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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

The equestrian circus

Baston, Kim
2021

Equestrian acts were the foundation of the early circus and distinguished this new institution from other theatrical entertainments in the late eighteenth century. Although the advent of new circus has normalised an idea of an animal-free circus, the present century is enjoying a resurgence in performance with horses. Contemporary companies, such as Theatre Zingaro and Cavalia, present new narratives for a contemporary age, while performing acts with a long history. In this chapter Kim Baston considers the legacy of practices that continue to inform contemporary performance through the examination of specific case studies from the late eighteenth century to the present day. Examples include the Edinburgh Equestrian Circus as a representative example of acts in the early modern circus; Jenny de Rahden’s classic high school act of the nineteenth century; the trick riding of the Loyal-Repenskys, a large family troupe of the early twentieth century; the mid-twentieth-century liberty act by Yasmine Smart; and the contemporary equestrian company La Luna Caballera. This chapter provides a snapshot, as it were, of classic equestrian acts as they were performed at a particular historical moment, focusing on the conjunction of the repeated skills of the repertoire and their re-imagination in contemporary practice.
Equestrian acts were the foundation of the early circus and distinguished this new institution from other theatrical entertainments in the late eighteenth century. Although the advent of new circus has normalised an idea of an animal-free circus, the present century is enjoying a resurgence in performance with horses. Contemporary companies, such as Theatre Zingaro and Cavalia, present new narratives for a contemporary age, while performing acts ...


Cote : 791.301 A776c 2021

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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

Circus music : the eye of the ear

Baston, Kim
2016

This chapter provides an overview of the development of circus music from 1780 to 1950. It draws on primary sources from Britain, America and Australia – countries with continuous and mutually influential circus traditions – and builds on the existing scholarly work. The ‘blaring’, ‘brassy’ sound of the wind band is the sound most identified with circus music. In the early modern circus, before the establishment of the wind band as the preferred accompaniment, the choice of instrumentation was opportunistic, reflecting ‘diverse and often jumbled network of performing practices and organizations which incorporated entertainments taken from fairground and theatre’ that comprised the earliest circuses. Regardless of the instrumentation or repertoire of the circus band, element that continues to underpin the function of circus music is rhythm matched to the style of act, rather than distinctive harmonic or melodic features. The predominant emotional role of the music is to affirm the demonstration of control and this provides, in effect, a meta-discourse.
This chapter provides an overview of the development of circus music from 1780 to 1950. It draws on primary sources from Britain, America and Australia – countries with continuous and mutually influential circus traditions – and builds on the existing scholarly work. The ‘blaring’, ‘brassy’ sound of the wind band is the sound most identified with circus music. In the early modern circus, before the establishment of the wind band as the preferred ...


Cote : 791.301 T135r 2016

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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

‘And now, before your very eyes’: the circus act and the archive

Baston, Kim
2015

The availability of a collection such as the Circus Oz Living Archive offers many possibilities for researchers in performance, not least a tremendous resource for a longitudinal analysis of the company’s performance style. Paul Bouissac considers the circus act as a communicative text that is open to a structural analysis and provides many examples in his seminal work Circus and Culture, a position elaborated further in a recent work, Semiotics at the Circus.1 Bouissac’s thick descriptions of particular circus acts, essential to his detailed structuralist approach, are predicated on multiple viewings of an act, a project he continues by viewing many live performances of the acts he analyses. But Bouissac continues to reject the substitution of a video recording for analysis. As Denise Varney and Rachel Fensham point out, performance studies as a discipline has a troubled relationship with the video recording.2 Much critical commentary is built around a syntax of loss, of disappearance, articulating the ephemerality of the individual performance event.
The availability of a collection such as the Circus Oz Living Archive offers many possibilities for researchers in performance, not least a tremendous resource for a longitudinal analysis of the company’s performance style. Paul Bouissac considers the circus act as a communicative text that is open to a structural analysis and provides many examples in his seminal work Circus and Culture, a position elaborated further in a recent work, Semiotics ...

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MEMOIRES ET THESES

Scoring performance : the function of music in contemporary theatre and circus

Baston, Kim
Victoria, Australia, 2008

This thesis is a cross-disciplinary investigation of how music and theatre interact and proposes a framework of terms for the analysis of music within the theatrical misè-en-scene (Chapter Two). As original research, this framework is proposed as appropriate for two scholarship disciplines, theatrical performance studies and performed music, as these relate both to reception and to artistic intention. The framework is also proposed as a practical means of communication between these two artistic practices. Within this framework, music is analyzed according to four broad processes: music as structure; music as intervention; cinematic music; and music as engagement. Drawing on scholarship in film music (e.g. Gorbman 1987), performance studies (e.g. Auslander 2006; McAuley 2000) and cultural and theoretical musicology (e.g. Scruton 1999; Frith 1996), it identifies and discusses the common uses of music in theatre, arguing that there are six frames under which the function of music can be considered: emotional, diegetic, metadiegetic, temporal, spatial and formal. The elements of music contributing to this framing (tonal content, formal structure, timbre, signal processing, improvisation and genre) are also considered. The framework of terms (abbreviated to how, what, why) is applied in reception of script-based performance (Chapter Three), within the physical text of circus performance (Chapter Four) and, by contrast, in one artistic process of production (Chapter Five). The "visual object" of music is also discussed, examining how the musician in performance can be theorized within the theatrical context (Chapter Six). While genres such as opera and musical theatre are commonly studied, there is less scholarship considering theatre in which music is "incidental" (Savage 2001; Pavis 1998). But in the hybrid practices of contemporary performance that encompass both the script-driven play and the complex set of practices that can be considered as "physical theatre", the analysis of the role of music should be considered integral, rather than "incidental". [author summary]
This thesis is a cross-disciplinary investigation of how music and theatre interact and proposes a framework of terms for the analysis of music within the theatrical misè-en-scene (Chapter Two). As original research, this framework is proposed as appropriate for two scholarship disciplines, theatrical performance studies and performed music, as these relate both to reception and to artistic intention. The framework is also proposed as a ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Circus at the edge of Europe : acrobatic entertainments in the Ottoman Empire

Baston, Kim
Early Popular Visual Culture vol.16 n°1, p.57-82, 2018

This article considers the nature of acrobatic performances in Ottoman Turkey, as represented in illustrated records of circumcision ceremonies. The circumcision of the sons of the Sultans Murad III in 1582 and Ahmed III in 1720 were the occasions for weeks of festivities, including parades and presentations by guild craftsmen, interspersed with other entertainments, such as music, dancing and various acrobatic entertainments. These two circumcision ceremonies were documented in lavishly illustrated histories, part of a growing tradition of Ottoman historiography, consisting of exquisite miniature paintings accompanied by text.

Although a century and a half separate these two celebrations, the snapshot they present of entertainments indicate both the continuity of types of acrobatic performances and their development. The illustrated records of these celebrations also reveal acrobatic traditions that combine performances familiar in early modern Europe and which continued into the development of the early modern circus, alongside performances that are now usually associated with the Chinese acrobatic tradition. [editor summary]
This article considers the nature of acrobatic performances in Ottoman Turkey, as represented in illustrated records of circumcision ceremonies. The circumcision of the sons of the Sultans Murad III in 1582 and Ahmed III in 1720 were the occasions for weeks of festivities, including parades and presentations by guild craftsmen, interspersed with other entertainments, such as music, dancing and various acrobatic entertainments. These two ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

‘New’ hippodrama, or ‘old’circus?: legacy and innovation in contemporary equestrian performance

Baston, Kim
Popular Entertainment Studies, 2016

The hippodrama existed as a popular spectacle during the nineteenth century, an entertainment marrying the equestrian acts that were staples of the early modern circus with a grander narrative purpose. As such it was denigrated by the guardians of ‘legitimate drama,’ such as Leigh Hunt, as an example of the triumph of the taste of the masses over the claims of the intellect. Within circus, equestrian performances waned in importance during the twentieth century, ceding prominence to wild animal and spectacular aerial acts. While animal performance within circus has also declined, there has been a recent resurgence of equestrian companies. In the contemporary equestrian spectacle the relationship of horse with human is radically re-defined, based on an ‘equal’ or ‘reciprocal’ sharing of the theatrical space, emphasising non-human animal agency and de-emphasising suggestions of coercion. Yet these spectacles retain strong traces of the traditional divisions of equestrian acts within the circus, from the formal movements of Haute École to ‘liberty’ acts. This article investigates the shifting narratives surrounding -the contemporary equestrian spectacle. [editor summary]
The hippodrama existed as a popular spectacle during the nineteenth century, an entertainment marrying the equestrian acts that were staples of the early modern circus with a grander narrative purpose. As such it was denigrated by the guardians of ‘legitimate drama,’ such as Leigh Hunt, as an example of the triumph of the taste of the masses over the claims of the intellect. Within circus, equestrian performances waned in importance during the ...


Cote : 798.24 01 B327n 2016

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Harlequin highlander : spectacular geographies at the Edinburgh equestrian circus, 1790-1800

Baston, Kim
Early Popular Visual Culture vol.12 n°3, p.283-303, 2014

In 1790, a dedicated circus building was constructed in Edinburgh by the equestrian performers and circus proprietors, George Jones and William Parker. The new Edinburgh Circus operated as an adjunct of both Sadler’s Wells and the Royal Circus in London, transferring both performers and repertoire from those venues. As a sound business practice, the proprietors of the circus remained responsive to the demands of the Edinburgh audience – including the presentation of elaborate spectacles with Scottish settings, which had been successful in the London houses. But how did a troupe from London, producing Scottish-themed productions that had originated in London, represent Scotland to the Scottish? During this decade the war with France was also echoed in the Edinburgh Circus, in lavish spectacles that clearly emphasised a patriotic appeal to an idea of ‘Great Britain’. This article examines the intersection of imaginary and spectacular geographies presented in the entertainments of this first circus in Scotland.
In 1790, a dedicated circus building was constructed in Edinburgh by the equestrian performers and circus proprietors, George Jones and William Parker. The new Edinburgh Circus operated as an adjunct of both Sadler’s Wells and the Royal Circus in London, transferring both performers and repertoire from those venues. As a sound business practice, the proprietors of the circus remained responsive to the demands of the Edinburgh audience – ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Transatlantic journeys : John Bill Ricketts and the Edinburgh Equestrian Circus

Baston, Kim
Popular Entertainment Studies vol 4, n° 2 : p. 5-58, 2013

John Bill Ricketts is generally credited as the founder of American circus, setting up a circus in Philadelphia in 1793. This paper examines evidence from Ricketts’ early career in England and Scotland and argues that the successful transplant of the early modern circus form initiated by Philip Astley into America rested on Ricketts’ experiences with a small circus in Edinburgh, established by the equestrian performers George Jones and William Parker. Not only did this circus provide a repertoire and a business model which Ricketts replicated in his American circuses but, crucially provided him with a network of experienced performers whom he subsequently employed. Ricketts has often been presented in terms redolent of the myth of the self-made man, an individual single-handedly forging his way to success, a myth that has particular resonance in the American context, and is particularly attractive in a founder figure. His achievements in America, though, were enabled through lineage and collaboration. The first circus in America owed much to the first circus in Scotland. [editor summary]
John Bill Ricketts is generally credited as the founder of American circus, setting up a circus in Philadelphia in 1793. This paper examines evidence from Ricketts’ early career in England and Scotland and argues that the successful transplant of the early modern circus form initiated by Philip Astley into America rested on Ricketts’ experiences with a small circus in Edinburgh, established by the equestrian performers George Jones and William ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Circus music : the eye of the ear

Baston, Kim
Popular Entertainment Studies vol 1 n° 2, 2010

Circus is a global entertainment form, which, as it is not reliant on the spoken word, has easily incorporated performers of different nationalities. Yet its institutional roots are within a dominant Euro-American form and as a spectacle it is heavily reliant on music. This article discusses the historical role of music within the dominant Euro-American circus tradition and argues that this role has remained remarkably constant. Historically, circus music has been both reflective of what is popular and also, through the use of the wind band, constitutive of the popular. Its characteristic musical structures and instrumentation shape the nature of the circus spectacle. Circus music performs both emotional and cultural reassurance, and, it is argued, has an important role in the construction of a cultural ‘Other’, through its musical assimilation of Chinese and Japanese acrobats. Kim Baston lectures in circus history and culture at The National Institute of Circus Arts (NICA) in Melbourne, Australia , where she also leads the clown band. She is a member of Windjammers, an American organisation dedicated to the performance of traditional circus music and works professionally within circus, theatre and film as director, musical director, and composer. [editor summary]
Circus is a global entertainment form, which, as it is not reliant on the spoken word, has easily incorporated performers of different nationalities. Yet its institutional roots are within a dominant Euro-American form and as a spectacle it is heavily reliant on music. This article discusses the historical role of music within the dominant Euro-American circus tradition and argues that this role has remained remarkably constant. Historically, ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Jacques Brel and Circus Performance: The Compiled Score as Discourse in the Space between by Circa

Baston, Kim
Australasian Drama Studies, 2010


The way in which the use of music by the 'new circus' company Circa both contributes to the spectatorial perception and provides a structural underpinning to the performance, focusing on the meanings contributed by the use of the songs of Jacques Brel in the production The Space Between. Circa's use of the recorded medium exploits both its limitations and possibilities as a feature of the performing style. [author summary]


Cote : CIRQ-510-CIR

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