Herman Ootics, the Clown: History, Culture, and Clowning

This event has already taken place. Find a full list of upcoming events here.


When: Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 6:00pm - 8:00pm

Where: Bard Graduate Center
38 W. 86th St.


The whimsical reference to hermeneutics in this program title is itself no whimsy. Instead, it introduces a challenge to cozy cultural narratives about “the clown.” The various and intrinsically related clichés—clown as kiddy favorite, sad clown, happy clown, scary clown, and that academic pet, the trickster—have little to do with the work of a comedic performer. In this lecture, David Carlyon will dig into those faith-based clichés to examine how clown and culture influence each other.

David Carlyon was a Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus clown, after the Army and Berkeley Law School and before acting in New York and acquiring a Ph.D. from Northwestern University. He has published scholarly work on performance, 19th-century culture and politics, and Shakespeare. He wrote the award-winning Dan Rice: The Most Famous Man You’ve Never Heard Of, and is on the Speakers Bureau of the New York Council for the Humanities.



Buy tickets/get more info now

Add to Calendar


See other events in these categories:

Browse By Category (254)


Browse By Location


Browse Off-Broadway


Get The Curriculum

Our free weekly email with smart things to do in NYC


Event Search



Find an Event by Date


Follow us on facebook