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LIVRES

The greatest shows on earth

Simon, Linda
London : Reaktion Books, 2014

Traveling back to the circus’s early days, Linda Simon takes us to eighteenth-century hippodromes in Great Britain and intimate one-ring circuses in nineteenth-century Paris, where Toulouse-Lautrec and Picasso became enchanted with aerialists and clowns. She introduces us to P. T. Barnum, James Bailey, and the enterprising Ringling Brothers and reveals how they created the golden age of American circuses. Moving forward to the whimsical Circus Oz in Australia and to New York City’s Big Apple Circus and the grand spectacle of Cirque du Soleil, she shows how the circus has transformed in recent years. At the center of the story are the people—trick riders and tightrope walkers, sword swallowers and animal trainers, contortionists and clowns—that created the sensational, raucous, and sometimes titillating world of the circus. [editor summary]
Traveling back to the circus’s early days, Linda Simon takes us to eighteenth-century hippodromes in Great Britain and intimate one-ring circuses in nineteenth-century Paris, where Toulouse-Lautrec and Picasso became enchanted with aerialists and clowns. She introduces us to P. T. Barnum, James Bailey, and the enterprising Ringling Brothers and reveals how they created the golden age of American circuses. Moving forward to the whimsical Circus ...


Cote : 791.309 S5941g 2014

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LIVRES

A reckless era the evolution of trapeze

Gossard, Steve ; Thayer, Stuart
Normal (IL), 2012

A typical nineteenth-century program was overwhelmingly a presentation of horse acts. There were child riders, women riders and men riders. There were two, four and six horse acts. There was hurdle riding, dressage and even horses that performed riderless. From seventy-five to ninety percent of the acts in a circus of that time involved horses. The popularity of the rider was a reflection of the place of the horse in society. Nearly everyone in the nineteenth-century owned, bought, sole, rode or drove horses, even in urban areas. Because of this they appreciated watching fine animals brought to the peak of training.

The decade of the 1880’s saw the beginning of the greatest period of expansion in America. Almost every aspect of life grew at a rapid pace. Immigration, financial structures and the construction of the cities all boomed exponentially. With this, the simple circus of the Civil War era became touched with what has been termed giantism. Competition between the showmen led to the acquisition of herds of elephants, many caged menageries, expanded programs and huge tents, seating as many as seven or eight thousand people. The trapeze acts, which had been confined to single performers in the low-ceilinged tents of the sixties, now became the flying acts of our time. With fifty and sixty foot high tents two and three hundred feet long, there was at least room for these aerial acts, which until that time had been confined to theatres and halls. It was this change that led to the relative demise of the horse acts, which had not changed, essentially, since the beginning of the institution. The trapeze performers, high above the crowd, throwing their bodies through the air, literally defying injury, became the favorites of the crowd. To this day, it is the aerial acts that are the climax of the circus programs.

Surprisingly, the literature of the circus has lagged far behind the popularity of the flying trapeze. Moreover, the history of these acts has been virtually ignored until quite recently. Why this should be, we are not sure, but we are thankful that Steve Gossard has decided to take upon himself the research into and chronicling of that history. There is something of present excitement as well as nostalgia in watching men and women thrust their bodies through the air in what is often the most graceful and athletic pursuits. That their efforts have a long and interesting history is borne out by the pages that follow.
A typical nineteenth-century program was overwhelmingly a presentation of horse acts. There were child riders, women riders and men riders. There were two, four and six horse acts. There was hurdle riding, dressage and even horses that performed riderless. From seventy-five to ninety percent of the acts in a circus of that time involved horses. The popularity of the rider was a reflection of the place of the horse in society. Nearly ...


Cote : 791.340 973 G677r 2012

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LIVRES

Magic : stage illusions, special effects and trick photography

Hopkins, Albert A. ; Ridgely Evans, Henry
New York : Dover Publications, 1990

Book on classic stage illusions performed by Robert-Houdin, Bautier de Kolta, Maskelyne and others. Detailed descriptions of techniques of fire eaters, sword swallowers, jugglers, acrobats, etc. Also ancient magic, automatons, magic photography, much more. Over 400 exceptional illustrations.


Cote : 793.809 H7932m 1990

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Les projectiles humains au cirque

Kada, Robert
Le cirque dans l'univers, septembre 2014


Cote : CIR-U-254

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

It's not as easy as it looks

Albrecht, Ernest J.
Spectacle, novembre 2008

Filtrer

Type
Sujets

Homme-canon [5]

Histoire des arts du cirque [2]

Histoire des arts du cirque - États-Unis [2]

Histoire des arts du cirque - France [2]

Numéro à sensation - Histoire [2]

Artistes de cirque - États-Unis - Biographies [1]

Arts du spectacle - Histoire [1]

Astley, Philip [écuyer, propriétaire de cirque] [1]

Avaleur de sabre [1]

Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth [spectacle de cirque] [1]

Big Apple Circus [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Blondin, Charles [funambule] [1]

Cinéma - Appareils et matériel - Histoire [1]

Circus Oz [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Cirque antique [1]

Cirque d'Hiver [1]

Cirque dans l'art [1]

Cirque du Soleil [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Cirque Invisible [1]

Cirque Medrano [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Cirque Plume [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Codona, Alfredo [artiste de cirque] [1]

Colleano, Con [funambule] [1]

Contorsion - Histoire [1]

Cracheur de feu [1]

Debureau, Jean-Gaspard [mime] [1]

Exhibitions de phénomènes [1]

Grimaldi, Joseph, 1779-1837. [1]

Grock [clown] [1]

Hanlon Lees [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Histoire de l'acrobatie aérienne [1]

Histoire de l'art clownesque [1]

Histoire de l'art équestre [1]

Histoire de la jonglerie [1]

Histoire de la magie [1]

Histoire des arts de la marionnette [1]

Histoire des arts du cirque - Angleterre [1]

Histoire des arts du cirque - Italie [1]

Histoire du dressage [1]

Hommes forts [1]

Houdin, Robert [magicien] [1]

Jonglerie - Histoire [1]

Leitzel, Lillian [artiste de cirque] [1]

Les 7 doigts de la main [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Magie de scène [1]

Mentalisme [1]

Numéro à sensation - Marche au plafond [1]

Pickle Family Circus [compagnie de cirque] [1]

Scénographie - Histoire et critique [1]

Théâtre d'ombres [1]

Théâtre équestre Zingaro [compagnie équestre] [1]

Tours de magie [1]

Traditions acrobatiques [1]

Trapèze - Histoire [1]

Trapèze ballant [1]

Trapèze fixe [1]

Trapèze volant [1]

Ullmann, Hermann [magicien] [1]

Ventriloque [1]

Wallenda [famille de cirque] [1]

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Auteurs
Date de publication

2014 [2]

2012 [1]

2008 [1]

1990 [1]

Langue

Z