Page 13 Summer 1988
Bobby
Mays Juggles Again On Lively New Videotape By
Bill Giduz
The
new video "Bobby May," captures the spirit of juggling as
well as
Its
secret lies in the collaboration of people who know the subject with a
juggler / film producer who knows his business. The producer,
Stewart Lippe from Tampa,
The
results give us a warm, authentic and definitive view of the American
juggling hero who thrilled international audiences from the 1920s
until his last performance in the late 1960s. May died in 1981, but
his juggling career and reputation will only be enhanced in Lippe's
film.
It
begins with May himself in a late 1970s interview explaining the
context of his early work in Vaudeville in the 1920s. Lippe had
interviewed him then during research for a film on the history of
vaudeville. Short clips of slapstick comedy, contortion and an amazing
Risley act set the stage. A quaint home-movie clip shows t-shirted May
juggling oversized clubs in his front yard. More clips follow his
progress to the stage of the La ScalIa opera house in Milan
and ice skating performances with the Ice Capades.
The
piece de resistance, however, is a high-quality seven-minute segment
of "The Juggling Fool" produced in 1938 by the Vitaphone
Corporation. Vitaphone produced numerous shorts of vaudeville acts
during that era, and Lippe found this one of May after an extensive
search. The highly contrived premise of the piece, May as a soda jerk
who can't hold a job because he's continually tossing things around,
doesn't dilute its historical value.
May's
voice and demeanor in his prime give a feeling for him unavailable in
written accounts of his career.
Dick
Franco, whose career begal1 through a close association with May,
talked about their friendship and explains May's "electric"
trick. A clip of Franco juggling on stage demonstrates the influence
May had on Franco's career. Besides the help he got from Franco, Lippe
said the film was produced with generous help from May's widow, Emily,
his son, Robert, and Brian Dube.
The
film shows May's considerable technical prowess - five ball runs with
shoulder throws, five ball shower, juggling three upside down in a
head stand, four clubs with another balanced on his head, creative
work with a hat, ball and cane, and amazing head rolls. The clips also
show that most of the tricks used by today's jugglers have roots that
go back at least as far as Bobby May.
It
winds up with May as an old man explaining his motivation for his
illustrious career. "Besides the act itself, I was fascinated
with juggling as a hobby. I really enjoyed doing it all my life."
This
superb film will now allow future
The
26-minute copy-protected film is available for $45 from Brian Dube;
NY, |
Stuart Lippe |