Veterans Day
Grock (Adrien Wettach), remembered as the “King of Clowns” tells of entertaining maimed and crippled soldiers from World War 1.
“All my desire was to enable them to forget the terrible reality of their state… little by little {I} succeeded in conjuring up that deeply human and tragi-comic world of absurdity… nonsense… and at the same time profound wisdom. Blind eyes were raised, making the smile more eloquent… these young men … clapped their stumps together for lack of hands, stamped, shouted and laughed; laughed with all their hearts.”
America has plenty of wounded warriors returning home every day. Today is the day to thank them for their service, and maybe tell them a joke.
Interview with TWEEDY.
This is a very useful interview with a Scottish clown who goes by the name TWEEDY. We can learn something about character creation from listening to him.
Youtube calling
I really like this stop motion animation, inspired by Basil Wolverton
It’s quick and fun, and nicely done. The animator was Thomas R. Smith
I also noticed two other things about it. It has 16 million views, and no advertising. I recently read that popular youtube videos with advertising earn about $5000 for every million views. By that number, “Ugly Girl” could have pulled in $80,000. I wonder if Mr. Smith intentionally declined, or was just unaware of the potential. UPDATE: On further thought, perhaps Smith doesn’t legally own the piece.
I know the people behind “Kozo, the Dancing Hippo” On youtube it has been duplicated and remixed so many times I haven’t bothered to count. The views on all of them runs into the tens of millions. I imagine if they had worked the system, they could have profited from each of them. I need to learn more.
More on Bouffon – the anti-clown.

If you have read my post on The Red Bastard, here is further information the clown type known as bouffon.
I had the book “Why is That So Funny” by John Wright, sitting on my shelf for a quite a while, and I picked it up again. Rather than guess where I left off, I just jumped to the last chapter, which happened to be the last of his profiles of clown types. I found it appropriate that the buffoon was the last of the types to be included. The buffoon seems to be the least known and least understood character of the comic archetypes. A google image search for buffoon/bouffon will largely deliver pictures of jesters and clowns. The author writes:
The Shorter Oxford Dictionary define buffoon as a “low jester – implying ridicule, contempt or disgust” We’re dealing with the lowest denominator of physical comedy here that, on the face of it, is socially unacceptable today because we pride ourselves on knowing better, and because we aspire to a diverse society.
On another site I found this description:
In the world of Bouffon, the audience is the joke. Bouffons show no vulnerability. Their great joy is to parody the audience, its values and flaws. This pack of grotesque outsiders engage the audience with great joy, intelligence & charm. They are disgusting, yet beautiful. They hate you, yet they flatter you. The Bouffons are the ultimate manipulators, a ferocious social satire about to explode, liberating the energy in the room with an immense pleasure to parody and to play.

Jacques Lecoq said:
The audience laughs at the clown and the bouffon laughs at the audience.
Historically speaking, buffoons are the descendant of the famous Punchinello of the Commedia Dell ‘arte. There is a story of a hunch back who attempts to trick some magical women into removing his hump. Instead, they curse him with a second hump on his belly. He becomes Punchinello, the very symbol of grotesque realism. Back in the middle ages, the misshapen and hideous could occasionally find as entertainers. Once a year, there would be the “Feast of Fools” when the city would turn the rules topsy-turvy and the village idiot could be crowned King of Fools. This happened with Quasimodo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
The above quote should now makes sense. We aren’t supposed to laugh at people like that anymore. It’s cruel. Which is why we can now create fake grotesquery, and achieve the same effect. However, it still makes audiences uncomfortable to be around someone who has an appearance like this…
The grotesque appearance puts you so far below “normal” people that they will tolerate behavior they wouldn’t from a peer. If they are uncomfortable just looking at you, they are likely to let you get away with unusual behavior.
There is an old saying: “Shit rolls downhill” meaning the people at the top will pass the abuse to those below them in the hierarchy. Once I heard someone else follow that up with “When it hits the bottom, it flies in all directions.” This is what the buffoon represents. They are at the bottom of society, and they have nothing to lose. It they have the spirit, they can take advantage of peoples fear of them, and get away with mockery that others can’t.
Some time ago I went to see Circus Finelli perform in a tiny theater in San Francisco. One of their skits involved dressing up in fake muscle suits and performing silly “feats of strength” all the while yelling “Mykonos!!!”
I know now this was a sort of Bouffon performance. The costumes severely distort the body, and they behave in an aggressive manner.