Not My Circus, Not My Clown

Last night was a dark and stormy night, so what better time was there to go see the circus? So, we went to see Circus Flora with Joanie. The big top kept us dry and a delightful time was had by all. This post’s title actually refers to Anne’s school day on Thursday, which was not quite so delightful, but that was so yesterday and now summer school is out for the summer. Flora is celebrating its 29th season, with a new show entitled, “One Summer on Second Street”, a story of the Jazz age. We’ve been going to this circus off and on for most of its life and while a lot about it has changed, a few things remain the same.

One new thing this year, was that the orchestra was moved from its usual perch above the main stage entrance. Circus Flora is a small one ring circus, with a horseshoe of bleachers for the audience and a staging area in the open end of the horseshoe, at the backend of the ring. New to me were individual plastic seats that are bolted onto the aluminum bench bleachers. They are much more comfortable. A sign on the entrance façade labeled it Balding Livery, a hat tip to Flora co-founder David Balding, who passed away a few years ago.

One thing that is still the same is Cecil Mackinnon, as Yo-Yo, who acts as the show’s narrator. Another constant was the Saint Louis Arches a local boys and girls tumbling act. The members are always changing, but not the act’s spirit. The Flying Wallendas have always been a Circus Flora act and the father is still performing. The Alanian Riders Cossack Act is a new troupe that fills Flora’s regular horse act role. Usually, we sit in the cheap seats, but one year I splurged for front row seating. This seemed like a good idea until the house act occurred. 400 pounds of horse galloping past you, seemingly right over you, was not a comfortable experience. Adam Kuchler reprised his clown role, after having substituted for longtime Flora clown Nino, who died in a motorcycle accident. Circus life is a hard life. There were also performing cats. Yes, cats that did tricks on command. I guess that if you can do it with lions and tigers, then you can do it with house cats too. The last act and the real reason that the orchestra was moved from their usual perch, was the Flying Pages, a two-man, two women trampoline act. They were really quite amazing. Joanie shared the photo of her and the Clydesdale last night. I think it goes well with this circus post.

50 Movies by the Numbers

Moon and Astronaut Teapot

Moon and Astronaut Teapot

A couple of weeks ago, there was an article on Slate, where the author had assembled a list of books that sequentially counted up to 101. Since then, I’ve tried to go back to Slate and find that article again, but to no avail. Instead, I decided to replicate that feat, substituting movies and an occasional TV show for the original book list. I’m not as ambitious as the original author, so I only counted up to fifty. Like the other list, I chose One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest to start with. The other author was also strict in adhering to the rule that each iteration’s number be at the beginning of the tittle. I started off that way, but decided to eventually deviate from this rule, choosing more notable titles over less well-known ones that happened to conform better. The black text movies are ones that I’ve seen, while the grey text ones are just fillers. Apollo 13 relates to the teapot photo above, from the Science Center and also Anne’s day today.

  1. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
  2. 2 Seconds
  3. Three Musketeers
  4. Four Weddings and a Funeral
  5. Five Easy Pieces
  6. Six Degrees of Separation
  7. Seven Year Itch
  8. Eight Men Out
  9. Nine to Five
  10. 10
  11. Ocean’s Eleven
  12. Twelve Angry Men
  13. Apollo 13
  14. Fourteen Hours
  15. 15 Minutes
  16. Sixteen Candles
  17. Stalag 17
  18. Eighteen and Anxious
  19. Nineteen Eighty-Four
  20. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
  21. 21 Jump Street
  22.  Catch-22
  23. 23 Minutes to Sunrise
  24. 24
  25. Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
  26. Special 26
  27. 27 Dresses
  28. 28 Days Later…
  29. 29 Palms
  30. 30 Rock
  31. 31 North 62 East
  32. West 32nd
  33. Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult
  34. Miracle on 34th Street
  35. 35 Shots of Rum
  36. 36th Precinct
  37. To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday
  38. Colt 38 Special Squad
  39. 39 Steps
  40. 40 Year Old Virgin
  41. 41
  42. Summer of ’42
  43. Movie 43
  44. Class of ’44
  45. Colt .45
  46. Code 46
  47. 47 Ronin
  48. 48 Hours
  49. 49th Parallel
  50. Attack of the 50 Foot Woman

Anne and Joanie went to the circus today, Circus Flora, which is based here in Saint Louis. Every year, Circus Flora has a story that ties together its various circus acts. This works much like with musicals, whose threadbare plots are only just strong enough to tie together the shows various musical numbers. This year’s story is based on of the 1902 Georges Méliès film, A Trip to the Moon. Its most memorable sequence is a shot of the Man in the Moon, or at least a man in a coconut creme pie, getting socked in the eye, by a spaceship from Earth. Sorry Georges, I couldn’t include your title in the list, because there were no numbers in it. So, I substituted Ron Howard’s Apollo 13 instead.