Contemporary circus Essays

  • Cirque Du Soleil

    799 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cirque du Soleil Paramour tells the story of a young woman named Verna who later transforms into Indigo James after meeting the esteemed Hollywood director AJ Golden. Indigo later finds herself having to make the toughest decision of her life thus far. She must choose between true love and her career as a movie star. After watching the Broadway show the best adjective that I can fathom to describe Cirque du Soleil Paramour would be extravagant. From the costuming and set design to the scenery and

  • Getting Into Cirque Du Soleil Analysis

    826 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cirque Du Soleil (“Circus of the Sun”) has become an international sensation, described as a “dramatic mix of circus arts and street entertainment” (16X9). One documentary about Cirque Du Soleil is an audition documentary called “Getting into Cirque Du Soleil.” It was first released in 2012 on the Canadian television show 16X9, which is hosted by Carolyn Jarvis. For several months, 16X9 followed Cirque Du Soleil scouts as they searched around the world for the best gymnasts, dancers, clowns, etc

  • Freak Show History

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    The thought of the circus sideshow acts seems like a hazy memory in the history of America. However, many television programs are recreating a modern version of P. T. Barnum’s freak shows. People today have the same curiosity or maybe even more curiosity than the people of the past to see these types of shows. The strangest part of today’s society is that there has never been a time when viewing the strange was so accessible. Therefore, my personal perspective is that freak shows still exist in the

  • Ghost Boy by Ian Lawrence

    1506 Words  | 4 Pages

    bullied is never an easy thing to deal with, and it certainly wasn't easy for Harold, till the day the circus came to town. Being inspired with the idea of meeting the Cannibal King, Harold runs off to join the traveling circus, which was the best decision he ever made because it gave him a chance to grow mentally and emotionally, and become a strong individual. The extended metaphor "The World is a Circus" sums up the reality of life in five simple words and for some like Harold, it is hard to recognize

  • E.B. White’s essays

    1484 Words  | 3 Pages

    interpretations of time and how it is used to symbolize meaning to each piece. “Once More to the Lake” is an essay that is derived mostly from White’s personal experience while “The Ring of Time” is mostly examining a teenage girl performing at the circus, in the eyes of someone else. Both of these articles give the reader insight of how the author uses the theme of time to show different aspects to the storyline. In White’s essays, he uses strategies that reflect on the past and foresee the future

  • Monstrosity: How Does Society Define It?

    3293 Words  | 7 Pages

    Monsters, mutants, oddities, weirdos, and freaks are terms associated with people with deformities. A person with a deformity was usually considered a monstrosity. In society, the focus of monstrosity has been commonly external and the internal aspects have become an accepted lifestyle if one’s external appearance is beautiful by society’s standards. If one is considered a monstrosity, their personality is usually portrayed as evil and wicked. In Tod Robbin’s 1923 book Spurs and Tod Browning’s 1932

  • circus

    860 Words  | 2 Pages

    were so excited to hear there was a circus stopping by your town? Did you impatiently wait for the animals to come up in circus and to amaze you with those performances? If yes was your answer, you were definitely not alone. There were 330 other people out of 550 respondents who enjoyed the animal performances best, as to compare with human ones. However, recently part of the world had been shocked with the video footage of animals cruelty in an infamous circus. This had arisen a controversy of whether

  • A Study of a Very Old Man with Enormous Wings

    1166 Words  | 3 Pages

    type of epiphany to occur. Early in the story, the people of town along with pilgrims from afar try to find miracles in the angel. The angels novelty soon wears off and the angel actually ends up a spectacle to the townspeople. They treat it like a circus freak throwing scraps of food to it and housing it in a chicken coup. Thoughts even cross their mind such as “clubbing him to death (Sic)”. (Marquez) Through magical realism he separates the angel from the rest of the world in a way which could not

  • 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

  • Roman Entertainment

    1009 Words  | 3 Pages

    commiting a crime. Another state provided form of entertainment was chariot racing. The chariot races were held in what was called The Circus Maximus. The chariot races held in the Circus Maximus were considered the most popular form of entertainment. The Circus Maximus' entertainment was much like the Colosseum, a visitor could come and stay all day. The Circus Maximus could seat as many as 255,000 spectators. Men and women could sit together, but there was reserved seating for the Emporer, senators

  • E.B. White's The Ring Of Time

    526 Words  | 2 Pages

    of his trip to a circus rehearsal where he describes a fascinating scene of a young girl practicing a horse act for an upcoming show. As a writer, he feels it is his obligation to record the events he is witnessing, and convey this to his readers without leaving anything out. However difficult this may be, the beautiful and fleeting moment is something he wishes to ultimately capture. When he arrives on the scene, White senses something magical about the surroundings of this circus as it undergoes

  • Identity In Freaks

    1233 Words  | 3 Pages

    self-identity. Tod Browning’s 1932 movie called Freaks ultimately put an end to his career. The film uses real carnival sideshow performers with deformities to disclose how “freaks” are the normalized and trusting figures while the “normal” members of the circus are delineated as the real monsters that exploit the freaks for their own desires and benefits. The film manifests the freak as a spectacular body that’s repulsive yet fascinating paralleling to the objectification of a monster. The freak is characterized

  • Freaks Movie Essay

    836 Words  | 2 Pages

    The film, Freaks (1932), is a wonderful movie, not only showing the culture in ancient America, but also a great look into the ideologies and assumptions in the 20th century American society. Ideally, the movie is packed with romance, deceit, and moving tales of disabled people, how they face their day-to-day challenges, and their interactions with people without disabilities. The main characters in the film, Cleopatra and Hans show a great deal of a romantic relationship. However, it becomes clear

  • Animal Entertainment-The Most Abusive Form Of Entertainment

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    and force them to amuse us. The article ‘10 Fast Facts about Animal Entertainment’ summarizes that animals, who are used in entertainment, are ripped away from their natural habitat for our satisfaction, and it also points that, whenever we attend a circus or any other form of animal entertainment, we’re promoting this violence. It also points that animals in circuses have inadequate facilities with lack of food, vet, and drinking. These forms of amusement reduce the mighty tiger into an obedient kitten

  • John Philip Sousa

    620 Words  | 2 Pages

    flute, baritone. Like his father, who played the trombone in the U.S. Marines Band, John, too, learned to play the trombone. John also spent time studying voice. John was a rather mischevious teen. At the age of 13 John tried to run away to join the circus. Dad was not all that impressed with John and made him enlist in the Marines. While in the service he published "Moonlight on the Potomac Waltzes". That was his first published composition and the beginning of a very successful career. After spending

  • De La Guarda Villa Villa

    1261 Words  | 3 Pages

    Is it a musical? A play? It’s more like a Circus! On March 1, 2001, I had the great opportunity to see a very unique Off-Broadway variety show named De La Guarda, written, directed, and designed by Pichon Baldinu and Diqui James. The theatre presenting this show is the Daryl Roth Theatre, which is located at 20 Union Square East, just a few blocks from Baruch College. There were many interesting moments in the show that one would be definitely surprised if he had no prior knowledge about the show

  • Fifth Business by Robertson Davies

    847 Words  | 2 Pages

    Firstly, Paul Dempster grows up as an outcast in Deptford, his mother's 'simpleness' leading the tight social world of the town to cast out his whole family and force's Paul to leave the town and create a new image for himself. Paul runs away to the circus in his early teens because of the mental abuse he took from the town because of his mothers incident with the tramp. Dunstable comment's, "Paul was not a village favorite, and the dislike so many people felt for his mother - dislike for the queer

  • 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

  • Rosemarie Garland Thomson's Extraordinary Bodies

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    these spectacles that gave the American people one collective identity, helping distance themselves from the “anarchic body” that was being paraded. (Thomson). Although the traditional model of the freak show met its death in the 1950s, the Jim Rose Circus managed to successfully reinvent the spectacle for a 21st-century audience. During the era of P.T. Barnum, the stars of the freak show were those that were visibly deformed, the more extraordinary their disability, the more successful of an act

  • Motivation In The Film, The Butterfly Circus

    1069 Words  | 3 Pages

    (someone) a reason for doing something. People like Martin Luther King Jr., Malala Yousifazi, and even Michelle Obama, motivate individuals everyday and have had many people who looked up to them achieve their goals. In the film, The Butterfly Circus, the circus travels to many places to give a show and brings the people joy to their lives. To motivate someone, you need to attract their emotions, challenge them, or even tell a personal story that can relate to the situation. Attract their emotions