Page 18 Fall 1990
Darn Good & Funny TEAM
SHOWS SOMETHING ALL TOGETHER DIFFERENT by Bill Giduz
The
Oklahoma juggling trio of Darn Good & Funny earned the only
standing ovation of
So
the crowd was pleased, but not overly impressed, as Kevin Holman and
Karen and Paul Phariss danced through a club routine between a stage
curiously defined by six upright white poles.
But
then the music changed appropriately to Randy Newman's "I Love
L.A.," and the group started working the poles into a routine
unlike anything the audience had ever seen. They were constantly in
motion to the upbeat tune, smiling and dancing playfully around the
poles as they handed them back and forth in creative ways. But when
Holman and Paul Phariss started juggling two balls each along with one
end of a stick that they jointly held. the audience went wild. The
excitement of that simple new juggling concept built into another
routine where balls were passed through hula hoops. The final trick
was the three jugglers passing 10 hula hoops with Kevin standing at
point passing ultimate throws with each hand while his partners tosses
on the every-other count. The routine climaxed in a spontaneous and
welldeserved standing ovation from appreciative viewers.
The
only other team contender, the Raspyni Brothers, had presented a clean
and professional routine, but it was little changed from what they had
done in previous IJA championships. There was no question who won the
audience vote. The judges confirmed that selection shortly thereafter
and Darn Good & Funny became the 1990 IJA Teams Champions. Paul
Phariss said the group had taken to heart a message they heard at each
of the nine previous conventions he and Karen attended. "People
are always saying. 'We want to see something new, something
different.' So in planning this routine we consciously set about to
find something new to do."
The
idea for using a pole as the jointly held third object in a
twoperson ball cascade pattern developed during the long hours the
trio spends "playing" in their home gymnasium in Norman,
Okla. Holman said they began with
the idea of two people juggling two balls tethered j together with a
rope. "But that wasn't very visual and we saw we could do the
same thing with a rigid object." he continued. "So we tried
a devil stick, but it was too short. That's when Karen remembered we
had all these 4-foot pieces of PVC pipe that support our backdrop.
During
several months of playing with the new concept. they developed several
variations presented in their routine. As
Paul and Kevin faced each other in the ball and pole cascade,
Karen stole the
pole and replaced it with another one. They tossed out two balls
as she put another pole into the pattern. They flipped the pole
as they juggled it.
and they held two poles still side by side to form a slanted trough
that they rolled balls down. The audience gasped and cheered to
greet each novel
move. Juggling archivist Karl-Heinz Ziethen said he knew of
no other juggling troupe in history that had ever used this
technique.
The
visual grace of hula hoops concluded the well-developed
A act. They combined many different variations of juggling hula
hoops and
balls, including one in which Karen and Paul juggled three hoops
between their two downstage hands while passing five balls with their
other hands and Kevin. Karen said, "That was the toughest part
of the act because we were dealing with different objects,
different hands and different
directions!"
They
said the pole juggle is relatively simple to learn, but
requires perfectly synchronized cascades between the two participants.
And while it had never been seen on an IJA stage before, many
viewers have certainly by now taken it back to their own performing
venues. The originators said they don't mind other folks using it. as
long as the routine is not simply duplicated, but used in a new context.
The
group had competed in the IJA's team championships for the first time
in 1988 and finished fourth. They were pleased at
the time but decided to sit out a year and put their creative
energy to work. "It gave us the motivation to work on something
new," said Karen,
"You can get away with the same old stuff just doing
library shows back in
Oklahoma, but the IJA championships is a great impetus to
create new material."
The
three have juggled together since 1982, following Karen's organization
of the Oklahoma Jugglers group. Karen and Paul
performed previously together. doing mime and juggling, while Kevin
had a solo magic and juggling show. They quickly found they enjoyed
club passing together and began fashioning an act that still
tours the state.
Their show includes a slow-motion mime race, Kevin's magic,
a juggling piece with many different props, and a finale of comedy
and club passing between Kevin on a six-foot unicycle and Karen
standing on
Paul's shoulders.
They have been trying to develop bookings outside their home state and hope that the new IJA championships title will help do that.
All
photos by David Carper |