Cirkus Bambino
Daily life of a small family circus
27 May 2021
Dad, mom, and six children together - a small family cirkus Bambino - come to Sweden from Germany on tour every year. I started to photograph them in 2010 and since then do it every year. Here is a story of a family circus daily life.
I don’t remember exactly when I put my eye on this circus. There are many of them around the city during summertime. I have had an idea to make some sort of story about circus life for a long time. At some moment, I gathered my guts and came to ask if I can photograph there. It was 2010, and since then, I photograph this circus each year it comes to Sweden.
Stationary circuses in Europe exist only in very big cities, and most circuses are travelling ones. Circus Bambino is a small family circus from eastern Germany travels from April until October around southern Sweden. It consists of a mother, father and their six children. Sometimes they have also other artists or relatives.
Circus Bambino gives one show every day. Depending on city size, it stays there from one day up to a week, moving from one city part to another. The show is made for children, but some jokes are pretty adult. The main line of the show has changed quite slightly during all these years; the only thing that changes is the performers. When I started to photograph, Billy, the father, was participating in almost all the numbers. However, each year kids take a bigger and bigger part of the show, and their tricks become more complicated.
A circus caravan is a reasonably large number of different cars. There are two main trucks, each with two trailers: two living carriages with a kitchen/living room and parents bedroom, a carriage with horses and the main entrance to the circus, which also serves as a freight car for folding the tent. Another truck contains a shower and Kevin's (the eldest son) bedroom. There are also several passenger cars with houses on wheels trailers. For many years all trucks were driven by only one driver - the father of the family - Billy. Now children have grown up and can also drive all cars. Yet, moving the circus from one place to another means several trips each time. Each year the number of cars increases - kids grow and moves out from the living trail to their own houses on wheels.
When the trucks have been transported, all the trailers are immediately put in the right places to set up the tent, the braces of which are attached to the trailers.
The tent is always set up in the morning by the children. They also install the arena and chairs for the spectators. It takes about a couple of hours to set up and assemble the tent. After that, before the performance, everyone goes about their business. Children usually play, sometimes rehearse.
All responsibilities in the circus are divided between family members:
- Billy drives a truck and operates a loading crane on one of the trucks.
- Kevin, Zasia and Vivian (before she left the circus) are in charge of the tent and its contents.
- Lui looks after the horses.
- Jean-Claude and Stephen collect a small inventory.
- Ariane hangs up and collects posters.
Posters are displayed in each city a couple of days before the circus arrives at a new location.
Usually, the stopping place is a parking lot in front of a large store. In the same stores, people can buy tickets in advance. Sometimes the circus stops in farm fields or parks if agreed with the municipality. Some municipalities don't allow small circuses to stay on their land. The performance is designed for children; usually, the audience is families with children under ten.
The season starts in early April and, if the weather permits, lasts until mid-October, early November. The journey begins with the arrival of the circus in Malmö by ferry from Lübeck. There are never performances in Malmö because of very high land rental prices, and the circus immediately goes to neighbouring cities. The closer to the middle of the season, the further the circus moves away from the southern coast. In the middle of summer, the movement begins in the opposite direction.
In one season, circus Bambino travels around 70 cities and villages, staying in one place for 1 to 3 days.
Probably the most fantastic thing is the energy with which the show is done. Despite the everyday repetition, it does not look like it is overdone; on the contrary, it seems like all the actors enjoy what they do. Half an hour before the show starts, the lights lit in the marquee and on the circus entrance, which is made of the track trail, music starts to play, and the popcorn machine begins to work. Billy, in his trailer, makes clown makeup for himself and Jan-Clod - they open the show. After that, Billy smokes a cigarette and counts the number of people who came to see the show. He does it through a gap in a curtain. Ariane starts the show as a compere.
Travel preparations begin immediately after the end of the show if it's time to move the circus. First, they remove the chairs and arena, then the tent. The tent legs and chairs fold into a trailer. The tent itself is folded up and loaded by a crane into the back of a truck. At the same time, inventory is collected, the ponies are put into the trailer, and the fence of their corral is removed. The troupe tries to carefully clean the parking lot to get permission to stay here again in the future.
The circus Bambino gives the last show of the season somewhere near Malmö so that it can catch a ferry and leave for Germany the following day. There, children go to school, equipment is repaired, and new performances are prepared.
Circus leaves for Germany at fall time. Their winter location is close to Lübeck on an old family farm that belonged to Billy's father and his circus. Out of permanent builds here, there's only a big barn, divided between old stall for elephants, garage for cars, stall for ponies and some storage. The family lives in the same trailers they travel across Sweden for more than half a year, parked close to the barn. A trailer with circus equipment which also serves as the main entrance, is usually left in Sweden.