The
venue for the 13th annual European Convention was the
university in the attractive old town of
Oldenburg - the first one
at a university since
Brussels
five years ago. The organization was, literally, more
professional than any previous European
convention, even down to the doors being "minded"
not by volunteers but by students. The symbol for admission
this time was a plastic yo-yo.
With
so many people attending it is not surprising that at times
the two juggling halls were too crowded. But this is not
just a reflection of numbers. The type of juggling done is
now overwhelmingly club juggling and passing, which is the
most space-occupying type. Rings seem on the verge of
extinction, and when someone other than a complete beginner
is doing balls, it's five or seven of them. Hats, cigar
boxes and devil sticks have never figured much at European
conventions, but for some reason diabolo continues to expand
in popularity rapidly both in the skills exhibited and
numbers performing.
Accommodation
in university residences was limited, but was supplemented
by the simple method of putting up to 25 camp beds in large
classrooms to create a number of dormitories - an obvious
idea, but one which requires goodwill on the part of
authorities.
There
were no campsites near the university, but the sports field
served the same purpose well. There was plenty of space
there to pitch your own tent, and a number of army-style
tents were erected for those without their own gear. All
camping was free, and the running track lights were left on
at night so people could see their way around.
The
registration was about $35 US, maintaining the European
tradition of affordability. But this can only be achieved
through outside support, usually by the local city, in the
form of free facilities and / or financial grants. The
allocation of local funds, loss of the use of sports
facilities for a few days and one
day blockade of the town center by games and parade
are additional prices to the local citizenry.
While
European jugglers have come to expect financial support,
there was a fuss this year over where it came from.
Contributions from a local
bank were widely unpopular, and a vote of thanks to them at
the games received a chorus of boos.
Another
area of financial concern was the Public Show. This
year some people took exception to the fact that the
convention paid some performers to attend, considering it
contrary to the general spirit of the convention. The
post-convention meeting showed a majority against payment of
performers, but this may be irrelevant because there may not
be any more money to pay performers and the future of the
Public Show itself is in doubt. An auditorium to seat the
2,000 jugglers now to be expected at a European convention
is a rarity, let alone the 4,500 who went to the public show
in
Oldenburg
.
The
talent at the Public Show
was sensational. Peter Davison opened the show with
his three and five ball routines. A full range of juggling
skills then followed, including the bizarre "suckerman,"
who juggled three rubber plungers and stuck them all over
his oiled body. For obvious reasons, the organizers included
an East German
act, Axel Damje, who performed four torches on a giraffe
unicycle. Michiel Hesseling and Jean-Michel
Pare showed off their street show, which included comic club
passing, Hesseling picking up from four balls to five, and
Pare leaping from one to another of a progressively
taller series of unicycles.
Koscel
and Koscmann started with a
slapstick routine, but got more applause for a
wonderful club passing act that built to a climax of passing
nine clubs while each balanced on free-standing ladders.
Ignatov
was the finale act. In the gym he had shown an 11 ring
flash, but the lighting and ceiling height at the Public
Show only allowed nine. He also did five club back crosses
and seven balls, the kind of numerical fireworks we've come
to expect from Soviet stars. He had some problems kicking up
from four clubs into five, which he does by stamping down hard
on the head of the club and flicking the handle
up into the air. He also appeared to have some
problems handling the thunderous ovation at the end of his
act. He seemed unused to such adulation, and decided to
repeat his three club routine as an encore. At the end the
applause was even louder, and so he did his three clubs
again!
While
Ignatov topped the show, perhaps Airjazz stole it. Their two
routines, "Traveling" and "Poles," were
breathtaking, elevating object manipulation from
mere juggling into dance.
The
Sunday business meeting raised the discussion of where to
hold next year's convention, and of who was paid for what at
this year's convention. The question of people videotaping
activity in the gym was raised at the same time as Ignatov
stood by videotaping the meeting. |