Rebranded Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus features no clowns but a lot of humanity

The new Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circuswon’t send in the clowns. The clowns are out.

When Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey came out of retirement this year, seven years after it reportedly went out of business for good, putting a different face on the enterprise was clearly on the minds of Feld Entertainment, its longtime producers.

It’s a happy human face, not a grotesquely painted one. The circus is coming to Hartford’s XL CenterMay 3-5 after playing at Bridgeport’s Total Mortgage Arena in March.

The circus is still officially known as Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, but this edition is also branded in a lot of its advertising and merchandise as just “Ringling!” That’s a questionable marketing tactic in Connecticut, where legendary circus pioneer P.T. Barnum was born, where he served in town and state government and where there’s a museum named for him. Barnum would also seem to deserve higher billing in general, since the main thing people know about American circuses from the time when this one was dormant is the movie “The Greatest Showman” in which Hugh Jackman plays Barnum.

This circus takes a cue from that movie in the way it wants to humanize its stars. It wants to introduce the circus as something amazing yet also approachable. Several different performers serve as co-hosts and take on invented character roles. Wesley is a young unicyclist who’s presented as a newcomer to the circus world. Nick Nack is a juggler who interacts with some of the acts. Aria is a singer. Stix is a drummer. They don’t so much introduce the acts as fill in the downtime between them with light banter about what a magical world the circus is.

There is no shortage of spectacle, but this is a circus with a human side. That’s not a bad strategy, considering the competition. In a colossal circus coincidence, the same weekend that Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey comes to Hartford is the weekend Cirque du Soleil show “Bazzar” ends its monthlong engagement. “Bazzar” takes place in a big top on Market Street through May 5.

Cirque du Soleil is a fantastic experience, but it involves costumes and masks and characters and moody lighting and exotic dreamscapes. There’s definitely an opening for a more old-fashioned circus, one with recognizable people in it doing amazing stunts on their own terms, a circus that works more like a vaudeville show than a cohesive theatrical work of art.

At Ringling!, the performers are announced on video screens almost like they’re in a competitive sports event. They cheer for each other. They cheer for themselves in that emphatic sort of “Heyyy!!” dismount that’s frowned upon in Cirque du Soleil shows. As for costumes, Ringling! still goes for old-school sequined or superhero-type outfits.

In the new Ringling! circus, full-cast parade-like processions and similar ceremonies are out. Loose full-cast dance routines are in. If you can’t get a good view of a stunt, there are video close-ups on the arena’s projection screen, which may seem more distancing but somehow enhances the human-size elements of the experience.

Unlike the old days of ringmasters and announcers, the new routines are not set up verbally with lavish descriptions of how extraordinary they are. Instead, the acts are allowed to be ordinary until they’re not. Just as the hosts are made out to be regular folks who’ve been made into something grander, a lot of the circus routines are things we can vaguely envision doing ourselves, until our minds are blown by unforeseen possibilities of these normal-seeming acts. There are people jumping rope, but then they’re jumping rope within a much larger jump rope at the same time. Then there is jump roping done with bodies instead of ropes. There are bicyclists riding fast up and down ramps, which is something you can see in local skateparks, but then they flip and somersault on the bikes or land on one wheel on a small platform. They behave like they have no fear of falling. There are glorified Double Dutch and drum team routines that get incredibly acrobatic. Someone might do an impressive flip, then do it a dozen times in a row, for a whole different level of excitement.

There are also of course the old circus standbys like high-wires acts, trapeze artist, teeterboards and hoops. There are multiple balancing acts, in which they do things like stand on their heads on top of someone else’s head.

Are there really no clowns? Well, one of the few acts that gets to appear more than once in the show is Equivokee, a trio of jugglers from the Ukraine who do their tricks while they also do pratfalls, goofy faces and physical shtick that comes off like a less violent Three Stooges. They’re hysterical, and their comedy is grand enough to work in an arena setting.

There’s also humor from the co-hosts, but it’s more gentle and subtle and doesn’t telegraph well on this scale. When Wesley deigns to ride a four-wheel vehicle, it’s one with the four wheels vertically on top of each other. Aria’s singing accompanies some beautiful acrobatic acts. The audience gets to choose, by their cheering and applause, whether, while on a teeterboard, which two musical instruments Nick Nack will jump over while balanced atop a teetering pile of boards and balls. Leaning into the generic rock ‘n’ roll soundtrack, Stix does a big drum solo suspended in the air using fire sticks for drumsticks.

Occasionally the co-host Aria might say something like “That was incredible!” but there’s no longer the overblown intros of yore where we’re told how amazing and unique something is before it even happens. The tricks in this show have a credible basis to build on. You don’t need to be told they’re astounding. You understand what’s being done, they ramp it up and you’re naturally astounded.

There are no animal acts in the newfangled Ringling! show. Nick Nack does interact with a robotic dog named Bailey Circuit, but those bits are a bit precious, too small and a little creepy.

It’s not technically a three-ring set-up, since they’re not rings, but there are several separate performing areas and they’re often used all at the same time. You may not know where to look. Sometimes the acts are carefully synched up so that the biggest stunts don’t have competition at the moment they’re happening. The other acts glance or gesture toward whatever the main attraction is. It’s a terrific bit of theater where members of a circus community pause to appreciate each other’s work. When in doubt, it’s safest for audiences to keep an eye on what’s happening in the middle.

When there are several simultaneous acts, the circus is really in business. Less successful are the attempts at intimacy and solo acts. An arena can be a vast place. On this scale, the sound quality can be bad so jokey one-liners and light dialogue get completely lost. The songs and patter don’t work well, but the routines do, especially when the performers are flying through the air.

What really sells this circus is the larger than life stuff, like Wesley riding a unicycle that’s over 34 feet tall, or the Double Wheel of Destiny, which is like two human-sized hamster wheels attached to each other so they look like a gigantic pair of eyeglasses. The daredevil Navas troupe from South Africa runs around inside these wheels, then runs around on the outside of them. They skip and jump and flip and basically defy all the laws of gravity and physics.

The big final act in the show is as traditional as it gets: A woman named Skyler, known as the Ringling Rocket, is fired out of a cannon. This is something that arenas like the XL Center are made for. She really does soar through the air. A landing pad is hastily inflated — the tech crew can be as fun to watch as the performers here — and she lands with a flourish and a big lighting effect. Skyler’s whole flight is over in a couple of seconds, but it’s worth it.

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Dunno sounds kinda gay
Sounds big gay but I'm okay with this. They took out the animals, which is great because circus animals have always been treated with horrific cruelty. And they are even treating the performers like human beings and not freaks to be ruthlessly exploited (it sounds like). I don't know why removing clowns would be a selling point though. Clowns are funny. Even when kids are scared of them, that is also funny.

Here's a short clip I just pulled from the website. It's whatever, something to take the kids to see I guess.
 
Saw these guys when I was a kid. Probably one of the last times they were ever doing shows before they got lawsuited to death. Not defending the rampant animal abuse, but one of the most criminal things in the world is making a legal battle so financially untenable the defendent has to capitulate.
 
I see a silver-spooned MBA wormed their way into a decision making spot at Ringling.
The name is half of the reason upper class people pay through the nose for Cirque du Soleil tickets, you aren't going to attract them to a discount version of it.
Learn from WWE if anything, it's the same kind of audience.
 
At least they're not torturing elephants anymore.
Occasionally the co-host Aria might say something like “That was incredible!” but there’s no longer the overblown intros of yore where we’re told how amazing and unique something is before it even happens. The tricks in this show have a credible basis to build on. You don’t need to be told they’re astounding. You understand what’s being done, they ramp it up and you’re naturally astounded.

I dunno. You need to know how to work a crowd to drum up excitement. Any good band at least has the sense to scream "HELLO CITY! GO SPORTSBALL TEAM!" Before going into their big hit.

And unlike the circus of yore you've got probably 80% of the crowd messing with their phones and not paying attention to anything. They do it at concerts, movies, outdoor events. You have to get their attention or they will go back to reading facebook and playing gacha trash and casino games.
 
Is there anyone who actually likes clowns and is amused by them anymore? I think kids these days grow up with the clown being seen as a creepy thing first and foremost.
When I was like 8 the school took us to circus that was excessively promising the world's smallest elephant, they spent like 15 minutes hyping it up during the show.
It was a sausage dog in a costume.
 
I remember when I was a kid my dad took me to the P.T Barnum Circus at least once a year, that circus was massive. It's cool the circus is still partially going 100+ years after P.T Barnum's death. What a legacy dude made

Also P.T Barnum was a marketing genius, back in the 1800s he was smart enough to know that any publicity is good publicity and would even send the newspapers tips his attractions were a scam just to get people to come in to see if they could tell, or he had Jenny Lund some London Oparah singer or whatever come tour America, and she was donating money to charity so he would donate money in her name then tell the Newspaper she donated this much to charity and P. T Barnum donated NOTHING to make it seem like she was so generous and he was so selfish, most people would never paint themself in that light but dude was smart
Is there anyone who actually likes clowns and is amused by them anymore? I think kids these days grow up with the clown being seen as a creepy thing first and foremost.
I think most people see clowns as creepy serial killers or killer clowns. It's not the same as they were back in the day
 
Here's a short clip I just pulled from the website. It's whatever, something to take the kids to see I guess.
Here's the opening of the show:
The circus was always fun, but from the looks of it, they've just turned it into another production that's no different in essence from Frozen On Ice. It seems like a higher budget UniverSoul Circus from the little I've seen of both.
 
Is there anyone who actually likes clowns and is amused by them anymore? I think kids these days grow up with the clown being seen as a creepy thing first and foremost.
When I was like 8 the school took us to circus that was excessively promising the world's smallest elephant, they spent like 15 minutes hyping it up during the show.
It was a sausage dog in a costume.
A sideshow con would be on brand for P. T. Barnum.
 
Here's the opening of the show:
The circus was always fun, but from the looks of it, they've just turned it into another production that's no different in essence from Frozen On Ice. It seems like a higher budget UniverSoul Circus from the little I've seen of both.

I take back my previous comment (well the first half, the jokes still stand). I would 100% rather go see a pretentious Frenchy 'Cirque' than whatever this is. Sure it'll be gay and there will be lots of tights but mimes don't push DEI through song. At least with Cirque you can take a woman to a nice dinner first and then have a French breakfast of pussy, black coffee and cigarettes the next day.

This is the epitome of "Make a sequel to Circus, put a chick in it and make it lame and gay!" This is one notch up from a middle school assembly and probably twice as preachy and leftist (if the clues in the song lyrics are anything to go by).

Also can I just say that bread and circus to Ancient Romans was getting shit faced and watching people get torn apart by lions and the system needs to do better.
 
The circus was always fun, but from the looks of it, they've just turned it into another production that's no different in essence from Frozen On Ice. It seems like a higher budget UniverSoul Circus from the little I've seen of both.

The Ringling Bros. circus has been owned by Feld Entertainment for decades, which is the company that owns all the Disney On Ice properties, monster truck shows, etc.
 
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