Saturday, February 25, 2017

H.R. McMaster

H.R. McMaster, security pro,
Doesn’t think Muslims are all a ditto.
His Chief don’t agree, but no repercussions
Ought to arise if he kisses no Russians.


Rex Tillerson

The State Department once was slow.
Now the place is just de trop.
So Tillerson plays solitaire
And lets his boss the nations scare.


Friday, February 24, 2017

The Selfie Saga

Could I go back in history to take a selfie, I
“Wouldn’t want to waste a shot with any old small fry.
“I’d get a shot with Mark Twain, puffing on his corn-cob pipe;
“I’d get a shot with Cleopatra, looking pretty ripe.
“Voltaire, Einstein, Dickens, and George Washington would smile
“Next to me — and P.T. Barnum, I might beguile.
“I’d get Michelangelo and me, holding his chisel;
“But a pose with Genghis Khan just might be a fizzle.
“I would try with Moses while he’s parting the Red Sea.
“King David and Goliath just might grin along with me.
“Only with my younger self would I refuse to pose;
” ‘Twould only be a record of how people decompose.”


Is the Media Biased?

The media can’t tell the truth.
It’s sort of like to say a sooth.
You may get it right,
til some oversight
Shows that you’re not such a good sleuth.




Sean Spicer

Using such a fine tooth comb
Spicer won’t let journos roam
In the White House halls no more;
He throws ‘em out the nearest door.
The New York Times is gone for good.
And CNN should knock on wood.
Politico had been blackballed,
While Breitbart quickly is installed.
It’s harder now the Prez to hear
Than to see the Pope drink beer.


Kim Jong-nam

The North Korean head of state
Prefers his relatives be ‘late.’
When uncles or an aunt is odd
He sends them to a firing squad.
When there are half-sibs to erase
He pats some poison on their face.
I would not be a North Korean
For all the wealth of the Aegean.



A Clown in Mexico

I was in the mood for a wanderjahr after my first season as a clown with Ringling. My pantomime skills were still rudimentary, so when the Little Guy, Steve Smith, told me he was going to Mexico for further studies with our Clown College pantomime teacher I decided I’d go there too.

I’ve always believed that comedy should be seen but not heard. While I relish the quips of Groucho, my true affection is for silent Harpo -- who brought forth a world of meaning with just his ‘gookie.’ To look upon the faces of the great silent clowns is to read an open book that never ends.

So I got off the bus in Patzcuaro, Michoacan, expecting our instructor Sigfrido Aguilar to meet me. But there was nobody there. After waiting an hour I started dragging my luggage around the town square, inquiring about the location of the pantomime school -- Estudió Búsqueda de Pantomimo. The school, a former nunnery, was two miles out of town. When I got there I piled my baggage next to the plain Jesuit fountain that bubbled in the patio and lay down to take a siesta.

I awoke to the beaming face of Sigfrido, who escorted me to the hacienda where I and the other students lived during our apprenticeship. I was assigned a room with Smith. He immediately set up his stereo and started playing excerpts from “The Night They Raided Minsky’s.” I got out my used copy of Prescott’s “The History of the Conquest of Mexico” and stretched out on my bed for a good long read.   

The next morning we six students started classes with the maestro in the courtyard of the nunnery. We began with warmup and stretching exercises, then progressed to some simple pantomime moves and classic poses. Sigfrido was an admirable teacher. His Tarascan face, with luminous brown eyes, blunt nose, and perpetual smile, patiently encouraged us to work through the tedium of rote movements to discover the beauty of silent action.

Afternoons were devoted to siestas, Spanish lessons, gorging on pesca blanca (a dried white fish that came exclusively from Lake Patzcuaro and went extremely well with refried beans and several bottles of Jarritos) or sightseeing in Sigfrido’s indomitable Volkswagen bus. Once a week we were assigned to sit in the little town square to observe passersby and then work up two-minute impressions of them to show Sigfrido. I watched dyspeptic Carmelite nuns shepherding their little girl charges, all uniformed in white blouses, blue skirts, and red bows in their hair. The peanut vendor and the ice cream vendor continually circled the square, hoarsely calling out “Tan bueno!” Their tin carts rattled in a way that reminded me of the corrugated tin roofs back in Winter Quarters in Florida. Sleepy old men sat on the stone benches, whittling grotesque little statues of peasants with long noses and drooping cheeks from driftwood. They sold these for a few pesos to the local tourista shops, who in turn sold them to the touristas for many pesos.

When Montezuma’s Revenge swept through the student body, as it did on a regular basis, the Little Guy acted as an angel of mercy, dispensing Kaopectate from a large bottle he brought with him from Nithercott’s Drug Store in Zanesville, Ohio, where he made his home. During these down times I learned to play Besame Mucho on my musical saw.

Our Mexican idyll began to shatter when the four other students in class decided simultaneously to go back to the States in pursuit of other interests. They had considered Sigfrido’s school an intellectual lark unlike Smith and I, who considered it sound vocational training for our careers as clowns. Plus the nightlife in Patzcuaro was nonexistent. After six pm they rolled up the sidewalks. That didn’t bother Smith and me; we spent our evenings recording a series of cheap cassette tapes about life in Mexico and sent them to Tim Holst back on the Ringling show, where he was now ringmaster. They were extremely insensitive, brash, and as far from politically correct as you could get. From the bucolic little town of ‘Fartzalotto’ Smith and I interviewed imaginary citizens who worked in the tortilla mines or stomped out the vintage refried bean wine, playing all the parts ourselves. Holst told me years later that he would play these cassettes for a select group of the veteran clowns and that the consensus, as expressed by the eloquent Prince Paul, was that we were “meshuge vi genem.”   

Sigfrido was at a loss as to what to do now that he only had two students, but Smith saved the day by suggesting Sigfrido get some kind of grant from the Mexican government to do pantomime/clown shows up and down Mexico. No sooner said than done -- as a native Tarascan, Sigfrido had an in with the Ministry of Culture. He simply neglected to tell them that his ‘culturally significant’ show included two gringos. Now there was money for a tour.

The three of us spent a few weeks rehearsing some standard mime routines, spliced together with traditional clown gags like ‘Dead and Alive.’ We billed ourselves as ‘Los Payasos Educados’ (The Educated Clowns.) Opening night was in Guadalajara, and it was well received. Sigfrido’s character came across as winsome and innocent; Smith’s character was impudent and cocky; and I came across as just plain nuts, trying to run into the audience with a bouquet of bedraggled flowers whenever I spotted a charming senorita and being restrained by the other two. Smith and I kept our traditional circus clown makeups, even though Sigfrido begged us to use the classical mime white face like he did.

We played a dozen other towns in Mexico before the grant money finally ran out. Then we holed up back in Patzcuaro while Sigfrido made a play for the Ministry of Culture to subsidize a tour of South America. Pemex was making obscene profits at the time, and the Mexican government tapped into that gravy train to sponsor a legion of cultural exports. We figured Sigfrido was a natural for some of that mazumah.

But as the captain of the Titanic once said to Robert Burns, “The best-laid schemes o’ mice an’ men gang aft a-gley.”

First, Smith’s girlfriend Robin showed up, driving all the way from Ohio in a battered Chevy held together with hair bands and nylons. It was an intrepid journey, I’ll give her that. She thought it was time to talk about marriage. Her unexpected presence shifted the subtle dynamics between Smith and I that had led to some great comic timing onstage. Now his mind was on Robin, and how to respond to her request. When Sigfrido came back with a swingeing great check from the Ministry to finance our South American tour, he immediately sensed the lapse in our esprit de corps. When he refused to pay for Robin’s travels with the tour, it looked like the end. But somehow Sigfrido and Smith came to a private understanding. We began rehearsing again.

Then I came down with something called pseudo-dysentery. I was bedridden for several weeks before I could get up, nearly a skeleton. I would need months to recuperate. My parents flew me back to Minneapolis so I could stay with them. Smith and Robin drove back to Zanesville to look for curtains. Los Payasos Educados was kaput. Sigfrido toured South America as a solo mime, to great acclaim.  

In latter years I worked with many Latino clowns, some of them from Mexico. On Ringling there was Zapato, who could keep a half dozen ping pong balls in the air simultaneously by spitting them out of his mouth. He also had a hilarious elephant walkaround, making the creature first squirt water out of its trunk . . . and then out of its backside.

I miss that kind of humor.


Judge Neil M. Gorsuch

The judge wants people living, not dying by the hands
Of doctors who push poison in many diff’rent brands.
If they will confirm him, he’ll use up all his breath
To tear down euthanasia -- and bore us all to death.


Betsy DeVos

Made of money, made of steel,
Betsy will not play genteel.
In her Education post
She will make her rivals toast.
But so far with Trump discreet,
Betsy takes a meek backseat.


Thursday, February 23, 2017

A Clown in Thailand

At the end of the 1973 season I looked fondly at my clown alley compatriots for one last time. Over the last few seasons we had shared a lot of laughs, a few hard times, and many miles on the old Iron Lung (our name for the train car where the new clowns had their roomettes.) I had been kicked by llamas; peed on by elephants and tigers; swindled out of ten dollars by a roustabout named Scotty; discovered my inner clown with the help of master comics like Swede Johnson, Prince Paul, and Otto Griebling; been promoted to Advance Clown; and eaten my first bean burrito. Now it was time to leave these hallowed halls of harlequiny for a radically different environment. I had received a letter from Salt Lake City, signed by President Spencer W. Kimball himself, calling me to spend the next two years as a proselyting missionary, at my own expense, in the Kingdom of Thailand for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I was to report to Salt Lake to begin my orientation in three weeks. From there I would be whisked off to BYU-Hawaii in Laie for a crash course in the Thai language. And then drop anchor in ancient Siam for two years to discuss the rudiments of salvation with Buddhist monks and tuk-tuk drivers. I wanted to say a fond farewell to these benighted buffoons who had tolerated a Minnesota naif and taught him so much -- with the maximum amount of obscenity and absurdity.

I stepped into the middle of the alley, already dressed in a white shirt and tie, with pressed black slacks, and rapped on Swede’s trunk with a handy turkey baster for attention.

“Listen, you guys” I began, my voice husky with emotion. “I just wanna say that . . . “

“How many wives ya gonna have, mate?” jeered Dougie Ashton.

“I just wanna say . . . “

“Hey Tork, bring me back some pre filled sarongs, will ya?” This from Chico. The rat.

“I just wanna say . . . “

Several clowns began a rousing rendition of Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus, substituting the word ‘halitosis’ for ‘hallelujah.’


“All of you guys can go to perdition for all I care” I yelled as I strode out of clown alley, right into Charlie Baumann’s starched tuxedo shirt.

“You must do this, this Mormon nonsense?” he asked me sternly.

“It’s all set, Charlie. I can’t back out now.” I gave him a weak smile. I didn’t want anymore arguments, especially since he was holding his tiger whip.

“Verwahren” he shook my hand. “Come back vhen you are done. You are a goot clown.”

Before I could react he pushed past me into the alley, to begin a rancorous investigation concerning the previous night’s panty raid on the showgirl’s train car.

I looked around for Tim Holst, who had introduced me to the LDS church several years earlier. This was all his fault, I wanted to joke with him. But he and his wife Linda were out shopping for bassinets somewhere.

I passed out the back entrance, looking at Backdoor Jack and thinking “There’s a face I won’t much miss.”

I had more luggage than the other missionaries when I arrived at the Mission Home in Salt Lake. President Morris in Thailand had instructed me to bring along my clown ensemble for possible use as a goodwill ambassador for the LDS church. Airlines, then as now, charged me an arm and a leg for the excess weight -- which I had to pay out of my own pocket.

In Hawaii I spent ten hours a day learning the basics of the Thai language. “Sour tea cup” or something like that, meant “Hello.” Being a tonal language, you had to sing it or risk having phrases such as “Would you like some rice?” come out as “Get out of here.” As set apart missionaries we were sworn to complete celibacy and obedience to other strictures that could rub a young man the wrong way pretty easily. The torrid beauty of the entire Pacific Rim poured into BYU Hawaii to study English, accounting, and home economics, and these languid island girls were not shy about parading past the barracks where we studied, ate, and slept. Even though I had been exposed to dozens of painted ladies (showgirls) during my years with the circus, I still found myself taking several cold showers a day -- as did most of my fellow sufferers.

When it was learned that I was a professional circus clown, the powers that be set up a one hour show for me at the campus auditorium, for all the missionaries and student body. I had plenty of my own original material, but I did not scruple to swipe bits and pieces from my colleagues back in clown alley. I especially relished stealing Otto’s old gag of going out in the audience and flirting with the girls while pretending to be cleaning the seats with a rag. I stole several impudent kisses from Melanesian and Oriental lasses that I still cherish today -- mostly because my clown persona let me get away with it. Out of costume, I would have been sent packing for such an egregious breach of standards. To paraphrase Mel Brooks’ famous dictum: “It’s good to be the clown!”

In Thailand itself I faced several challenges new to me as a clown. First, all my grease paint melted in the tropical heat, becoming impossible to apply. I finally solved this problem by purchasing bags of ice prior to my performance to firm up the greasepaint so I could apply it properly. Next there was the problem of my classical whiteface clown makeup. To the Thais I appeared to be a “phii”, a ghost. Their initial reaction to my appearance was to screech and head for the exits. Or else cover their eyes and wave their Buddhist amulets in front of me to ward off the revenant’s evil eye. I finally overcame this dilemma by having my companion (LDS missionaries always work as a team) come out before me to explain that although I may look like a specter I was actually a harmless funnyman (“tuatalog” in Thai.) This satisfied most people, but there were always a few betelnut-chewing grannies in the back row who remained unconvinced and would pelt me with holy water sold by the pint by Buddhist monks. Finally, my clown shoes, stuffed with horsehair, began to sprout grey wedges of fungus out the sides -- making me look like a ridiculous winged Mercury.  Through trial and error I found that Snake Prickly Heat Powder discouraged the growth, not only on my shoes but on me.

As my two year assignment came to a close I began to ponder about my future career and activities. Did I want to go back to clowning with the circus, or should I aim higher? Most of my companions were set to enroll at BYU in Provo Utah. They would become doctors, lawyers, CPA’s, architects, teachers, and engineers. Have comfortable and productive lives.  I decided that when I got back to the States I would enroll in the University of Minnesota for a bachelor’s degree in theater arts, so I could mold young performers’ minds with my expertise and mellow avuncular humor.  

At the end of two semesters I called Mr. Feld to ask for my old job back. I was suffering from terminal boredom. He cheerfully hired me back. Since then I’ve always wondered . . . did he do me a favor or a disservice? That’s the kind of stuff that gives an old man like me insomnia.