Books and circuses

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Circuses? They’re all about performing animals and clowns that do slapstick and must have a ringmaster with a big black moustache, right?

Libraries? They’re all about books and being quiet and must have a circulation desk and a reference desk, right?

I’m just back from ooohing and aaahing at the latest offering from Circus Oz called Laughing at Gravity (gotta love those puns). Their high energy performance showed how circuses have morphed to fit their audience. The ring master was a high octane woman with glam silver boots, a style which crossed diva with Frank’N’Furter and who belted out songs like “La Vie En Rose” and a piece about trying to be an object of female beauty in the age of global warming.

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There were no animals involved, but people doing amazing things with their bodies and circus apparatus. The style was distinctly Australian, but edgy and owed a lot to musical comedy – although much more Caberet than Oklahoma. One of my favourite parts was the strong woman who did a bendback, had three concrete slabs placed on her abdomon and then…and then….kept still while a man with a sldegehammer smashed the slabs to smithereens. They even incorporated new technology – a bloke who swang out on a rope, missed his target and kept swinging until he hit a wall and…stuck!. The velcro fuzz on the front of his tracksuit met the velcro hooks of the wall.

Yesterday, I heard from a library manager who, like Circus Oz, has been transforming his craft to fit his audience. Chris Szekely ,who has just finished as City Librarian of Manukau in New Zealand, gave the closing keynote at the loclib biennial conference. The conference is aimed at Western Australian public librarians, but some of us from other sectors (Hi Sue!) came along for a couple of presentations from US library blogging legend, Jesssamyn West (Hi Jessamyn!).

Chris described how they redefined and repositioned their services when they were faced with a growing population, the need for more libraries but not many more staff allocated. Among other points he described the Botany Library, the Idealibrary (gotta love those puns), which was built in a new retail hub taking a lot of service ideas and design elements from the surrounding shops. There are no service desks, but staff who wander the floor restocking, serving the customers and acknowleding everyone who walks in within 90 seconds of entry. They implemented RFID as a security system – which lets someone checking out their entire limit of 35 items to do so by placing them in a single pile on the self-check machines.

An area aimed at youth (covertly – not with signage!!) takes design from night clubs, with a mezzanine and subdued neon lighting and a disco ball. Magazine displays compete with those in nearby newsagents. Display walls of books, which look like bays in a video shop, can be turned to create a separate space for study or events. A quiet area is enforced not by signage or staff, but by having a totally different ambience to the rest of the building. The Staff were chosen not for librarianship skills, per se, but for their ability to fit the customer service model. Consequently, 90 percent of the staff are men under 25. A very unusual proportion in a traditional library.

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Like Circus Oz, we need to embrace new technologies, define the core of what we do and then highly hone those skills – maybe throw in a bit of glitter and disco – and continue to do our best to delight our audiences.

SL mirrors RL mirrors SL mirrors….

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I’m after a new look for my Second Life avatar. She’s going to be showing a few folks around, so I want her to look good. In Second Life, I can buy an entire new face, body shape, skin and hair. It means I’ve given the Linden Labs my credit card number, so I’m cashed up with Linden dollars for the first time. As Mr9 would say, “the money’s burning a hole in my head”.

My first purchase was a too-dark skin, with a face that reminds me of a vapid cow. Seemed OK when I tried it on in the shop.

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With a location search on “skin”, I can get to the Centrefold shop and the Hot ‘n’ Sexy shop. I asked someone where I’d find the “attractive and intelligent and interesting shop”…but strangely, he didn’t know. I bet that if I opened a branch of that near Info Island, I’d do a roaring trade to librarians.

In Second Life, most people are young, attractive and can fly. I thought I’d never see that in Real Life. But, today I took the kids to see “Aureo”, a very stylish and sophisticatedly lit performance by aerealists from Western Australia’s electronic circus company Skadada. They were breathtaking and reminded me that with determination and practice, people can do wonders.

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To a kid with a hammer everything looks like a nail, but today wasn’t the only time Second Life has spilled into Real Life. Thursdays are Laughter Yoga days. We spend an hour trying to laugh as much as possible to coax our bodies to release endorphins. Last week we did an exercise where you pretend your boss has just given you an impossible job, due in half an hour. We look up from our typing and laugh uproariously and say “you want it when??”.

So, there I was, in a circle of people walking around with all of us typing on our imaginary keyboards in front of us. This is the exact position your Second Life avatar takes when you are typing in the chat window, so the yoga exercise wasn’t the only reason I was staring at the others and LMAO.

Power of one….

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People with enthusiasm, who embrace what they do with joy and encourage others, can change the lives of hundreds of people…far more than most committees do. Here’s a few of them…

Fig 1. Enthuse, embrace, learn, play.


Enthuser 1 – LORI BELL
Lori always seems to be online when I visit Second Life. She was showing librarians around Info Island 10am Western Australian time this morning, yet when I just emailed her (about 9pm my time), she replied straight away. She’s getting out of bed at 3am her time to show us around as part of our LINTy party.

She is co-ordinating countless projects in Second Life, creates a Real Life buzz around her project and is a hub around which many folk are empowered to try out skills in Second Life. She’s part of a team but she works many extra hours and brings extra ooomph to it.

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Enthuser 2 – WARREN HORTON

Director General of the National Library of Australia, 1985 – 1999. I’ve been doing a bit of reading about Aurora and discovered that the foundation is self funded due to a legacy he left on his death in 2003. He believed in empowering future librarians, and was deeply involved in Aurora’s inception and running until he died.

I’ve been reading how he scrutinized the applications and took delight in matching applicants with mentors. He was affectionately called the “Grand Poo-bah” by participants and mentors when he joined in each 5 day live-in course. He let down his guard and talked frankly about some of his best and worst decisions. He had an extensive knowledge of who was where in the library world, and apparently a talent for suggesting who should be where.


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Enthuser 3 – RICHARD RENNIE
Richard runs the Fremantle Light and Sound Museum. He’s not a librarian, but a passionate ex-science teacher who won the Premier’s Award for Science Communication 2006, He single-handedly runs his collection as a volunteer, in a small room in our local museum..and always seems to be there when we visit. He lets us play with his stuff collected over 40 years, talks to us about it and we leave thinking about it for days afterward.

The last few times we visited, we

  • Played “Pong” on an old tele-tennis machine hooked up to a portable black and white TV
  • Ran our fingers along a string dangling from a christmas card and heard it play a tune due to the friction of our fingers over the special bumps in the string
  • Used a magnet to distort the picture on an old black and white TV set
  • Wore special red and blue specs and goggled at Michael Jackson and Dr Who in 3D
  • Placed our $50 notes under ultraviolet light to reveal the anticounterfeiting marks on it
  • Used a typewriter – a highight for Mr4 who now wants to get one.
  • Debated whether the baffles on a gramaphone really made the sound quality better
  • Looked through periscopes and kaleidoscopes and stroboscopes.


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Enthuser 4 – REG BOLTON
I’ve previously blogged about Reg Bolton. He packed an entire circus into his suitcase and inspired and taught thousands of children that they had the power to amaze. He had a few “circus swear words” that he banned from his Big Top

“No, Can’t, Impossible, Embarrasing, Difficult”


TODAY’S HIPPIE CARD: Face the situation.

A goodbye celebration

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I took the kids to the goodbye celebration for Reg Bolton this afternoon. To describe him as a circus educator would be underselling him. He was teacher, clown, scholar, stage manager, director, committee member, writer, friend, bulls**it detector, raconteur, father, husband, innovator, leader and transformer of young lives.

Fig2. Life enhancement aid

I’d seen him perform a couple of times. Both kids had done workshops and performances with him, (I’d been lured into doing my first handspring in 15 years at one of them). He’d asked me a couple of questions when I was on the ref. desk while he was doing his PhD at MyUniversity. I wouldn’t have said we were mates, or even that he would have known who I was particularly. But, I’m sure that if I had asked him if it was OK to attend, he would have said “Yeah, of course, come along, join in”. And he would have meant it. I wanted the kids to understand the difference one person could make, and to see how to make life a circus.

It was a colourful group of people packed into the Camelot Theatre …most wearing bright clothes and with hair that would certainly stand out in the boardroom. Lots of little kids. Average age of everyone was about 30. Reg was almost 61 when he died a fortnight ago.

Simon ,an internationally acclaimed unicyclist performed and told us how he started unicycling in a workshop with Reg at the Woodford folk festival. Mike Finch, the artistic director of Circus Oz told us how he emailed everyone in his contact list on learning of Reg’s death and a large proportion emailed back saying how they’d just recently had this conversation with Reg, seen that performance of his, received this email etc from Reg. Mike noted that if Reg had given so much of himself in the last two weeks, then how much he must have given over his lifetime.

He also mentioned that celebrations of Reg’s life are taking place in several places in Australia and one in New York. Circus Monoxide planned a celebration where memories of Reg were written down, placed into a suitcase that was then set alight and floated away on water.

Two young jugglers showed us their tricks. Two older jugglers demonstrated a belt that Reg had designed, allowing a juggler with a bad back to clip juggling clubs in a “hula skirt” around his waist and not bend down to get them . People told of starting careers teaching circus skills after reading his book, Circus in a Suitcase. Several other performers involved us all in their enthusiasm and joy, balancing children, singing, performing “the Hunter” routine with large sticks, showing a video of a kids’ performance.

There were many, many stories of Reg encouraging people to be better than their best. The story of the one legged stiltwalker over at the Theatre Australia forum demonstrates how Reg constantly showed people how they could improve, even when they hadn’t considered the possibility.

Reg’s son, Jo, showed a series of slides of Reg’s life and his family. Daughter Sophie gathered us around in a circle and danced a comedy Charleston, complete with crowd “oohing” and “aahing” on cue. Reg hadn’t seen her do this before, so she dedicated it to him.

At the end of the performances and open mic, we all grabbed our circus props – diabolos, juggling balls, clubs, rings, hoops, spinning plates, stilts, unicycles, a couple of fitballs and made our way across the road to a local reserve. Everyone juggled, balanced and threw until there was a countdown 10…9…8…7..6..5…(energy rising)..4…3…2…1..and Up! all the balls and hoops and diabolos and other equipment were thrown into the air. Show over? No..we all stayed on the reserve, playing for another hour and a half. Kids and adults , seasoned performers doing amazing tricks and beginners learning simple tricks for the first time.

For me, the spirit of Reg was there when Mr3, who was too reluctant to come forward when a circus mum encouraged parents and kids to join her in a balancing act, spent the next 30 minutes that we sat in the audience practising standing balances on my lap.