I I , - -1 , , I Page 4-Sunday, October 2, 1977-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily--Sun( knew she was dying but there was this bittersweet happiness. She was a happy little girl. "Later she came looking for me after the show," how recalls. I cried then and it's tough to talk it now." "Somehow, just her saying 'You're my favorite clown' meant a lot to me." . Moments like that must provide Carlyon with an emotional respite from the often taxing schedule faced by circus performers. Carlyon says he makes about a dozen appearances during each circus performance, and his weekly labor tips the fifty hour scale. Some lawyers don't work that hard. Two consecutive days off,,-he says, is a rarity. And Ringling members take in 45 cities during the course of a year, negotiating those thousands of miles by rail. What's more, Carlyon says its difficult to shake an illness when traveling with the circus because the performers and animals are in constant closed quarters on the train. Germs, too. The whole thing took a lot of adjustment, he says. Still, Carlyon says he's amazed that despite all, the 350 employes manage to give crowds across the country consistently tip-top performances. "I sound like a promo hype, but it's good solid entertainment. There's a lot of skill involved," he says. "There's something about it-that show af- ter show, the people get a good show. You won't get the same 100 per cent every time, but you get pretty close." Which isn't too say that each performer always approaches 100 per cent. Just like basketball players and law school students, Carlyon assures that clowns are not immune to their periodic slumps. Just a couple a found himself in, is when "I swear is funny and I'm : by being here." "But I was tall was coming out "and to cap it of was waiting to co standing there, an couple of young'i me, so I raised m: "And for some i she poked her fri minutes while I v with a blank exp eyebrows every c cracked up." Just how long people up is unce contracts to perf Carlyon won't ma knows if his contr. Someday, he sa "The law is ou the man with the I and degrees fror Clown College of doing this." And if Dave Ca what would it be? an Emmet Kelly? No way. "An N emphatically. Yes, Dave Carly DAVE CARLYON is running around with two big slices of foam rubber bread, trip- ping over balloon-sized shoes and thrusting his nose into the face of a bewildered little boy whose mouth is filled with pink clouds of cotton candy. "Hey, kid, wanna be in my sandwich?" he inquiries, wiggling painted eyebrows which sit above his bulbous, red schnozz. He then gently places the bread on either side of the kid's head like so much lunchmeat, and is off again on his motley way, smiling and stumbling and searching for other human sandwich fillings. If that's not enough, Dave Carlyon also rides piggy back on hulking, grey elephants and chases an orange Datsun around a track, threatening its windshield with a wrench. PHOTOS BY ANDY FREEBERG It's hardly the type of behavior one might expect from the well-spokenson of a college president, whose clean-cut face appeared in the 1971 Michiganensian as an American Studies major and who later completed three years of law training at Berkeley before passing his bar exams. But Dave Carlyon has a valid excuse for such nonsense. He's a clown. "You could say I'm the only clown getting paid for being a clown who graduated from Michigan," cracked Carlyon, who dons his tattered garb for Ringling Brothers. At 28, Carlyon needn't be slipping his slender frame into rainbow striped pants ten sizes too big for him. Nor need he be toting his big slices of foam rubber bread into every arena between here and Omaha. Simply put, Dave Carlyon needn't be living the hectic, hit-the-road life of the beloved circus nebbish-whose antics Carlyon himself equates in hilarity with "elephants defecating." Rather, Carlyon says he could be working now at a law firm-where he'd be able to trade his baggy pants for pinstripes and the bread for an at- tache case. But for the moment Carlyon is content with the nine mohths he has spent with Ringling Brothers-the circus troupe which has lost little luster after 106 years of three-ring entertainment. Despite the physical demands of cross country travel and strenuous clown routines, Carlyon says it's an interesting, varied life-a learning experi- ence, too. What's more, he says clowning provides the op- r -rtunity to shed the mild-mannered demeanor which he claims is representative of the real, out- of-makeup Dave Carlyon. "I've never been the class clown or anything," he says. "In fact, I'm generally considered a very quiet person. But inside, there's a bunch of clowning." A grey Michigan T-shirt complementing his floppy green and purple tie, Carlyon seems anything but clownish as he lounges back after a recent performance at Detroit's Olympia Stadium. Behind the red and white paint and shaggy orange wig is a serious minded man who commands enough insight to professionally link the lawyer and the clown--at first an absurd proposition. Ask Carlyon why he'll jot "Clown" on his resume, and he'll tell you that "the perfor- ming experience is valuable if I plan to practice courtroom law." And "simply being in front of people and falling on your face-not in a clowning way, but bom- bing-is good for your inner self," Carlyon con- tinues. A learning experience, so to speak. Good for a lawyer's character. But when Carlyon steps on the arena floor, he blocks his law ambitions from his mind. Fueled by the howling audience and surrounded by shapely, sequinned chorus girls, lithe trapezists and in- S credibly tame polar bears, Carlyon becomes the classic ne'er-do-well-the gangly, bungling bub- blehead whose appeal cuts across all generations of circus fans. C ARLYON, though,. followed a circuitous route before landing under the lights at Ringling Brothers. A Bay City native whose father is president of Delta College there, Carlyon peppered his study at Michigan with slapstick per- formances in Musket and Uie Ann Arbor Civic Theater. While at the University, he had also heard of a clown school in Venice, Fla., where in two months students learned to apply make-up, sew their costumes, -and otherwise be clowns. But Carlyon had little time to contemplate clown school. After graduation he was whipped up by the draft and spent two years near Philadelphia, where he not only fulfilled his service obligation but did a little dinner theater on the side. Berkeley Law followed.. In between all that,Carlyon found time to tutor, fight forest fires and pursue his long standing in- fatuation with basketball. ' Last year Carlyon-studied hard for the Califor- nia bar exams and passed. An accredited lawyer, he looked to the future. Then he recalled the clown college. "For some reason," says Carlyon, "it struck me as an eminently reasonable idea, to use a little lawyer language." Never a circus enthusiast, and not particularly sure why he wanted to join the circus, Carlyon sent in his application. Of 3,500 applicants, he was one of 50' selected. Two months of clown preparation, and Carlyon signed a one-year con- tract with Ringling Brothers. He thought it absolutely hilarious. - "I was in rehearsals last January down in B y Jay Levi In "Images don 't fill you. People do. It's walking out the back door and the first little kid you come to is standing there waving and saying 'Hi, Mr. Clown 'in a way that every little kid has said it for 350 performances.' Levin is Co - of the