Saturday 12 October 2024

Clowns

 

Clowns

                                            Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Many people don’t like clowns. Some are actively scared by them.  A clown phobia is called coulrophobia and is more prevalent than some other fears, like arachnophobia or claustrophobia.

Traditionally, there are three major categories of clown to be seen in circuses, though some clowns, like Joseph Grimaldi, performed only on stage in pantomimes.

The whiteface clown is regarded as the superior clown, his face and neck completely masked in white greasepaint, ‘clown white’, the features painted on in red or black. He often wears a conical hat and a fitted, full sleeved costume with short trouser legs. The suit is usually colourful and elaborate and may be decorated with sequins. The clown in Pagliacci is a whiteface clown, the jocular exterior hiding the pain of his inner sorrow.

The Auguste or ‘red’ clown wears red or flesh-coloured makeup and outlines his eyes and mouth with white and paints other features in red or black. He wears baggy trousers in strident patterns and colours, oversized shoes, outrageous wigs and a bright red nose. He is ‘the fall guy’, the stooge to the whiteface clown. He is the one who receives a pie in the face or falls on his backside or has his clothes ripped off. He is the butt of every joke.

The third category is the character clown, who may support either of the other two clowns, depending on circumstances. He is cleverer than the Auguste clown but inferior to the whiteface clown. He is an eccentric version of any one of a number of standard characters, like a policeman, a housewife or a tramp. His make-up is flesh coloured and accessorised with such things as a false beard, big ears, huge glasses or an odd haircut.

Laurel and Hardy are examples of character clowns, though they relied on costume rather than make-up and bizarre accessories.

Marcel Marceau was not a circus performer and not traditionally a whiteface clown, though he adopted white make-up. He was a brilliant mime artist but also deserves to be remembered for his work in the French Résistance, saving at least seventy Jewish children from the Nazis.

I find circus clowns quite grotesque and not at all amusing, but am happy to watch Buster Keaton or the Marx Brothers, or any of the modern clowns.

Modern clowns include actors like Rowan Atkinson and Sacha Baron Cohen, though they may prefer to be known principally as actors, but then surely clowns are actors, too.

9 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. From your learned descriptions of different clowns, I am guessing that Boris Johnson was a whiteface clown but I guess he could be an Auguste clown as he is "the butt of every joke".

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  3. I thought Sacha Baron Cohen's Borat was clever and well worth watching, but I never thought of him as a clown in the traditional sense

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  4. I've never really been a fan of clowns but I suppose they have their place and role in the world of entertainment.

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  5. I had no idea there was different types of clowns. I don't understand the fear of clowns.

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  6. I always thought clowns were jolly but their play acting can often have a cruel edge. I didn't know about the clown hierarchy.

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  7. I like your inclusion of the four non traditional clowns. The Three Stooges could be included too.

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  8. I never quite understood the appeal of clowns, either the traditional or the modern versions, but they have always been popular it seems.

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  9. I don't enjoy clowns, they don't worry me, but I can't see their appeal, our daughters loved them when we visited the circus.

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