Circus clown Essays

  • Mirrors: A Brief History Of Clowns

    552 Words  | 2 Pages

    someone would mention ‘clowns’ they would automatically think of someone who would dress in vibrant colors, has full face makeup, makes fun balloon creations and tell jokes. The definition of a clown is an “entertainer who wears silly clothes and makes people laugh by performing tricks without speech” but clowns are no longer perceive that way due to recent events and movies (“Clown”). In ancient Egypt around two thousand four hundred BCE was when the earliest document clowns had appeared (“A Brief

  • Genre Of Clowning (Theatre, Drama, Arts)

    502 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Genre Of Clowning The genre of clowning actually originates from Greece, where satires had begun originating slowly as time went by. The art of satire was challenged throughout the years to form the various forms of clowning we have today. A clown must have certain abilities or skills to master its comedy upon the audience. It is a profession that requires delicate detail, precise movements, and of course a reaction. The costume for every type of comedy is extremely different. Commedia Dell’Arte

  • Bob dylan: a classic

    934 Words  | 2 Pages

    To your tambourine in time It’s just a ragged clown behind I wouldn’t pat it any mind It’s just a shadow you’re seeing he’s chasing >Chorus Take me disappearing through the smoke rings of my mind Down the foggy ruins of time Far past the frozen leaves The haunted frightened trees Out to the windy beach Far from the twisted reach of crazy sorrow Yes to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free Silhouetted by the sea Circled by the circus sands With all memory...

  • Clown

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    Clown a performer, usually in a                          circus, who plays the fool,                          performs practical jokes, and                          does tricks to make people                          laugh. Other names for clowns                          are buffoon, jester, fool,                               conjurer, mirthmaker, tumbler,                          gleeman, mime, actor, harlequin, merry counselor, comic, and puppeteer. Even though there are many types of clowns,

  • Personal Narrative - My Parents' Funeral

    555 Words  | 2 Pages

    the funeral was very bright. The curtains were opened in the coffin room. Aunt Sandy held my hand. She wore a black hat with a big black feather. Her eyes had big red circles around them, and her mouth was bright red. She reminded me of the clown in my circus coloring book.

  • Observation Essay – The Clown

    1477 Words  | 3 Pages

    Observation Essay – The Clown He’s a young man, the clown, with white socks striped in black, and black suspenders over a white T-shirt. White face, red nose. His MO is to follow people and imitate their motion without their noticing, to the glee of the sizeable, ever-changing audience. We’re sitting here on the steps of the Museum, hot and sweaty, watching the show. The clown can follow anyone: a slinky woman wearing pink ruffles, a kid with a mountain bike, a muscle-shirted dude talking

  • Pantomime

    1136 Words  | 3 Pages

    language, prehistoric men told about a hunt with pantomime. Prehistoric men would use pantomime to tell the history of the tribe. A clown named Grock became a very successful mime. He started as an acrobatic clown at a very young age. Grock became famous because he succeeded in the circus and in the music hall. After years of successfully performing in circuses, he tried his clown routine in a theater in Berlin. Grock began to move away from broad comedy in the Grimaldi tradition, and towards Debureu’s type

  • Christopher Lathrop: Autobiography

    603 Words  | 2 Pages

    monkey. But brother Haanz stole him from me; for his own entertainment.(If you know what I mean?) Anyway; a few years later when I became a shambala monk. (many degrees above a standard monk.) I ran away to America and joined circus Vargus as the head clown. When the Circus came too my hometown of Olympia My mother witnessed my performance, and decided too let me move back home. Living at home was worse than I had hoped. I decided to venture, as I called it; on a long and hopefully successful quest

  • Circus Circus

    1508 Words  | 4 Pages

    Once the ringmaster steps into the ring and guides the animals into their positions the audience knows the circus is about to start. A circus is a traveling group of acrobats, trained animals, and clowns that perform in a tent for money. In the past, the circus began with only a few traveling entertainers that moved from one village to the next singing songs and bringing stories to life. Now circuses have both human and animal performers, they travel from town to town in different states and perform

  • Three Popular Circuses In The 19th Century

    1149 Words  | 3 Pages

    and then leaving. The circuses were presented in theaters that had ramps and a full orchestra down in front of the stage. While at the circus you would see people dancing on the backs of horses along with doing ballets and Italian shadow plays. Circuses now a days are a lot different than they were when they first began in the 18th and 19th Centuries. The circus has had very interesting performers. Circuses in the 19th century were very entertaining to the people who were watching them. They were

  • The Trickster in Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire

    2100 Words  | 5 Pages

    that tricksters are not necessarily male. The use of these words is in no way an attempt to promote a sexist outlook of the trickster phenomenon. In fact, many tricksters are androgynous. Bibliography Christen, Kimberly A.. Tricksters & Clowns. ABC-CLIO, 1998. Kaufmann, Walter. The Portable Nietzsche. New York: Penguin, 1984. Radini, Paul. The Trickster, A Study in American Indian Mythology. New York: Schocken Books, 1972. Rice, Anne. Interview with the Vampire. Whyte, Lesa

  • Doctor Faustus Essays: Critical Analysis of Faustus

    610 Words  | 2 Pages

    summon up a devil named Mephistophilis.  Faustus signs over his soul to Lucifer (Satan), in return to keep Mephistophilis for 24 years.  We also see what happens when magic power gets in the wrong hands when Mephistophilis punishes Robin, who is a clown and his friend Ralph for trying to make magic with a book they have stolen from Faustus.  In the beginning angels visit Faustus, and each time he wonders whether or not to repent, but the devil appears and warns him not too by tempting him of magic

  • Twelfth Night Essay: Olivia's Denial

    856 Words  | 2 Pages

    27) because she "desires to season a brother's dead love" (1.1.31). Feste knows that mourning is the not real reason for her refusal to marry Orsino. Clown: Good madonna, why mourn'st thou? Olivia: Good fool, for my brother's death. Clown: I think his soul is in hell, madonna. Olivia: I know his soul is in heaven, fool. Clown: The more fool, madonna, to mourn for your brother's soul, being in heaven. Take away the fool, gentlemen. (1.1.64-70) Feste shows Olivia the foolish

  • Twelfth Night Essay: Feste is No Fool

    688 Words  | 2 Pages

    truth-teller.  And in William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night it is no different. Feste, a clown, through his mixed up words and songs enlightens the other characters whilst playing the role of the truth-teller.  Through aiding the Duke with his patience, helping Viola with her love problems, and having a major role in Malvolio's downfall, Feste holds one of the primary parts of the play. Although Feste is a clown, he seems to be the most perceptive and knowledgeable of all the characters.  He has

  • Pool Personalities

    632 Words  | 2 Pages

    to free his or her mind after a stressful day at work, or a group of friends hanging out for a while. These are the people who normally come in, have a couple drinks, and enjoy a few games of pool before going home for the evening. Although some do clown around a little, they rarely get out of hand. If you look towards the back of a bar or pool hall, this is where you will often find the better skilled pool players. These people tend to take the game very seriously. Good pool players are generally

  • Tod Browning's Freaks

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    Director Tod Browning was a product of circus life. He grew up in the circus with manic clowns, hairy women and human deformity all lined up for our entertainment, so he sheds a bit of light on the reality of our idea of what is freakish and what is normal. The film begins with disclaimer about its subject matter set up in the format that would later be adopted and tweaked just a bit by Star Wars. He calls this film a “Highly Unusual attraction” keeping with the circus theme of the film. We have a history

  • Betrayal

    2962 Words  | 6 Pages

    David, the long-term boyfriend (now). Moa, at first betrayer, then clown, then you (then). There is the self who perceives, creates, and ultimately longs for the deep and endless fall of vertigo (lost between the now and then). And there is Love, so mysterious and evasive that I sometimes believe it is a character, alive, weaving tendrils around us (love plays with time). But the descriptions might switch names. I could be the clown, and it could be you who plunges yourself into vertigo. And maybe

  • Imaginationuality In Charles Dicken's Novel 'Hard Times'

    1752 Words  | 4 Pages

    For many decades, many have tried to obtain a perfect mixture of a healthy state of mind in relation to a healthy body. In order to do this, people exercise their bodies along with their minds. However, overly exercising can lead to consequences. As a result, a balance needs to be met. When displaying too many hard core views, the mixture of a healthy mind and a healthy body disappears. Therefore, it is very important to obtain a balance with strict rules along with some imagination. When looking

  • Invisible Man

    953 Words  | 2 Pages

    the white elite of his community. However, before her can deliver said speech, he is forced to perform humiliating tasks. The use of symbols is evident throughout “Battle Royal” particularly with regard to the Hell imagery, power struggle, and the circus metaphor. The setting of the chapter is significantly symbolic. The story takes place in a luxurious ballroom, which Ellison has masterfully transformed into Hell. This is the smoker. The men in the audience are “smoking black cigars” (1255). The

  • P. T. Barnum

    1977 Words  | 4 Pages

    P. T. Barnum 	Phineas Taylor Barnum reinvented the circus. His knowledge of what people want and how to make people think they want what he had was amazing. He constantly fooled people and had a way of making the customers come back. Barnum was ultimate salesman. He single handedly turned the circus into the "Greatest Show On Earth" it is today. 	P. T. Barnum was born in Bethel, Connecticut on July 5th 1810. He later called himself a "Yankee doodle dandy, plus one." He was the oldest of five