Archives – December, 2009

BC Lions Cheerleaders Play at the Vancouver Circus School!

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This past Fall, the BC Felions (cheer-leading squad for the BC Lions) came out to our North Shore school for a day of fun circus team-building activities.

BC Felion, Amanda Shatzko gushed, “The coaches at the Vancouver Circus School were so helpful and taught our squad everything from aerial silks to juggling.

Not only was it really fun to do something so out of the ordinary, but it was a great workout!

The girls and I loved every minute of it!

Thanks VCS!  The BC Lions’ Cheerleaders will be back!” Go LIONS!!!

BCFelions 008Warming up with VCS instructor, Jordan Hooge!

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Team Building!

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Business Manager and part owner, Travis Johnson

shows the Felions the ropes (for the trapeze)!

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The girls try out the art of aerial silk

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Above:  a perfect ankle hang on the swinging trapeze!

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The Felions get a lesson on trampoline

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Go BC Felions!

Thanks for coming to visit,  Felions!  We had tons of fun teaching you the art of the circus (and learning how to do a pyramid)!

Leave a Comment December 29, 2009

UBC Student Stays Active in the Circus!

November 2009-The UBC student newspaper, the UBYSSEY, interviews UBC and VCS student Vanessa Goh on her experience with circus training in its article, Joining the Circus Not Just for Daydreamers by Nessa Aref.

“I’m standing in the middle of the Vancouver Circus School, watching 19-year-old Vanessa Goh, a second–year UBC Math and Economics student, while her coach runs her and a handful of other students through a series of stretches before they begin training. . . “Read more

See the YouTube Video here.


Leave a Comment December 28, 2009

Do You Know Your Circus History? Read This & Learn Now!

Do you know the historical background of the circus?  Read this article  from www.encyclopedia.com/topic/circus.aspx The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 18 Dec. 2009: 

circus [Lat.,=ring, circle], historically, the arena associated with the horse and chariot races and athletic contests known in ancient Rome as the Circensian games. The Roman circus was a round or oval structure with tiers of seats for spectators, enclosing a space in which the races, games, and gladiatorial combats took place. Underneath were dressing rooms, dens for wild beasts, and rooms where properties were stored. The Circus Maximus, presumably built in the reign of Tarquin I (c.616-c.578 BC), and rebuilt by Julius Caesar, was reported by Pliny in his Natural History to have a capacity of 250,000, though this figure is suspiciously large.

Other famous circi of Rome were the Circus Flaminius (221 BC); the Circus Neronis, of Caligula and Nero, at which many Christians perished; and the Circus Maxentius. The circus of Septimius Severus at Constantinople and many others were circus [Lat.,=ring, circle], historically, the arena associated with the horse and chariot races and athletic contests known in ancient Rome as the Circensian games. The Roman circus was a round or oval structure with tiers of seats for spectators, enclosing a space in which the races, games, and gladiatorial combats took place. Underneath were dressing rooms, dens for wild beasts, and rooms where properties were stored. The Circus Maximus, presumably built in the reign of Tarquin I (c.616-c.578 BC), and rebuilt by Julius Caesar, was reported by Pliny in his Natural History to have a capacity of 250,000, though this figure is suspiciously large. Other famous circi of Rome were the Circus Flaminius (221 BC); the Circus Neronis, of Caligula and Nero, at which many Christians perished; and the Circus Maxentius. The circus of Septimius Severus at Constantinople and many others were often scenes of riot and bloodshed between factions of charioteers. The games, aside from races, were brutal and bloody, and for this reason the Greeks, even under Roman domination, never really accepted the circus.

The modern circus, which originated in performances of equestrian feats in a horse ring strewn with sawdust, dates from the closing years of the 18th cent. The circus is traditionally a nomadic tent show, with trained animals, acrobats, and clowns. The main tent, known as the big top, is often surrounded by various concessions and sideshows with “freaks” and wild animals. Even before 1830, traveling circuses were common in the United States and in England. After 1873 two rings were used in the main tent and the three-ring circus, as we know it today, was initiated by James A. Bailey. The most celebrated circus in America was “The Greatest Show on Earth” of P. T. Barnum, which, in merging with Bailey’s, became Barnum and Bailey’s. On Bailey’s death in 1907 the circus was purchased by Ringling Brothers, and in 1919 the two circuses were combined. Since 1969, Ringling Brothers has had two large circuses on tour that play mostly indoors and visit almost every major U.S. city annually.

The traveling circus, in its heyday from 1880 to 1920, declined in the 1950s and 60s. By the 1980s, however, more than 30 circuses were touring the United States and Canada. Outstanding among contemporary circuses are two small and sophisticated shows, the New York City-based Big Apple Circus and the Montreal-based Cirque Du Soleil.  The latter is the most elaborate and best known exponent of the form called cirque nouveau. A type of modern circus without animal acts, it is characterized by a mixture of traditional circus arts with poetic spectacle, music, and dance and is practiced by a number of European and Canadian troupes (including the Inner Ring).

Interesting how far the circus arts date back isn’t it?

Do you have any fun facts about the circus?  Post them in the comments section under this article; we’d love to hear from you!

Leave a Comment December 18, 2009

VCS-Great for Networking!

The social groups in Vancouver, known as “meetup” groups offer Vancouverites a variety of opportunities to network with like-minded people.  One of these meetup groups came to our school in July 2009.

See what the members of this meetup said about us on their blog!

One woman raved about her VCS experience, saying, This workshop was an absolute blast. The coaches were patient and helpful (which they needed to be since this stuff was a lot harder than it looks), and Kerry was actually an excellent hand balancing and tumbling coach in his own right…” read more

Leave a Comment December 18, 2009

Become a Fan on our Facebook Page!

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If you aren’t already a fan on our Facebook page, you should be!  Search for the Vancouver Circus School  on Facebook and become a fan today!  We want to hear from you and we know you want to hear from us!  Get all the Vancouver circus info you need on our fan page!  See you there!

Leave a Comment December 7, 2009

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