The 2010 New York Clown Theatre Festival begins on September 3 with its traditional opening day parade from Union Square through the L line subway to Williamsburg, followed by an open-to-the-public pie fight at The Brick Theater. The festival closes on September 26 with the traditional closing day Funeral, with clowns weeping and wailing in the streets of Williamsburg. This year's festival will also present 5 different clown cabarets, including a cabaret devoted to clowns over 50, Short and Fatty's Half-Century Extravaganza.
Please make a note that there have been some schedule changes to the programs offered by The 2010 New York Clown Teatre Festival. These changes can be viewed online at www.bricktheater.com
The NEW YORK CLOWN THEATRE FESTIVAL will run September 3-26 at The Brick (575 Metropolitan Avenue between Union Avenue and Lorimer Street, Brooklyn; subway: L to Lorimer, G to Metropolitan). Tickets ($15 Regular / $10 for Weekend Matinee Family Shows) are available online at www.bricktheater.com or by calling 1-866-811-4111.
Clown cabarets will take place periodically throughout the season, with new guests each night. For a full listing of the cabarets scheduled, please visit www.bricktheater.com
Some of the cabarets include:
OPENING NIGHT CABARETAlong with cabarets, the New York Clown Theatre Festival is offering clown workshops that will cover a wide range of topics and techniques. Information about these workshops can be found at www.bricktheater.com
Clown Workshops include:
TO BE CAUGHT: A CLOWN WORKSHOP
Joan Schirle
www.dellarte.com/dellarte.aspx?id=52&staffID=8
Saturday, September 11 & Sunday, September 12 from 10am-3pm
Location: Triskelion Arts, 118 North 11th Street, 3rd Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11211, www.triskelionarts.org
Fee: $200; Maximum: 15
The world of the theatre clown is generated from the empty space of the stage. The clown brings the space alive in a dynamic partnership with the audience. "To be caught," to be captured by what IS, is the goal of our play. We will play with presence, breath, voice, movement, status, and delight in the playing. On the second day we will investigate The Situation of the clowns' journey to set us on the road to laughter. By working in ensemble, we learn who our clown is in relation to community. Joan Schirle is the director of the Dell'Arte International School of Physical Theatre and will offer the teaching of DAI based in founder Carlo Mazzone-Clementi's principles of Effort, Risk, Momentum, Joy.TM
PHYSICAL COMEDY
John Towsen
http://physicalcomedy.blogspot.com/
September 18, 19, 25, & 26
Saturday and Sunday, 10am-4pm
Location: Triskelion Arts, 118 North 11th Street, 3rd Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11211, www.triskelionarts.org
Fee: $350; Maximum: 15
A hands-on crash course in physical comedy vocabulary for clowns, mimes, actors, and everyone in between. Technique leads to application in short pieces, with an emphasis on character interaction, gag structure, and storytelling. Skills are centered around working with your partner (counterweights, levers, mounts, lifts, partner tumbling) and with the physical world around you (tables, chairs, doors, props, etc.). Some performance experience and a reasonably sound body highly recommended, but all levels of experience welcome.
BEING A CLOWN OR PHYSICAL ACTOR AT Cirque du Soleil
Yves Sheriff
www.cirquedusoleil.com
Tuesday September 21 @ 9pm
Price: FREE (non-ticketed event)
Come meet Senior Artistic Talent Scout Yves Sheriff to learn more about life at Cirque du Soleil from a clown and a physical actor's perspective. Get an insight on the casting process from audition to the on-stage experience. This talk will include various video excerpts of clown routines and Cirque du Soleil documentaries.
Videos