by Craig Browning » Nov 16th, '05, 14:17
The concept behind this bit goes back to the late 1800s and early 1900s (Vauldville) and was seen as a clown stunt. In the 80s (if I recall) Doug Malloy and a few others creative minds, started making some major improvements on the original idea that insure ease in operation, quality of construction (dependabilitiy), cleanliness/deceptivity, and most important -- SAFETY!
You MUST have some very strong legs and tummy strength to do this! In short, you'd best be the kind of person that has lots of energy, self-control, etc.
Doug Malloy is a very old friend and I can tell you, he lives his life on the edge and is always on the go. He's very athletic and "powerful" when it comes to body strength, which is why he can get as much of a lean as he gets in this bit.
There is another version (I forget who makes it)... if I recall it was a Danish performer I saw using it years ago, but he added to the gaff a small platform that was on a bellows type structure that would raise him up or lower him. When he did the lean, this accordian styled device would lean as well, creating a very interesting effect around the primary effect, so you may want to look around for footage on this... I believe it was a featured bit at FISM manyyears ago.