HIGHLIGHT: Interview with Cal McCrystal

We sat down with the director of ¡Carpa! Cal McCrystal who has worked on 11 productions of Giffords.

How did you first get involved in Giffords 11 productions ago?

My friend John Walton was appearing in the 2011 Giffords show War & Peace. He suggested me as director of the 2012 show. Nell and Toti asked me to come see the show and have a chat with them. There was an instant chemistry and they offered me the job there and then!

What was it like to collaborate with founder Nell?

Nell was the best producer I have ever worked with. She was trusting, wise and supportive. Everyone could see she was completely dedicated to the circus, and she poured all her love and energy into it. Nell was our inspiration. In Giffords, she created something beautiful, and we all strive to live up to her passion and artistry.

What is it about Giffords that keeps you coming back for more?

Before I arrived, Giffords changed directors every year. After my first show, The Saturday Book, Nell saw I shared her vision and asked me to stay on. During the time she was ill it was an advantage to have people she could trust around her, looking after the wonderful world she had built. It’s a real creative challenge to make a brand new Giffords show every year, but I love it. For me, it’s the time I can let my imagination go crazy.

How is Giffords different from any other Circus?

It’s a very strong brand. Beautiful, English, sometimes nostalgic. Giffords is more than the sum of its parts. It’s the storytelling, the aesthetic, the attention to detail, the family atmosphere, the gorgeous estates or commons where we pitch our tent. The other thing that makes Giffords different is the theatricality of the productions. In some ways we are an old-school traditional circus but the shows always have a strong comic narrative and a touch of pathos. This gives us a contemporary edge.

This year’s show ¡Carpa! is Mexican themed, can you tell us a bit more about how this decision was made?

Nell usually had an idea for a theme and would discuss its potential with me before a decision was made. We had talked about various ideas before she died so there are still some ‘in the bank’, so to speak. The idea for this year’s show came from the wonderful Lil Rice. Lil is Nell’s niece and was producing Giffords for the last couple of years. She had spent some time in Mexico with her sister, Kitty. They both thought a Mexican theme would be inspiring and I agreed. I had worked in Mexico several times, and for ¡Carpa! we are bringing over my favorite Mexican actress, Adriana Duch. Adriana was brilliant in a comedy play I directed at the National Theatre of Mexico some years ago.

Do you work from a script or more of a storyboard or is the show improvised and structured during rehearsals?

After the formulation of the idea, some decisions about content must be made far in advance of rehearsals so that designer takis and the Art and Costume teams can get a head start. I generally do a first draft running order taking into account a long list of considerations. For example, how much time a performer might need between their acts, keeping space between comedy numbers, likewise with aerial acts. I also need to think about putting the acts in a narrative order that builds momentum. Also taking into account rigging time and how often the carpet needs to come in and out etc. The fun part for me begins in rehearsal. I have always weaved a narrative of some kind through the show. It’s a delicate operation as Circus artists are not actors and whatever story I am telling needs to play to their strengths. Much of the creation of the story happens in rehearsal after I have got to know everyone a little. It’s always a gift to work with Tweedy, who comes to rehearsal with dozens of great ideas. He is a joy to be around and endlessly creative.


How do you go about finding all the artists who make up the company?

Gifford’s has a great reputation in the circus world and many artists write to us asking to be considered. Kelly Rumbelow puts feelers out to agents and between us we whittle down the shortlist to our ideal company drawn from performers from all over the world. Although the tour is hard work for everyone, we often have artists asking us if they can come back the following year. As I must make a completely different show every year, this isn’t possible but every now and again we will invite artists who have more to give back for another show.

Can you tell us a bit about some of the characters in this year’s show?

The show is set around the time of the Mexican Revolution, and we will reflect the society that existed at that time. Adriana will play our high-status grande dame- Doña Rosa Francisca Juana Margarita María Magdalena de los Querubines Limantour del Rincón de la Calle Jiménez de Martínez y Rodríguez Cabeza de Vaca del Corral Florido! She will be keeping her servants in check and making sure that Tweedy doesn’t get up to too much mischief. She also has a couple of beautiful daughters looking for romance. We couldn’t make a Mexican story without caballeros and this year we are welcoming back one of the world’s greatest vaulting acts, The Donnerts. This daring Hungarian equestrian family were last seen at Giffords in Xanadu.

As the first concept to be fully developed without Nell, how does ¡Carpa! keep Nell’s vision for Giffords alive? What do you think she would make of it?

Nell was (and is) my muse and I know she would love the theme for this year’s show. She was always encouraged my ideas and was wonderfully generous in her praise when she saw the audience reactions to the finished show. When you have a close and loving working friendship with someone for 10 years there is a symbiosis. Nell assembled a great team, tried, and trusted though the years. We are keeping the circus going for her. I know she would be proud.

Giffords is always full of surprises, without giving too much away, is there anything particularly special or unusual about this year’s show that you could tell us about to whet our appetite?

One of the key characters in the show this year is a divine deity. I think we perform minor miracles in all our shows but this year we may have some special help!

The circus will be in Barrington, Burford from 21 July – 1 August.

HIGHLIGHT: Interview with Tweedy the Clown

We sat down to interview some of the performers at Giffords Circus. Gifford Circus’ brand new show ¡Carpa!, the company’s brand new Mexican themed extravaganza that is returning to Oxfordshire this summer. The word ¡Carpa! originates from the Spanish word ‘tent’ and refers to a removable canvas roofed structure used for a travelling theatre, much like a circus.

How long have you been performing in Giffords Circus and how did it start? 

2022 will be my 16th show with Giffords Circus. Nell and I were friends already, having met through circus when Nell was a groom on another circus, and I asked her for a job.

What was it like to collaborate with founder Nell?

Great! It worked very well because our approaches were very different, hers was very serious and artistic whereas I was quite silly, and we just naturally complimented each other.

How did you get to be a clown? Did you have any kind of formal training?

I didn’t have any formal training when I decided I wanted to be a clown. It was very difficult to find out how to be a clown because there wasn’t the internet back then to look things up, so I applied to a few circus schools and I got accepted onto a clown course at Fool Time (which is now Circomedia in Bristol) and I was saving up to pay for it by working as a Red Coat at Butlins, but sadly the school went bust!

So to research and find out more about clowning I sent out a questionnaire to about 50 circuses and I got about two back! One from Cirque du Soleil (which I hadn’t heard of at the time!!!!) and the other was from Martin Burton at Zippo’s Circus, who said the best way to learn about clowning was from other clowns and in front of a live audience. He also offered me a job as a Publicity Clown, which involved handing out leaflets in the streets and doing school and hospital shows. This was when I was 19 years old.

In the first week at Zippo’s the clown got stuck in traffic and there was no one else who could do the act, so I volunteered and said “I’ll do it!” and I did the show. Martin caught the end of the second half of the show and offered me the job as his understudy. The following year I became part of Zippo & Co, a clown troupe, the rest is history!

You are a big favourite with audiences, and very interactive – how would you describe your relationship to your audience?

Empathetic! In the circus, you see many people doing amazing feats and acts, so the clown acts as a device that the audience can relate to bridging the gap between two worlds, the world of the circus and the real world. I have a go at things and mess it up and the audience can relate as they think that’s what would happen to them if they gave it go! But in the end, I always pull it out the bag.

You did an incredibly dangerous ladder act last year in The Hooley, how hard is it to balance putting yourself at risk whilst still making people laugh?

I don’t find it that difficult because I’ve been doing it for so long and it’s also a technique of building up tension and the release of the tension gets the laugh as well as the silliness. Two things that can induce the laughter within the stunt type routine that I quite often do.

Who is your character in this year’s show? What’s his story?

I am always Tweedy in Giffords Circus, I’m never fully immersed in the show, I’m always the outsider.

Giffords is very much an ensemble company, but everyone gets to show their particular skills, can you tell us a bit about some of the other acts we can expect to see this year?

“Show their particulars! Oh Matron!”

And you are a bit of an all-rounder – can you tell us which skills you have that you think are your best?

I like doing lots of things so I’m good at lots, but I never spend enough time doing just one thing to be really good at it like the other circus acts, so my best skill is being an allrounder to be honest! I’m also quite observant and quick witted as if anything goes wrong, I have to be straight in there filling in or distracting the audience!

‘Running away with the circus’ is such a romantic notion but I imagine it’s really hard work. How would you describe life on the road with Giffords Circus?

Well for a start I had to catch a bus as it was too far to run! So that wasn’t very romantic or glamourous, stuck on a coach for eight hours to London. But I did meet my lovely wife Sharon at the circus and had a wedding in the big top!

Life on the road can be very up and down as you work really hard and sometimes in really difficult conditions such as the weather, but you have the most amazing community that you live with and such an amazing camaraderie.

Of all the Giffords shows you’ve been in do you have a favourite?

No I don’t have a favourite, Moon Songs in 2015 was a highlight it was the one where I was shot out of a cannon and had to catch a rope in mid-air! I also had great fun playing Magda the fortune teller that year too.

Give us three reasons why everyone must see ¡Carpa! this year?

It’s a completely unique experience like no-other circus you’ve seen before! It incorporates live theatre, music and circus.

The circus will be in Barrington, Burford from 21 July – 1 August.