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LIVRES

The age and stage of George L. Fox, 1825-1877

Senelick, Laurence
Hanover, N.H : Published for Tufts University by University Press of New England, 1988

Senelick's biography of the panto clown Laff Fox, renowned in his time as America's funniest performer, brings this most popular and most tragic legend to life. In his new essay to this expanded edition, Senelick draws upon recent discoveries and insights to further animate Fox's remarkable career.[Editor note]


Cote : 791.330 92 F7911a 1988

  • Ex. 1 — disponible
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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Send in the clowness : the problematic origins of female circus clowns

McMahan, Matthew ; Senelick, Laurence
2023

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.
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 ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

The circus origin of ‘hep’

Senelick, Laurence
Popular Entertainment Studies vol. 1 no. 2, p. 107-110, 2010

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ETUDES, GUIDES ET RAPPORTS

Early american and british popular amusement : an exhibit from the personal collection of professor Emeritus Don B. Wilmeth, supplemented by items from Brown's special collections

Senelick, Laurence
[États-Unis, VA.] : The John Hay Library, 2010

Guide to the exhibit from the personal collection of professor Emeritus Don B. Wilmeth.


Cote : 791.307 473 S475e 2010

  • Ex. 1 — Consultation sur place
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