Wednesday, November 29, 2017

bits from clown show at fronterafest 2008

Clown decided to get shot out of a cannon one day.
He was bored and thought it would shake things up.
He thought it would knock the fleas off him.
He really didn't know what else to do.

He loaded up the cannon (with too much gun powder, of course)
and pulled the string that lit the wick and
just then realized he hadn't set up anything to land on.
"Uh oh," said the clown.

Then. Boom.
And he was zooming through the air
head over heals
doing somersaults
and got lucky
by landing
right in the middle of a hotel swimming pool
where a very elaborate
water ballet was taking place.
The audience thought he was part of the show
and applauded like crazy.
Clown was very relieved,
and figured he had finally
satisfied his curiosity
forever
regarding the
human cannonball experience,
which he now realized
had been troubling him
far more deeply,
and for much longer,
that he had at first supposed.


Robot and Clown met for coffee.

Robot said it was tough––feeling he had no control––such limited choices––doing the same things over and over––not even needing to take a cigarette break or a dinner break or stop for the night. He said he might shut down now and then because it seemed sensible to give the circuits and whirly-gigs a rest––but when he booted back up it was like no time had passed at all––it was just on, or off, for him––except that one time he seemed to have what is called a dream––of––well––rocks and butterflies and people and galaxies. . .

Clown was listening to all that and took his big red nose off and set it on the table and then started trying to light his cigarette with, of course, his trick lighter and on his first attempt a giant flame shot out and singed his bushy eyebrows and left a faint reek of burning hair. And on the second attempt shot out water and drenched the cigarette and got him right in the eye. So he set the lighter down on the table and fished out another cigarette––a candy cigarette as it turned out––and then looked in another pack and found an actual cigarette but couldn't find his other lighter or any matches. In the meantime, the robot was talking on and on and Clown was listening to every word of it and thought it sounded both familiar and quite quite unimaginable. Clown paused a while when Robot was done talking and said that's all very interesting but what about laughs––what do you do for laughs, and then bonked the Robot on the head with a big foam rubber baseball bat. Clown thought it was hilarious and fell out of his chair.


searching for his inner Barcelona

lounging like a clown in the water on a float.
laughing like a clown upside down at the parade.
singing like a clown under a shower of sparks.
dancing like a madman in the pouring down rain.
too upset to function, broken like a machine,
wanting to be more useful, but always lost in a dream.
A sentimental clown in a no nonsense world of
money time and payback. He wanted to sneeze
and wake up someplace like, well, maybe Barcelona.
he'd heard that was pretty nice.


This clown is riding on the back of a giraffe,
and he asks the giraffe how the zebra got his stripes.

And the giraffe says,
What? You’ll have to talk louder––my ears are up here
with my head you know.

And the clown asks him again.

And the giraffe says,
How should I know. Go ask the zebra.
What do I look like, a set of encyclopedias?

So the clown took out his flask of whiskey he had
hidden in his shoe and took a big swig and fell off the giraffe––
but the giraffe didn’t even feel it and kept walking,
and the clown took another swig
and did somersaults for half a mile until he got
to the tavern at the edge of town.

He goes up to the bar and says,
Gimme a double.

And the bartender pulls a lever and two stuffed boxing gloves
fly from the wall and hit the clown
in each of his eyes.

Ah. . . That’s better. . .
says the clown.


Scene at a Parisian Cafe

Abstract existentialist clowns, cubist clowns,
impressionistic clowns,
smoking Gitanes and Gauloises
and drinking espresso––

half their make-up on and half of it off.
Clowns sitting at a little table at the sidewalk café
playing chess.

Now and then one the them flying into a rage
throwing the whole thing over––
which angers the one who was winning––
so he blasts the angry one with water from the flower
in the lapel of his clownishly
rainbow striped suit coat.


Clown got on the teeter
and his other clown self got on the totter

and they went up and down and
up and down for years and years.

Who wins the game of teeter totter?
Is it the clown that gets off,
or the clown who stays on?

Neither of them know the answer
either.


beautiful life with its
mystery roses

becoming aware
that's all you are ever were   
ever could be   
the universe becoming aware of itself
starting from fire  
making suns and planets
making cells and green things that
grow up crawl out of the muck stand up
and say    me 
this  
that  
I want   
I think
it should be this way

I think it should be that way

how funny.


Peanut crunch and motes of dust sailing like
crazed rudderless spaceships in the spotlights.
Hush and murmur of audience hum––heartbeats
and sneezes, coughs and stammers and shuffles and
wheezes––when is it going to begin––when will
the Las Vegas Showgirl walk the tightrope with a
TV on her head showing the live video feed of
the Las Vegas Showgirl walking the tightrope
with a TV on her head.

The Ringmaster approaches:

"Ladies and Gentlemen blah de dee blah blah
never before yak yak yak in the history
gooble de gookety blah blah blah. . ." While
the Showgirl snuffs out her cigarette checks her
make-up and doesn't, then does take a shot of tequila.



Space Clown was a glow boy
hot to the touch
shinier than a bowling ball or
acetylene blow torch.

He was flying, he was trying, he was
like all of us
perpetually dying,
slowly or quickly,

who would know until the end and
by then what would it matter.

But he was something shiny,
laughing or crying most of the time.
Not so you’d know it,
behind his painte
poker-like face.


Mr. Space Clown was a big cat dada-daddy.
Nothing made sense to him except nonsense,

and that sense was like copper pennies
falling from the sky
disguising themselves as rain

making the people in the big fat city melancholy
and morose

but that’s not the point at all

nor is it in the least bit true. . .

it was simply a meaningless verbosity tangent

the kind Mr. Space Clown was so often prone to.



Mr. Dr. Space Clown.
Dr. Mr. Space Clown.

Doctor or Misterology or
Mister or Doctorology….

depended which side of the equator you were on.


Mr. Dr. Space Clown drove a fire engine red Ferrari––
mostly in the streets of
his Imagination.

He might have bought one for real but he wasn’t
sure he could afford
the insurance.

He was fond of driving and enjoyed,
for the most part,
how cars would, generally,
take him where he wanted to go––or,
if not that––
at least in the general direction he was
pointing them.
Usually.

He knew if he were a Cowboy Clown and
rode a horse
he would probably be arguing
with the horse
all the time, and then
having to deal with its
resentments.



This Clown walks into a bar, and the bartender says,

Say, we don’t get many Clowns in this bar.

And the Clown says,

You’ve gotta be kiddin’ me.



This Clown walks into a bar, and the bartender says,

Whaddya Know?

And the Clown says, What’s that about my nose???



This Clown walks into a bar and the bartender says,

Say, we don’t get many clowns in this bar.

And the Clown says,  You’re right,

and at these prices you won’t get many more.


Dr. Mr. Space Clown’s nose was driving him crazy.
It was changing color at random.

And it wasn’t even sticking with the solid primary colors
of ROY G. BIV.

At times it was marbleized, or paisley, or. . .
well. . . you may imagine. . . day-glo. . .
whatever
whatever––

and it seemed to be connected to his unconscious––or––
well––not his conscious. . . nothing to do with
what was on his mind ever. . .

maybe it had to do with the atmosphere of the room.

Anyway, who knows. . .

well. . . his nose. . .

but. . .

who knew.


Clown goes downtown looking for adventure.

He parks his funny little golf cart in a no parking zone, which gets towed away by the time he takes a seat in the nearest bar.
He asks the bartender for a Brandy Alexander and the Bartender says, How about a shot of whiskey.

Clown says, Well, if you’re gonna make a Federal Case out of it. . .
And the Bartender says do you want a drink or do you want to get out of here.

Clown says, Why are you so mean?
The Bartender says he doesn’t know why he is so mean, and starts crying immediately, and says doesn’t mean to be mean, but he can’t help it.

Clown leans over the bar and pinches the Bartenders nose and says,
Honk Honk,

And the Bartender says, All right, that does it, out you go…

Clown says, Aw come on, give me a double shot of whiskey, I was only trying to cheer you up.

The Bartender reaches under the bar and grabs his Colt 45 Revolver and points it right between Clown’s eyes    and pulls the trigger. . .

A big red flag with black letters shoots out of the barrel and says BANG.

Clown falls to the floor, and the Bartender roars with laughter, then throws a bucket of cold water on Clown.

Clown says, o.k., show’s over, how about a Brandy Alexander.

The Bartender says how about a shot of whiskey. . .

And Clown says, oh, for cryin’ out loud, and walks back to the street where he’d parked his golf cart and sees it isn’t there.


How would you like to get show out of a cannon
and land in a pool of flames

How would you like to do it
three times a day.
Forget the pay.
It’s what Cannonball clown lived for.
Restless and deranged.

A super high caliber bullet
flying through the air
again and again
you’d think he would stop at some point
under the big top.

You’d think he would burn to the ground.
But he rises from the ashes.
He never quits taking chances.
He wants to steal a few more glances.
He wants to go down the road with a fever
and raise a little steam.

He really really wants to be, not you nightmare,
but your very favorite dream.


When teenage clowns fall in love
the girl’s father greets them at the door––
invites them inside to sit by the fire and
sip some brandy and smoke a cigar.

Of course, the clown’s cigar always explodes,
and the girl’s father roars with laughter,
then, says very seriously­­––

If you try anything funny with my daughter,
I’ll kill ya. . .


Lights up


D. walks out.

Says “Let’s talk about what is going on.”

At the word “on”  All Lights Go Out.

D. talks about space a while in the dark.
Asks for the lights to come back up eventually.

Does show.

Last words of the show are  “How funny.”

Lights go off.
Back on.

D. says Thank you. Takes a bow.  Walks off stage.






clown boys and indians

out on the prairie the clowns were headed west,
and the indians saw them, and attacked, and the clowns
started honking their bicycle horns at them, running around
in circles, arguing with each other, throwing pies in each others
faces, until they forgot about the attacking indians because they were
so busy fighting among themselves.

the indians stopped attacking and just watched for a while,
and then started laughing, and then started yelping and hollering,
and then started imitating the clowns until the clowns and indians
were all running around in circles together pulling each others ears
then bonking each other on the head and throwing dirt clods and
on and on until they all fell on the ground laughing unto exhaustion.

the indians still secretly wanted to scalp the clowns to get the
orange and green and blue hair the like of which they'd never seen,
but then, as if reading their minds, a bunch of the clowns took off
their wigs and handed them to the indians...since they did know the
indians were fond of collecting hair now and then.

after a night of hilarity and festivities, the clowns kept heading west
and the indians gave them some food to take and wished them luck.

the next bunch of white people that came over the hills were greeted by
indians running around with their clown wigs on doing somersaults and
yelping and hollering and doing tricks with their ponies, but some stupid
honky shot at one of them, and the indians stopped with the hi-jinks,

put on the war paint, and scalped the whole lot of them.

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