Clown car

A clown car is a prop in a common circus clown routine, which involves a large number of clowns emerging from a small car. The first performance of this routine was in the Cole Bros. Circus during the 1950s.[1] The effect is usually produced by removing all of a car's internal components like door panels, headliners, engines, seats, and any interior barrier to the trunk, and then filling the enlarged space with as many clowns as possible.[2] Greg DeSanto of the International Clown Hall of Fame estimates that somewhere between 14 and 21 clowns and their props could fit into a car prepared in this manner.[2]

Lou Jacobs miniature clown car, 1951–1952, with gas pump
Lou Jacobs miniature clown car, 1951–1952

See also

References

  1. Feiler, Bruce (2003). Under the Big Top. HarperCollins. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-06-052702-0.
  2. The Physics Of: Clown Cars, by John Pearley Huffman, at Car and Driver; published March 28, 2011; retrieved November 10, 2018
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