In digital age, circus maintains flesh-and-blood appeal

In digital age, circus maintains flesh-and-blood appeal

The Budapest International Circus Festival draws circus performers of all types from all over the world.

In-digital
BUDAPEST:
Budapest’s international circus festival shows audiences are still captivated by the emotion of a live performance, Charlie Chaplin’s son Eugene, who heads the jury, said.

The 12th Budapest International Circus Festival, with artists from all over the world, has performances from horseback-riders, jugglers, illusionists, and aerial acrobats.

And this year, it pays tribute to the 250th anniversary of the founding of the modern circus by Philip Astley, an English equestrian, in London in 1768.

“The circus has a big show value. My father liked it and I think the important thing is you … must have some kind of emotion, and if this feeling, this emotion comes out, the public gets it,” Chaplin told Reuters.

Chaplin was the biggest star in Hollywood’s silent movie era. Eugene Chaplin is one of his 11 children, and is a renowned recording engineer and documentary filmmaker.

In the opening act, Kevin Richter, a young Hungarian artist, performs a traditional horseback acrobat act, riding close to 20 horses in the circus ring.

“The audience loves it that it is not a film they are watching, not some kind of edited recording, or a digitalized film … here acrobats risk their lives and this is a unique experience,” said Flórián Richter, his father.

Flórián himself won the Golden Clown award at the 32nd Monte-Carlo International Circus Festival in 2008 with his own horseback act.

Stay current - Follow FMT on WhatsApp, Google news and Telegram

Subscribe to our newsletter and get news delivered to your mailbox.