Page 7 Winter 1987-88
Ignatov In
Form Again In
by Jim Neff
Five
members of the
They
were ecstatic when Sergei Ignatov's name appeared in the program.
The Russian virtuoso whose 11 ring juggle astounded American
jugglers on a tour of the
A
security guard arranged for the Buffalo Jugglers to speak with
Ignatov during the show. They presented him with the IJA hat and he
put it on.
The
first question he asked was the whereabouts of Anthony Gatto and
Kris Kremo. He had worked with Gatto in Germany about three years
ago and wanted to meet both jugglers again.
He
said he is fully recovered from surgery to repair a neck injury
suffered several years ago and is juggling again full
time. Ignatov then had to leave for his own performance, but
promised to talk to the group again after the show.
His
10 minute routine was electrifying. A written description can hardly
do justice to his smoothness and finesse. He runs into the ring
juggling five clubs, then sets them down one at a time while still
juggling. He picked up four large orange balls and kicked a fifth
ball into the pattern from behind. Tricks with five include a
pirouette, high and low patterns, shower and multiplex. He then
cascaded seven.
He
set six rings on the floor in a stand and put a seventh on his neck.
He grabbed the six from the floor two at a time, pirouetted, then
went into seven by pulling the one off his neck. He did two half
pirouettes with seven and finished with a smooth five ring pancake
juggle.
He returned to his five clubs and kicked them up with his toe into a cascade. Effortless back crosses followed. He then did four clubs, making smooth transitions from fast triple spins to slow singles. The routine included multiplex tosses of four as well.
His
polished three club routine included back crosses, Albert throws and
a beautiful transition from very fast triple spins to flats in the
blink of an eye.
For
his finale, he juggled seven rings, pulled two more out of a belt
holster and ended by pulling all nine rings down over his head.
The
He
said his daily routine at the Moscow Circus includes a two-hour
session of stretching and yoga each morning, an hour's jog and three
hours of juggling in the afternoon.
There
are no organized juggling groups in the USSR and no commercial sales
of props. Ignatov makes his own clubs, and didn't like the popular
European Custom club he was shown. He said the handle was too hard and
it was not balanced in the right spot. His clubs balance exactly in
the middle.
Ignatov
said he can do 10 rings very well, but doesn't perform it because of
the uncertain lighting in most arenas. He said he is working on
polishing up 11 again. The neck injury set him back to the point
where he believes it will take another two years of practice to regain
his old form.
When
asked if he would like to attend an IJA convention, he expressed
interest, but said it would be a government decision.
The
Moscow Circus will be coming to the |
Jim Neff with Sergei Ignatov (Ginny Rose photo). |