Beginning Sideshow Arts
Slim's Notes
by
Slim Price
I sometimes get mail asking
about how to start learning sideshow arts.
This is my answer,
First you need to analyze your self, and your reasons. If you
want to learn to impress the guys at the bar, or your frat
buddies, or to get girls, forget it! By and large, the acts are
dirty, invoke some pain, take years to learn properly and you
will find that ?normal? people will look at you as something
less than normal. The acts will probably cause you medical
problems later in life, or immediately. It isn't like magic at
all, the damage you do to yourself can last for years.
I often think that in our current media society, people think an
accident (there will be some) goes away at the end of the clip,
or movie, This is not true. An accident can take weeks or months
to recover from, and can even cause you permanent disfigurement.
The best (only) way to learn is with a pro teacher who has lived
this life. I don't mean the kid at 7/11 who sucks fire from a
Bic. I mean a working professional. Learning from a book is the
worst way to get this knowledge. I think I have read most of the
books on the subject, and I am often appalled by errors, missed
points, plain lies and oversights, all of which can bite you!
Even when you know it all, a pro can see a lot of things you
will miss, and might save you a lot of damage to yourself or
others.
Slim's notes are overwritten to prevent as much of this as
possible, but sometimes surprising interpretations slip in. I
remember writing several additions to a note to clarify putting
a Band-aid over a thumbtack...
Most of the people who chose to start learning sideshow acts are
young, impressionable, frequently misfits, and are looking to
make some kind of mark. See what I can do! This is
understandable, but the fact is that there are a lot of better,
easier, cleaner, and more profitable ways to make a living.
Working at McDonald's will earn you more, and you won't spend
most of your time looking for the next gig. Even the best
performers have dry spells.
Although most of the acts however, dangerous, are simple, few
initiates realize the need for learning to be an entertainer.
This is really what separates the tyros from the pros in every
field, not just sideshow work. Theater skills are what will make
the money and work for you. If you are still in school take
advantage of your theatrical options, acting, stagecraft, voice,
costume, scripting, learn anything and anything you can. If you
are a civilian, do the same. It's an investment sure to pay off.
Don't try to learn everything at once...There are dozens of
nuances in any single act that can only be learned by
exploration. Mastering one act and doing it well, (and adding
your own persona) will always serve you better than shot gunning
several badly done stunts. When you begin working a sideshow
act, the first thing you will want to do is push the envelope.
This, more than anything else will get you in trouble? Give your
art a little time to nurture, until you really understand it?
Above all, learn from a pro mentor.
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