The Day after the Jango Edwards Workshop

Jango warned us that we would experience a let down after the workshop is over, and it is true.  I am feeling very much alone here in my apartment while My Kid is at school and The Husband is at work.  But, thankfully, I have a performance coming up on Monday to keep my mind and body occupied. I am feeling connected to the clown community though.  Last night in Soho I talked to Michael Bongar and Stanley Sherman and Jim Moore, contemporaries of Jango Edwards, who became a clown in the 1970’s, working the streets of Europe.  John Towsen, author of Clowns was there too.  I just got an e-mail from Kendall. Someone from Circus Cirkor playing at BAM this week contacted her to talk about clown and risk.

Speaking of risk, it was a risk to take the Jango Edwards workshop this week.  Based on what I had seen on the internet, I found him offensive and scary and I was dis-inclined to take the workshop.  But, Jef Johnson said that his workshops are inspirational.  So I took the risk.

Jango’s aesthetic is certainly not mine, but the way he talks about the importance of clowns in the world is something I have not heard since I was last around Steve Smith.  There is something wonderful about the belief that the world needs more clowns when one is a clown or a clown in training.  When I was at Clown College, we were working and sweating and nursing injuries because we were trying so hard to win of the contracts to tour with The Greatest Show on Earth, kind of like So You Think You Can Dance. At the same time we were taught that it was important for us to appreciate what we had been given.  It seemed  a happy bit of subversive action, reflected in the promotional materials at the time, that there was as much pride in the Clown College graduates who had gone on to become doctors, teachers and lawyers as those who become name entertainers or part of Clown Alley on the Red Unit or the Blue Unit.

Steve Smith made sure that when we left Clown College, with our professionally designed agent suits and our make-up kits full of the Krylon, Mehron and Ben Nye products that worked best for our particular skin, in addition to all of the crafts and skills we had been taught by our many impressive teachers, that it was our obligation to be kind and generous to all clowns.  As healthy 20-somethings who had just had the door to the corporate entertainment industry opened for us, it was humbling to be reminded to respect and appreciate the work of those who learned everything they know about clowning in a class at a senior center or at clown club conventions.

Sometimes stage and cabaret clowns and  Ringling-style clowns look askance at each other’s aesthetic sensibilities, but Jango, who brings to mind Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters wants all the clowns to come together in the same community.

The way Jango used music in his workshop reminded me of the Search Weekends at the Newman Center when I was in college.  After intensive days of learning and sharing we would stand in a circle with our arms around each other, tears shining in our eyes as we sang Simon and Garfunkle’s Bridge Over Troubled Water.  With Jango we did the same thing, but the song was Smile, by Charlie Chaplin.

The Sunday before I took Jango’s workshop, I attended a talk about fasting and almsgiving, which are part of all the major world religions because they can lead to humility and transformation.  The same can be said of a good clown.

SYTYCD

Watching So You Think You Can Dance and thinking about the clown show.

“That was not good.”  “You didn’t bring it in personality.”  “Prove to the judges that you’re good enough.”  “That was not strong enough”.  “We would like you to fight for you life today.”   “Show the judges that I am here to stay.”  “That wasn’t strong enough.” “You have got to come up to a certain standard.”

That wasn’t strong enough.  He knows he needs the performance of a lifetime to stay in the competition.  (That’s what I thought going into the studio and then I didn’t deliver and expected to get cut in the manner of So You Think You Can Dance.

Ryan said: “I talked to Evan last night:  Yesterday was a little sketchy.  It was not my best day.  I talked to Evan last night and that calmed me down a little bit.  Which was awesome.  He was like just chill out, relax, don’t take it personally.  He was like you’re going to kill it tomorrow.  I was like Yes I am.”

Nigel said:  “Ryan step forward please.  Ryan yesterday in the hip hop I think we gave you an extra chance cause the hip hop was not strong yesterday and we gave you and extra chance because we just adore what you do.  Your solo is outstanding.  And as long as SYTYCD is about people will talk about that solo.  Today it was frighteningly strong.  It was, there was no relaxation down into the hips.  The feel of it was totally wrong.  It looked like you were going to mug her halfway through.  I mean you were going to beat her up.  There was nothing of they style involved in this routine.  So you know what we feel about you Ryan but it’s not happening this season.  I’m sorry.  We’re going to let you go.”

Ryan:  “You never know what’s going to happen, you know, and I believed that coming in.  I never, never once did I expect to just make, make it through.  You know I had to deliver and I didn’t so I’m going home.  So I’m calling Evan, little bro,  Um.  Top 4.  Um.  This is not the phone call I was hoping to make.  I’m disappointed… in myself because I know can do better.  You know.  And I should’ve.  I should’ve.”

Ev

Hey What’s up Dude.

Guess what?

What?

I got the axe.

No Way

I got cut

As the song lyrics plays: “…Through the same mistakes we always make and here’s where it ends..”

Happy Birthday to Me, I’m 29 again!

I’m too old to be on “So You Think You Can Dance”. The auditions are taking place at this very moment just blocks away from my Brooklyn apartment, at the Mark Morris Dance Studio. According to the official rules posted on line: contestants must be between the ages of 18 and 30.

So close in distance and so far in years.

We are big fans. My Kid loves the show and her favorite dancers always make it to the finals. She looks forward to being big enough to dance in sparkles and high heels. I look back on my former flexibility when doing the splits was just a part of my regular stretching routine. Now, without having “made a mistake” high school, I am old enough to be the mother of the younger aspiring professionals waiting in line to dance for their chance to be on TV. I’m more like the wierd old people with the thick torsos who sit behind the judging table and tell the young dancers what they are doing wrong.

Should I tell My Kid that I’m too old? She think’s I’m 29. She also thinks her teacher is 20.

She doesn’t know about the audition. Neither did I, until I just found out just now, via a fellow mommy’s twitter about the crazy long line right here in our ‘hood.

Should I tell My Kid I am the same age as her school principal, that my age is about the same as Michelle and Barack Obama. PRESIDENTS ARE REQUIRED TO BE OLD!

After the election last week, one of My Kid’s classmates spent the whole school day showing everyone she came in contact with a picture of Barack Obama clipped from a newspaper.
“He’s got grey hairs! Look! See right there! He’s got grey hair!”

Last summer back in my home town, we went to the popular ice cream stand that is a real scene for young families and college students. My daughter and her cousins came running through the crowd screaming at the top of their lungs.
“How old are you Aunt Kathie? How old are you Mom?”
“I’m 29.”
“No you’re not. How old are you really?”
“I’m 29.”
“No you’re not! UNCLE MARTIN IS 44 AND YOU’RE OLDER THAN HE IS!!!!!!!”
“I’M 29!”
“Why do you say you’re 29?”
“Because that’s what grown-ups say when they don’t want to tell people how old they are.”

Mommy Camp went off with a bang and I am exhausted

Thank goodness today’s scheduled group Mommy Camp was cancelled because I am exhausted and I have to work the Macy’s Fireworks VIP audience tonight.

We decided on the way home from Coney Island yesterday afternoon that we did not need to get up early today and rush to the Painted Pot to decorate knickknacks in yet another fun-filled activity during our Mommy Camp Summer-Kick-Off Week.

On Monday we met at noon to see the 12:30 showing of Wall*E at Cobble Hill Cinema, afterwards we had pizza in a restaurant and spent the rest of the afternoon with water balloons (some of us until after 6pm) at Peirrepont Playground on the Promenade in Brooklyn Heights.  On Tuesday we Met at Melody Lanes Bowling Alley at 10am (I ducked out to meet the cleaning lady at my apartment–she never showed–so I made phone calls about clown stuff and paid bills–she is here now with her mother–how embarrassing for me) and returned to meet the group again at Pierrepont Playground where we stayed until after 6pm.  Then I brought My Kid and her friend home for a sleepover.  We walked to Ft. Green from Brooklyn Heights through Fulton Mall, stopping at Cookies to buy cheap plastic walkie talkies CUZ WE NEEEEEED THEM FOR OUR SLEEPOVER!.  At home we made tacos.  The girls had fun cutting up tomatoes and lettuce with plastic knives.  Then at 9:30 we went outside and walked to Fort Greene Park looking for fireflies.  Two were captured.  Many never made it into the jar, then one of the two prisoners escaped.  The other was granted clemency and freed. The girls desperately needed a bath and so they had one.  They were asleep by 11:30.  But we had to get up early because I had a 9am appointment in Brooklyn Heights.  I was late.  The kids played Ninetendo in the waiting room.  Then we met up with the others and took the train and a bus to Chelsea Piers to go ice skating.  But, none of us had checked in advanced and the rink was closed to the public.  So we went, as scheduled to the water playground next to Chelsea Piers and then (as a quick Plan B) to Dave and Busters in Times Square where everyone ate greasy food and the adults drank overpriced tropical drinks and spent too much on games for the kids.  Afterwards we returned My Kid’s friend to her apartment where her mom had been home all day with a sick 4-year-old, a baby, and less than 24 hours to pack camping gear and clothes for a family of 5 before a flight to Colorado the next day.  My Kid and I again walked home from Brooklyn Heights through Fulton Mall. (Meanwhile Enthusiastic Mom took her son to a baseball game at Yankee Stadium and they got home at midnight)  I think we ate Chinese take-out.  I think we watched “So You Think You Can Dance” on TV.  I was beginning to wonder if the week of fun would ever end.  Nope not yet.  Next on the schedule–Thursday morning we met on the Q train for a trip to Coney Island; Astroland unlimited ride bracelets, Nathan’s cheese fries.  Sand and Sea.  And the inevitable melt-down.  My Kid was too short to ride the pirate ship but her friend was tall enough.  So My Kid got to play some games and win some MORE stuffed animals to add to the clutter in our apartment.

 Enthusiastic Mom had e-mailed us a spread-sheet schedule of the week’s planned activities. The kids were all supposed to wear the same colored shirt each day (so they would look like a group just like real day camp kids) which they took seriously.  Monday was white, Tuesday was red, Wednesday was blue, Thursday was yellow.  We discussed changing plans, but unfortunately our kids are old enough to read and in fact had been studying the schedule.  The children would not allow us to deviate much from what had been printed. (Thank goodness they were also exhausted by Thursday night so we could cancel today–which isn’t really a day of nothing since it is the 4th of July and that involves at the very least schlepping out somewhere to stand with a crowd to watch the fireworks and then schlepping home in the dark and possibly rain.)  That’s why we still had to go to Astroland at Coney Island even though we had spent the previous afternoon at Dave and Busters in Times Square.  They are effectively the same thing from a spending money for nothing point of view. 

All in all it was a good week.  But, I will be glad to get back to My Kid’s version of Mommy Camp which is much more like homeschooling with reading and writing, math and science, and art (what can I do that’s what My Kid said she wanted…)  But, we’ll be going to Montana for two weeks and accompanying My Husband on a business trip to Toronto in August so I don’t know how many days of this brand of low-key educational mommy camp she will actually get.