurred only one major iniurv. Yet even after breaking a leg in mul- tiple places and totally dislocating his back, Zuchini returned to the act with- out reservations. "It is like any other business , . . there are risks, but the applause and admiration make it all worthwhile." Zuchini was not sure why he chose this line of work. Although he could have lived a nice suburban white collar existence as an engineer, he chose the bone splintering job of being shot out of a cannon. "After being shot out of a cannon nothing else seems to be ex- citing." (40PSEY THE CLOWN rushes back- stage in a chartreuse costume re- plete with floppy shoes, flowered hat and baggy pants. He says that he would be more than happy to talk to street pants, his white face still decor- ated with a big red smile and jutting eyebrows, Oopsey lights up a Kool and reflects on his life with the circus. "I ran away from home in St. Thom- as, Ontario, at the age of 12. I had al- ways wanted to be a clown and still enjoy it 31 years later." His Toby Tyler-type tale seems too exciting to be true. Yet Oopsey Is to- tally serious, even as his words come out from that seemingly indelible red smile. "Part of the job is learning how to Tarzan seems to want to finish the interview and bitterly adds, "People like you come to the circus to feel su- perior to the clowns or to see people like me bleed." T had talked to the supermen and the fools, smelled their body odor, heard them stumble when they spoke, seen them get nervous over a simple interview. They were real people, al- though, at times, some would not be willing to make this concession. I had returned to the circus for this purpose and was satisfied with what I found. And so I left. Martin Porter is Magazine Editor of The Daily. 1. l x iI 4l A1 4 :. I