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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Joel SchechterPublisher: Southern Illinois University Press Imprint: Southern Illinois University Press Edition: 3rd ed. Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.318kg ISBN: 9780809323579ISBN 10: 0809323575 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 12 September 2001 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsThis group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish. --Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University "A serious study of the revolutionary Pickle clowns is certainly welcome and long overdue. By choosing to publish separate interviews with the Pickle family's clowns, Joel Schechter gives the reader the history of Pickle clowning from several different points of view, allowing an insight into the performers and their craft that no other book on the subject of clowning has ever come close to. Patrick Cashin, New American Clown Theater "" There are many books on the American circus that cover clowningbut not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure. Sarah J. Blackstone, author of ""Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill s Wild West """" This group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish. Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University"" ""There are many books on the American circus that cover clowning--but not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure.""--Sarah J. Blackstone, author of ""Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill's Wild West "" ""A serious study of the revolutionary Pickle clowns is certainly welcome and long overdue. By choosing to publish separate interviews with the Pickle family's clowns, Joel Schechter gives the reader the history of Pickle clowning from several different points of view, allowing an insight into the performers and their craft that no other book on the subject of clowning has ever come close to.""--Patrick Cashin, New American Clown Theater ""This group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish.""--Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University "" A serious study of the revolutionary Pickle clowns is certainly welcome and long overdue. By choosing to publish separate interviews with the Pickle family's clowns, Joel Schechter gives the reader the history of Pickle clowning from several different points of view, allowing an insight into the performers and their craft that no other book on the subject of clowning has ever come close to."" -- Patrick Cashin, New American Clown Theater "" There are many books on the American circus that cover clowning-- but not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure."" -- Sarah J. Blackstone, author of ""Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill' s Wild West"" "" This group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish."" -- Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University" There are many books on the American circus that cover clowning--but not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure. --Sarah J. Blackstone, author of Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill's Wild West A serious study of the revolutionary Pickle clowns is certainly welcome and long overdue. By choosing to publish separate interviews with the Pickle family's clowns, Joel Schechter gives the reader the history of Pickle clowning from several different points of view, allowing an insight into the performers and their craft that no other book on the subject of clowning has ever come close to. --Patrick Cashin, New American Clown Theater This group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish. --Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University There are many books on the American circus that cover clowning--but not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure. --Sarah J. Blackstone, author of Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill's Wild West There are many books on the American circus that cover clowningbut not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure. Sarah J. Blackstone, author of Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill s Wild West A serious study of the revolutionary Pickle clowns is certainly welcome and long overdue. By choosing to publish separate interviews with the Pickle family's clowns, Joel Schechter gives the reader the history of Pickle clowning from several different points of view, allowing an insight into the performers and their craft that no other book on the subject of clowning has ever come close to. Patrick Cashin, New American Clown Theater This group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish. Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University There are many books on the American circus that cover clowning-- but not clowning like this! This is one of a very few studies of clowning not dedicated to the large three-ring format. The fact that the book is mostly first-person accounts of the show by the clowns themselves makes this study particularly valuable. When you add the fact that the interview questions are intelligent and interesting, this book becomes truly one of a kind, and a treasure. -- Sarah J. Blackstone, author of Buckskins, Bullets, and Business: A History of Buffalo Bill' s Wild West This group of interviews with nine clowns from the Pickle Family Circus provides insight into late 20th-century American circus clowning and various approaches to comedy/humor as expressed by practitioner (as opposed to theorists). The content of the interviews is frequently enlightening and entertaining. Both subject and interviewer manage often to describe physical comedy and specific routines in a surprisingly clear manner, offering the reader a good sense of what a routine looked like and what it was trying to accomplish. -- Don B. Wilmeth, Brown University A serious study of the revolutionary Pickle clowns is certainly welcome and long overdue. By choosing to publish separate interviews with the Pickle family's clowns, Joel Schechter gives the reader the history of Pickle clowning from several different points of view, allowing an insight into the performers and their craft that no other book on the subject of clowning has ever come close to. -- Patrick Cashin, New American Clown Theater Author InformationCircus historian Joel Schechter is a professor of theatre arts at San Francisco State University and is author of Durov’s Pig: Clowns, Politics, and Theatre; Satiric Impersonations: From Aristophanes to the Guerrilla Girls; and The Congress of Clowns and Other Russian Circus Acts. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |