FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
B/W PHOTOS,
COLOR SLIDES, CD ROM
CONTACT LAZER VAUDEVILLE
PH: 1-800-206-1008
FX: 1-800-884-3876
www.lazervaudeville.com/photodownloads.htm
for downloadable
Digital Photos
LAZER VAUDEVILLE TO PERFORM.
Lazer Vaudeville combines
high-tech laser magic with the traditional arts of vaudeville to create
an original theatrical production. This exciting event will be held at the
_________________________________________ on __________________ at __________.
Complete with superlative juggling, black light illusion, acrobatics, zany
comedy, and audience participation, Lazer Vaudeville offers clean, classy fun
for the entire family. A cast of fantastical characters leads the audience on a
journey through the imagination as a wizard creates magical illusions with laser
beams, a neon cowboy kicks up a luminescent rope-spinning display, and an
audience member escapes from a straitjacket. The master of ceremonies is a
seven-foot tall, fluorescent, fire-breathing dragon named Alfonzo.
Touring since 1987, Lazer Vaudeville fulfills Carter Brown's dream of bringing
contemporary vaudeville to the American stage. Internationally acclaimed as a
master of his craft, Brown demonstrates the endangered art of hoop rolling. In
an astonishing visual display, up to ten hoops roll around the juggler’s body
and circle the stage as if taking on a life of their own. Some are century-old
antique wooden bicycle rims. Brown also collaborates with performers Cindy
Marvell and Nicholas Flair to fly indoor kites, spin glowing staffs, and juggle
running chainsaws.
"The kind of juggling we do blows away everybody's concept of what juggling is
about," Brown comments. Together the troupe creates pinwheel illusions and
percussive sounds with South American bolas, bounces balls off airborne drums in
a mesmerizing ensemble piece, and defies the laws of probability by passing up
to ten clubs in an engaging display of buffoonery and expertise. Lazer
Vaudeville has performed at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C., and
was featured in the P.B.S. specials
Juggling Work and Family with Hedrick Smith and Center Stage at the
Paramount Theatre in Austin, TX. International tours have included theater
festivals in England, Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, Bermuda, and Saudi
Arabia.
Composer Jesse Manno of the University of Colorado in Boulder has created an
original soundtrack that captures the show’s special effects and vaudevillian
spirit. The music mixes electronic sound with Turkish guitar, Macedonian
tambura, Greek bouzouki, Australian didjeridu, and Irish fiddle. The troupe
sells this lively and lyrical recording on CD along with a performance video,
available online at www.lazervaudeville.com.
Designer Maia Robbins-Zust of Berkshire Production
Resources in Richmond, MA created the company’s fiber-optic scenery. A
floating castle lights up the stage and monument valley glows in the evanescent
moonlight. Imaginative costumes by Jennifer Johanos add extra sparkle to
the performance.
Cindy Marvell, the
first woman ever to win the International Jugglers’ Association Championships,
“juggles like a poet" and performs with "a compelling mix of pragmatism and
magic," according to Jennifer Dunning of The New York Times. Marvell also
dresses up like a chef and teaches children from the audience to spin
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
B/W PHOTOS,
COLOR SLIDES, CD ROM
CONTACT LAZER VAUDEVILLE
PH: 1-800-206-1008
FX: 1-800-884-3876
www.lazervaudeville.com/photodownloads.htm
plates. Master manipulator and physical comedian
Nicholas Flair intercepts clubs with razor-sharp timing as Brown and Marvell
send them whizzing by at precarious angles.
All three performers
became interested in circus skills at a young age. Brown was born to a
theatrical family and led the University of Vermont's mime troupe, The Silent
Company, while majoring in theater and art. A graduate of the Ringling
Bros. Clown College in Sarasota, he toured with Ringling Bros. Circus for two
years, then went on to perform his solo juggling act with Carden International
Circus and the Monte Carlo Festival du Cirque.
Cindy Marvell, a native New Yorker, embarked on an international juggling career
after graduating from Oberlin College with honors in 1988. As a teenager, she
trained at the Antic Arts Academy at SUNY Purchase and performed regularly
around the city including events at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. She has
toured with San Francisco's Pickle Family Circus, collaborated with modern dance
companies in New York, and worked solo in Japan. P.B.S. specials include
Sesame Street’s 25th Anniversary and
Children and the Bomb with Elizabeth Swados. Off stage, Marvell has written
articles about her field for The New York Times and for Juggle,
Spectacle and Kaskade magazines. Marvell and Brown are also featured
in the DVD A Juggling Journey (www.dube.com). “The technical level we
perform at is very high,” says Marvell, now in her tenth season with the
company, “and we explore the frontiers of the art in a way that still appeals to
kids and enthralls adults.”
Nicholas Flair got
hooked on juggling as a high school student in Ithaca, NY. As a math major at
Brown University, he founded the Out of Hand Juggling Club and performed with
Misnomer Dance Theater. After graduating in 1998, he trained at the National
Circus School of Montreal. His signature cigar box routine combines demanding
technique with aerial acrobatics, dance, and flamenco rhythms. New York credits
include productions with the Metropolitan Opera, New York Theater Ballet, and
variety theater shows in Madison Square Garden and Times Square. His solo act
has taken to the waves with Holland America cruise lines and hit the airwaves on
FOX TV’s 30 Seconds to Fame. Collaborations have taken him to the
International Jazz Festival of Montreal and the Summer Festival of Quebec. Flair
recently completed a seven-month tour of Switzerland with Circus Starlight.
Lazer Vaudeville is based in Colorado at the
Boulder Circus Center, which offers juggling and aerial classes. LV’s touring
Arts-in-Education Outreach program is designed to bring live performances to
students and teachers. "We focus on the history of vaudeville in America," Brown
says. "Most students can't imagine popular entertainment before the invention of
T.V. and movies." The first 15 minutes of the show are in black light, so
attendees are asked to be seated before the show begins at _____. Tickets for
this family evening are $_____ for adults and $____ for children and senior
citizens and are available at ______________________________.
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