{"title":"Send in the Clowness: The Problematic Origins of Female Circus Clowns","authors":"M. McMahan, L. Senelick","doi":"10.1017/S0040557422000539","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Historically, clowns have always been trained “on the job”: one was born or adopted into a circus dynasty or else ran away to join the circus, serving an apprenticeship. Breaking with the long tradition that performers learn on the job, after World War II, national circuses in the Communist bloc created their own academies; they were followed in 1974 by the École nationale de cirque founded in Paris by Annie Fratellini and Pierre Étaix, now the Académie Fratellini, and in 1982 by the Escola Nacional de Circo in Brazil. These examples led to the teaching of circus skills in universities, enabling breaches in the gender barriers between types of circus acts. For example, six years after Ringling Brothers founded a clown college in 1968, Peggy Williams was the first woman to graduate with a contract. At first she felt out of place. In an interview series for the Ringling Museum of Art, she stated that early in her training she had presumed that clowns were gender neutral: “I didn't know there weren't girl clowns. I thought being a clown was being a clown. You could be a man or woman. I had no idea what was heading my way because of gender.” Although she learned under the auspices of great clowns such as Lou Jacobs, she was left to her own devices to craft a clown that reflected her allegedly female nature.","PeriodicalId":42777,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE SURVEY","volume":"64 1","pages":"24 - 48"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE SURVEY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/S0040557422000539","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Historically, clowns have always been trained “on the job”: one was born or adopted into a circus dynasty or else ran away to join the circus, serving an apprenticeship. Breaking with the long tradition that performers learn on the job, after World War II, national circuses in the Communist bloc created their own academies; they were followed in 1974 by the École nationale de cirque founded in Paris by Annie Fratellini and Pierre Étaix, now the Académie Fratellini, and in 1982 by the Escola Nacional de Circo in Brazil. These examples led to the teaching of circus skills in universities, enabling breaches in the gender barriers between types of circus acts. For example, six years after Ringling Brothers founded a clown college in 1968, Peggy Williams was the first woman to graduate with a contract. At first she felt out of place. In an interview series for the Ringling Museum of Art, she stated that early in her training she had presumed that clowns were gender neutral: “I didn't know there weren't girl clowns. I thought being a clown was being a clown. You could be a man or woman. I had no idea what was heading my way because of gender.” Although she learned under the auspices of great clowns such as Lou Jacobs, she was left to her own devices to craft a clown that reflected her allegedly female nature.
从历史上看,小丑总是在“工作中”接受训练:一个人出生或被一个马戏团王朝收养,或者逃到马戏团去当学徒。第二次世界大战后,共产主义集团的国家马戏团打破了表演者在工作中学习的悠久传统,建立了自己的学院;1974年,安妮·弗拉泰利尼和皮埃尔·Étaix(现为弗拉泰利尼学院)在巴黎成立了École国家马戏团,1982年,巴西国家马戏团也成立了。这些例子促使大学教授马戏技巧,打破了马戏表演类型之间的性别障碍。例如,1968年,林林兄弟(Ringling Brothers)创办了一所小丑学院,六年后,佩吉·威廉姆斯(Peggy Williams)成为第一位获得合同毕业的女性。起初她感到格格不入。在林林艺术博物馆(Ringling Museum of Art)的一系列采访中,她表示,在接受培训的早期,她曾认为小丑是中性的:“我不知道没有女小丑。我以为做小丑就是做小丑。你可以是男人也可以是女人。因为性别的原因,我不知道前方会有什么。”虽然她是在卢·雅各布斯(Lou Jacobs)等伟大小丑的指导下学习的,但她只能靠自己的手段来塑造一个反映她所谓的女性本性的小丑。