LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, BOYS AND GIRLS... welcome to the big top blog of Douglas McPherson, author of CIRCUS MANIA, the book described by Gerry Cottle as "A passionate and up-to-date look at the circus and its people."
Showing posts with label Big Kid Circus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Kid Circus. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Circus Posters - A Disappearing Art Form?





In an article that originally appeared in The Stage, Circus Mania author Douglas McPherson asks big top insiders about the changing face of circus advertising.


Posters have been the main form of circus advertising for as long as big tops have travelled the land. In the middle of the last century, brightly painted pictures of snarling lions and ornately made-up clowns whetted appetites for the arrival in town of Billy Smart’s or Chipperfields.

Today, animals have almost completely vanished from British circuses, and clowns have toned down their make-up to nearly nothing. In an increasingly online world, are posters also about to fade into history?

Paulo’s Circus is believed to be the first in the country, and probably the world, to have stopped using posters, along with leaflets and physical tickets, in a drive to go completely paperless.

“Our decision to stop using posters stemmed from a number of reasons. Chief among them, waste,” says showman Kenny Darnell Jr, whose family has been in the circus business for seven generations and traded under the Paulo’s brand for more than 120 years

“Posters aren’t reusable, they’re wasteful, they make a mess when fly posted and are often slapped onto anything sticky tape will cling to, just so the biller can be rid of them quickly. Personally, I was done with the whole thing.”

Darnell’s memories of billing – as putting up posters is known – are less than happy.

“It was hard work, traipsing around town all day, going shop to shop, asking the same question, ‘Can we pop a poster in your window?’. Rejection was part and parcel of it. Not every shop wants a circus display in their window and then there was the circus politics, other circuses tearing down your posters, and occasionally things getting a bit... physical. Tedious, wasteful and to be honest not a terribly dignified way to advertise.

“I knew there had to be a smarter, more efficient way. Surely circus could tap into this new market online?”

As proof of the power of purely online marketing, Paulo’s in 2024 sold 1000 tickets to a venue Darnell hadn’t even booked – he announced only the county and dates. “And yep, we sold out 14 shows in a row at that venue, two months later. That to me is the power of innovation.”


One reason circus posters were once so visible is a clause in the Town and County Planning Act that specifically exempts circuses and funfairs from needing planning permission to display advertising for limited periods. 

They need permission from property owners, but that has left some grey areas such as telephone poles where a poster may have served its purpose before the owner of the pole requests its removal.

Empty shops are another popular target. Billers have long perfected ‘door dropping’ by which posters attached to sticky tape are slid over the top of a locked glass door to hang down on the inside.

“I was rather skilled at that,” says Darnell. But in retrospect, he says, “I’d hazard a guess that it’s illegal. It certainly looks dodgy. Not a great look for the circus.”

Postering the wrong places can cause complaints from residents and sometimes leads to prosecution. In 2022, Exchange Events Ltd twice appeared at Liverpool Magistrates Court, fined £1500 and £2000, for illegally promoting Gandey’s circus.

Fly posting is a serious issue,” says Darnell. “I’d be in favour of stricter penalties, or even a licensing system to regulate poster usage. At least that way there’s accountability and some of the revenue could go towards cleaning up the mess left behind over the years, that many shows, us included at one point, have all contributed to.”

The circus industry's reliance on posters has declined over the past 20 years as online advertising and social media engagement grew.

When Martin Burton founded Zippos Circus 40 years ago, he distributed 5000 - 6000 posters per venue. Today it's around 2500. 

Although Burton says he lacks the courage to dispense with posters altogether, he believes they no longer catch the eye on a high street plastered with advertising, and foresees a day when they will disappear completely.

In another break with tradition, Burton has stopped buying local newspaper adverts, having noticed that nobody redeemed the discount codes anymore. Instead, he spends the money – and more – on social media ads, with a full time member of staff dedicated to online marketing

Another former mainstay of circus advertising that has fallen out of fashion is leaving piles of leaflets, with discount coupons, on the counters of shops and petrol stations. 

Since Covid, says Burton, “Nobody would pick them up.”


Big Kid Circus
, by contrast, still relies “heavily” on local newspaper advertising and believes that posters will always have a role to play alongside online marketing.

“From our market research, posters still have a big impact. People still expect to see them,” says artistic director Julia Kirilova. “We are a business which depends a lot on feelings and nostalgia. Everyone knows circus and has a distinct memory of it. Our job is to find a way to make them remember that feeling, whether that is through a short video clip on TikTok or a poster.” 

While some big top bosses may welcome a future without the chore of billing, circus historian Dr Steve Ward regards circus posters as an important part of our cultural heritage.

“As a child growing up in the 1950s, circus posters were very much a part of everyday life,” Ward says. “They seemed to be everywhere – shop windows, telegraph poles, walls, fence panels etc. Brightly coloured and often quite garish, they offered entry into another world of excitement, danger, and fun.”

In his book Nineteenth Century Circus Poster Art, Ward recounts how innovations in printing technology during that time saw posters evolve from a list of acts to a fully illustrated art form.

“As the saying goes, a picture paints a thousand words,” says Ward. “The second half of the 19th century could be referred to as the early golden age of the circus with some very fine posters to match.”

Since then, poster art has evolved with the circus itself, from paintings of headline acts in the mid-20th century to photographic images, and the more abstract designs used by some contemporary companies. 

“Social media cannot replace the impact of a brightly coloured circus poster that elicits a feeling of childhood nostalgia in many people,” Ward concludes. “For me, circus poster art will continue to adapt to new trends, as it has done so over the last 250 years, but it will survive. It will be a sad day for us all if it does not.”


Saturday, 7 March 2026

Dinosaurs in a Circus! Big Kid Circus hits the road with Jurassic

 


Lions and tigers may have disappeared from Britain's big tops, but this year Big Kid Circus is parading bigger beasts: Dinosaurs!

Last year, Big Kid staged probably the most visually-striking travelling circus show in the country with Kingdom of Kong, featuring a 40-foot-tall animatronic ape.

This year, they're back on the road with a brand new show: Jurassic. And as these pics show, it looks like it's a monster!





Sunday, 5 October 2025

Review of Kingdom of Kong by Big Kid Circus - the best looking big top show in Britain

 


Salesmen have an old saying: sell the sizzle not the sausage. It’s not the product that people buy, it’s the feeling that the product gives them. The buzz of excitement. The lift out of everyday mundanity.

That goes especially for nonessential buys. And doubly especially in tough times, when nonessentials are the first things people stop buying.

It’s something the circus has always understood, providing affordable glitz and glamour. A cheap night out for all the family, often in areas where other family nights out may be in short supply.

“In a recession,” Zippos founder Martin Burton said in my book Circus Mania, “when more people are holidaying in the UK and not buying that new car, they want to take the kids out for a treat, and a trip to the circus is an inexpensive family treat.”

But that doesn’t mean circuses are guaranteed an audience. Especially in the current economic situation when profits are squeezed between trying to keep prices affordable while costs such as the diesel the shows move and run on are higher than they have ever been.

“I think we’re all surviving,” says Julia Kirilova of Big Kid Circus. “People are cautious about how they spend their money.”

For its 20th anniversary edition, however, Big Kid Circus has cut no corners. With its show Kingdom of Kong, it has done the opposite, sparing no expense to present what I have no doubt is the best-looking circus production to tour the UK for a long time.

Photo by Andrew Payne

At its centre is Kong himself, a specially designed and built 30-foot-tall animatronic ape who emerges snarling and rolling his head from the back of the stage before lifting a contortionist who performs, Fay Wray-style, in the palm of his giant paw.

The solid floor performance area looks more like a jungle clearing than a circus ring, surrounded by giant flora and fauna that also extends up the king poles of the big top.

Atmospheric lighting adds to the jungle atmosphere, as does the costuming, dancing and a soundtrack that mixes new and traditional African sounds into a heart-quickening brew.

Before anyone even does anything, Big Kid is, in short, selling the sizzle more than any other show on the road.

“We don’t just want to offer a traditional circus show,” says Kirilova. “We want to add a storyline, and still be attractive to the kids. We’re not going as far as Cirque du Soleil where nobody knows what world they’re in.”

I would say they have got the balance just right. The storyline about a couple of explorers – the clowns – trying to steal a diamond from an African tribe is pitched at kids level. In the style of a pantomime, perhaps. But no one goes to the circus for Chekhov (hopefully) and the story does its job in stringing the acts together in an accessible way without boring the adults too much.

But what of the sausage behind the sizzle?

Even Cirque du Soleil, for all its grand presentation, knows that the circus lives and dies on its acts – what Soleil calls its “acrobatic skeleton.”

Here again, Big Kid delivers.

Some expected big top fare – foot juggling, hair hanging, rollerskating, Wheel of Death – is lifted by the African dressing. An aerial straps guy dressed as Tarzan is a perhaps obvious but nonetheless smile-inducing nod to the setting. 

But there are some more unusual stand-out acts, too.

Photo by Andrew Payne

First is a man performing on an unsupported ladder. A really impressive and engaging one-person act.

A troupe of human tower acrobats are equally good. When a three-man tower falls forward like a toppled tree, it’s a good heart-stopping circus moment, smoothly resolved when the performers land with perfectly performed forward rolls.

Perhaps the most original act is a large troupe mix of basketball and springboard. But strong competition comes from an extremely rubbery 'alien contortionist' who seems capable of bending his joints in ways that should be impossible.

The clowns, meanwhile, deliver a traditional chase through the audience while spraying copious amounts of water from a pressure washer. There’s nothing like a good dousing with water to get an audience squealing and screaming and knowing they’ve had a good time.

The finale is a Globe of Death, but with a difference: it’s the UK’s only all-female team, which was painstakingly assembled by Kirilova with performers from all over the world.

The gender of the motorcyclists may not make much difference as viewed from ringside. And that’s kind of Kirilova’s point. She plans to take the act onto Britain’s Got Talent with a view to normalising the idea of women taking part in a traditionally male-dominated act.

“An all-female globe shouldn’t be a novelty,” she says.

Photo: Andrew Payne

The circus was at the forefront of female empowerment long before feminism was a word. The Victorian circus featured women lifting weights and swinging on the trapeze at a time when their activities were strictly curtailed in other avenues of society.

Big Kid Circus continues that tradition by including the only female Globe of Death rider from Iran

“I think that’s so symbolic and so special, for a country like Iran where it still has its strict regulations around women and perceptions around how women should be,” says Kirilova. “She’s breaking all sorts of boundaries. Something like this would never be accepted in Iran. They don’t even allow women to perform on stage, never mind something as extreme as that.”

Kingdom of Kong is a show that could run and run. But in the spirit of continually moving forward, Big Kid is retiring the big ape at the end of this season. Next year they’ll be back with the Jurassic Circus featuring giant animatronic dinosaurs.

I can’t wait!


Tuesday, 8 April 2025

Big Kid Circus goes ape (big time!)


With its jungle scenery and a contortionist performing in the palm of a 30-foot-tall animatronic ape, could Kingdom of Kong, the new show by Big Kid Circus be the best looking show touring the UK this year?

Big Kid is celebrating its 20th anniversary, and with Kingdom of Kong, directed by Julia Kirilova, it proves why circus will never die: the big top's perpetual ability to introduce new, never-before-seen spectacle.

With a storyline in which the clowns are explorers trying to steal a diamond from an African tribe, the show also includes the world's only all-female Globe of Death motorcyclists and a very fresh-looking basketball-meets-springboard act.

Atmospheric music and lighting, and a view through ringside flora that transforms the performance area into a jungle clearing, create a fully immersive experience with a completely different appearance to traditional images of sawdust and canvas.

And if the above picture doesn't make you want to buy a ticket, what would???

For venues click here.







 

Saturday, 23 March 2024

Big Kid Circus presents Europe's only all-female Globe of Death


"For the first time ever, in any circus in the UK..." Those are the words you want to hear, bellowed through the air in a big top

The new, the original, the unique. Those are the commodities that the circus has always thrived on. That is what will get you rolling up to a big top to see: something you can't see anywhere else.

In this case, ringmaster Kevin Kevin (yep, he was so good they named him twice) was introducing this year's new season attraction to Big Kid Circus: Europe's only all-female Globe of Death riders.




The globe of death is itself nothing new. In some recent reviews, I complained of seeing too many of them, with one closing almost every circus.

But there are ways to refresh the act, with bikes leaping over the globe at Circus Extreme, Circus Zyair and Planet Circus (read my review here).

The all-female trio at Big Kid provides another welcome twist, and one likely to generate something that circuses depend on: news coverage.

My preview of the Daring Dames Festival - Europe's only all-female circus festival looked at how some circus disciplines such as clowning and strongman have traditionally been almost exclusively male preserves - and how a new generation of women is now venturing into those areas.

The Globe of Death is definitely one such male dominated arena, making Big Kid's women motorcyclists remarkable.

The troupe comprises Julia from the UK, Vanessa from Brazil and Ronica from Iraq.

You can see their death-defying display on Big Kid Circus' next stop in Brent Cross.








 

Tuesday, 28 November 2023

Big Crowds for Big Kid Circus




A great shot of a big crowd piling into the Big Kid Circus' big top on the last stop of their season in Glasgow, beneath a sunny autumnal sky.

 

Thursday, 21 May 2020

Big Kid Circus Cake marks 91 years in the big top for circus star Doreen Enos



Circus star at 91
Here's the cake with which circus star Doreen Enos celebrated her 91st birthday yesterday (May 20). Enos, known to her circus friends as Oma - the German word for grandmother - blew out the candles in the big top on Morecambe seafront where Big Kid Circus is currently in lockdown.

The cake was donated by one of the local residents who have supported the 35-strong circus company while it is unable to open its doors. You can help by watching their show, Cirque de Cuba online here.

And in circus summers gone by.