Page 30 March 1983
Groundhog
Gets Icy Nose in Atlanta!
A
groundhog peeping out of its hole in Atlanta on Sunday, February 6,
would've
The
states of Washington, Colorado, New York, Pennsylvania and other
far-away places were represented at the event, which was sponsored by
the IJA-affiliated Atlanta Jugglers Association. President Toni
Shifalo and more than a dozen AJA members organized the proceedings
and opened their homes to the out of town guests.
The
private school gymnasium in which the festival occurred was
overflowing with jugglers and about 300 members of the public who
attended the competitions Saturday afternoon. Seated in a semi-circle,
the crowd cheered 13 competitors vying with four minute routines to
win the titles of "Most Spectacular," "Most
Incredible," and "Most Stupendous" jugglers.
Three
judges, an Atlanta Constitution newspaper sports columnist, director
of the Atlanta Arts Festival and a promotional director for a nearby
resort, were chosen specifically for their lack of juggling knowledge.
They
chose Benji Hill of Thomasville. North Carolina as "Most
Incredible," John R. Mallery of San Mateo, California as
"Most Stupendous," and Larry Vaksman of Philadelphia,
It
was the third straight year Vaksman took home a "Punxsutawney
Phil" trophy, but was the first time the other two winners had
ever attended the Groundhog Day Festival.
With
his usual flawless precision, Vaksman presented combination tricks
such as
Hill
presented a flashy stage routine, including three club back crosses,
five rings, four hatchets and three long-handled axes.
The
16-year-old high school student said he has been juggling for 3 1/2
years, and has won a statewide talent contest.
Mallery
won for a comedy routine which included manipulation of a devil stick
and juggling three furry, bewhiskered clubs. He introduced the
home-made clubs as his cats Sparky, Fluffy and Frederick, then
commanded them to perform tricks for the crowd. Among other feats,
Fluffy did a tail stand and Sparky successfully completed the famous
"Leap of Death."
Mallery
said he and his wife, Roseanne, have been street juggling all over the
country as the "Juggling Gibertinis" since last June.
Others
competing were:
David
Lowe of Atlanta, a winner last year, who juggled Frisbees, six rings,
cigar boxes, clubs and did kickups and pirouettes with a devil stick.
Robert
Calloway, 'The Rhythmic Juggling Machine," from Commerce, Georgia,
who danced three balls around the stage to musical accompaniment.
Tim
Nolan of Elizabeth City, North Carolina, who performed a three ball
comedy routine, five and six balls in a half-shower pattern, and did two
ping pong balls with his mouth.
Alabama's
Bill Boulding left the floor littered with props as he juggled and
disposed of sharp implements, hand grenades, baseball bats, plates and
bowling balls.
Henry
Slack of Atlanta, "H. Uggler," presented a comic skit about
"Winning Juggling in Five Lessons. "
Tom
Roos, from Bronston, Kentucky, demonstrated head rolls with a lacrosse
ball, juggled five balls with a neck catch and did some fast cigar box
work.
Pat
Cox of Charlotte, North Carolina, performed a musical routine with three
and four clubs and five rings.
Lorenzo
Caruso of Gainesville, Florida, juggled objects on his skateboard,
including four clubs, seven balls and five rings.
The
Jongleur Jugglers from Gainesville, Florida, (Mike Stillwell, Yvonne
Wetherell and John Creveling) presented the only team act. Juggling
clubs, they performed takeaways, dropbacks and comic pass-arounds.
Louis Zeller of Marshall, North Carolina, "Captain Slow," another former trophy winner, put on four minutes of foolishness. Besides emptying jumper cables and a hammer out of a tote bag, he juggled three Cheez-It crackers and passed out a deck of cards to the crowd. |
Henry Slack gives the crowd a unique and humorous lesson in three ball technique. |
Winners were (l-r) Larry Vaksman, Benji Hill, and John Mallery. |