INDEPENDENT NEWS

Fun-filled Family Treat at The Civic

Published: Mon 20 Oct 2003 12:33 AM
Fun-filled Family Treat at The Civic
Get ready to laugh out loud – Canada’s Daredevil Opera Company is coming to The Civic with its side-splittingly funny family show Cirkus Inferno.
For the first time ever in New Zealand and presented by THE EDGE®, in association with Strut & Fret Production House, Daredevil Opera Company’s show Cirkus Inferno brings mess and mayhem to The Civic from November 25-29.
Exploding popcorn, water pistols, pyrotechnics, slapstick adventure, circus skills and outrageous visual effects combine in this fun-filled pre-Christmas treat.
Cirkus Inferno features Lucky (Jonah Logan) and Lady (Amy Gordon) – the world’s most dangerous clowns!
When Lucky and Lady show up for The Daredevil Opera Company’s Cirkus Inferno they find the main show is cancelled and this lovable pair of troublemakers create a new one as they find their way onto Rocket Johnny’s rocket pogo and Roxanne Roll’s jet skates, get tied to the Hound of Hades and even end up in Hula Lula’s grass skirt and ukelele.
“The whole piece bulging with slapstick powers towards an explosive finale making a fine mess into a stupendously great one. Hurray for anarchy and Canada and clowns.” – EdinburghGuide
“Here is every child’s dream come true: a pair of virtuoso clowns putting on a show that’s enormously messy, full of things that blow up and explode, with pratfalls and flame-throwing roller skates and fart jokes and action galore.” – The Seattle Times
Cirkus Inferno’s high-energy explosive fun is perfect for ages five to 105 and family tickets are available for $75.00 (service fee applies).
The Daredevil Opera Company - Cirkus Inferno
Background
Canada’s Daredevil Opera Company has created pyro-fueled clown shows with live sound effects and original music for six years, working with circuses and circus festivals throughout the world, including Cirque du Soleil and Just for Laughs. Together with New York’s AntiGravity, they formed the creative and performance team for Broadway’s 2001 smash hit Crash Test Dummies.

Jonah Logan (Founder, Creator, President, CEO and Toasterhead) Lucky
The world’s most dangerous clown! Jonah has worked as a thrill clown and support for AntiGravity’s Crash Test Dummies on Broadway, Cirque du Soleil and various shows worldwide.
He is an accomplished designer and stunt performer and has worked extensively as a licensed pyrotechnician. Jonah is also the creator and clown of The Daredevil Opera Company.

Amy Gordon (Creative Team, Ukulele Lady and Foxy Babe) Lady
Most recently seen on Broadway in AntiGravity's Crash Test Dummies, Amy has worked as a clown with the Bindlestiff Family Cirkus, New York City variety clubs, Royal Caribbean International, Circus Minimus and as the other half of Matlock & Gordon in their show, A Tale of Two Sillies. She has a degree in theatre and has studied clown with Kenny Raskin, David Shiner and Phillipe Gaulier. Her work has been seen on television, film and numerous stages around the world. Amy has also directed and choreographed many original and classic works.
The Daredevil Opera Company - Cirkus Inferno
REVIEWS
The Herald (Scottish National Newspaper)
Friday May 30, 2003
Mary Brennan
There’s a certain age – seven is about right – when a circus seems like paradise. Things that grown-ups say no to – like walking washing-line tightropes, or lion-taming the neighbor’s fierce dog – are everyday activities there. Heck, a circus positively encourages you to make a career out of dangerous stunts and clowning.
Cue Canada’s Daredevil Opera Company with their exuberant whiz-bang celebration of slapstick and mayhem, Cirkus Inferno. Before long, we all want to run away with them in the hope that Lady (Amy Gordon) will give us a shot on her Jet Skates or Lucky (Jonah Logan) will enlist us for the gravity-defying Pogo Moon Shot.
At first, the twosome are clutzy latecomers, scrambling over rows of seated youngsters and scattering popcorn everywhere. Didn’t an official-sounding man just warn everybody not to make a mess?
By the time Lucky and Lady are onstage, ignoring very large warning signs and rooting around among the props, the tally of “uh-oh” moment is into double figures and rising. They are effortlessly accident-prone and totally lovable. Hilarious cartoon mishaps come complete with orchestrated biff-bang-whallop sound effects and they even use fire and sparkly pyrotechnics.
It is calculated clowning that gives a fresh energy to traditions sustained by the likes of Buster Keaton, whose look (and outlook) are reflected in Logan’s performance. A mega-hit-a-roonie, folks!
The Seattle Times
Thursday, May 15 2003
Melinda Bargreen
Cirkus Inferno: Messy, Explosive, Virtuoso Clowning
Forget “opera”; that’s just part of the title. Here is every child’s dream come true: a pair of virtuoso clowns putting on a show that’s enormously messy, full of things that blow up and explode, with pratfalls and flame-throwing roller skates and fart jokes and action galore.
The kids at the premiere were screaming with laughter at the antics of Jonah Logan and Amy Gordon, two Canadian clowns of incredible range and energy, who open the show by arriving in the audience – climbing the wooden bleachers at the Fisher Pavilion, clambering over patrons and spilling their huge containers of popcorn and bottles of water everywhere.
Waiting for a circus performance that cancels at the last minute, the two clowns go down to the stage to investigate the circus’ props, including a Combustible Canine, a rocket costume, the ukulele lade Hula Lula and a janitor’s cart with a life of it’s own.
With the stage awash in confetti and streamers and spilled popcorn a Seattle Center worker said it’s hard for them to clean up afterwards. “You have no idea,” she said, rolling her eyes, “but it’s absolutely worth it for such a great show.”
Theatrereviews.com (Edinburgh, Scotland)
May 31, 2003
Forget opera, and to a large extent circus. This is the world of silent film slapstick: the central male character’s flat hat and deadpan expression recall Buster Keaton specifically.
There’s mayhem in the audience before things are properly underway as a young man and his girl edge along the front circle then stalls, scattering popcorn and squirting liquid all around. The promised show they’ve come to see, ‘Cirkus Inferno’ is cancelled, so they clamber on to a stage surrounded by posters for various genre films and proceed to create their worlds with a variety of physical near-accidents and disasters.
As always it’s the skill with which danger is made to appear inevitable, and then avoided by ingenuity or emergency action which makes this so scarifyingly sunny. Though real fears held well at bay by the performers’ sublimely confident expressions.
The show also celebrates the edgy confrontation between anarchy and order in life. Moments before popcorn and liquid are spraying wildly around, the audience has been given a No Eating or Drinking rule. A No Laughing rule wouldn’t survive half-a-minute with the circus on skates.

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