What Goes Up: Australian Juggling to World War I
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About this ebook
What is juggling? For the purposes of this history, juggling is broadly defined as the manipulation of objects. So this book discusses hoop rolling, plate spinning, traditional club and ball juggling, hat juggling and lots of balancing. There are also many discussions of individual jugglers, including international visitors like Cinquevalli and
Leann Richards
I am a juggler, a writer, a pretend magician, an historian and a teacher. I've published some books on Australian theatrical history through Ginninderra Books in Australia, and have just finished another on Australian juggling history which will be published in early 2022. Between juggling, researching history and teaching I like to write fairy tales. I live with my imagination in Sydney Australia.
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What Goes Up - Leann Richards
WHAT GOES UP
Australian Juggling to World War I
LEANN RICHARDS
Ginninderra PressWhat Goes Up: Australian Juggling to World War I
ISBN 978 1 76109 318 0
Copyright © text Leann Richards 2022
All rights reserved. No part of this ebook may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright holder. Requests for permission should be sent to the publisher at the address below.
First published 2022 by
Ginninderra Press
PO Box 3461 Port Adelaide 5015
www.ginninderrapress.com.au
CONTENTS
Introduction
Before the British
The Convict Jugglers
The Early Circus Jugglers
The Japanese Jugglers
The Minstrel Performers
The Vaudeville Jugglers
The Women Jugglers
Club Juggling
The Australians
Mishaps and Misdeeds
The Australian Vaudeville Jugglers
The Exports
Conclusion
References
Picture Credits
Also by Leann Richards and published by Ginninderra Press
For Jos, Kenny and Shiho
INTRODUCTION
What is juggling? For the purposes of this history, juggling is broadly defined as the manipulation of objects. So this book discusses hoop rolling, plate spinning, traditional club and ball juggling, hat juggling and lots of balancing. There are also many discussions of individual jugglers, including international visitors like Cinquevalli and American minstrels like Joseph Jalvan. Australia also produced some incredible jugglers, including amazing circus performers like Marizles Wirth, international superstars like Stan Kavanagh, and local talents like Arnold Jarvis.
My aim with this book is to promote discussion about Australian juggling history in the hope that others will extend, refine and uncover more details. I have also purposefully concentrated on lesser known performers. So, for example, although the Ashton family greatly influenced Australian juggling, I have not discussed their role at length, primarily because so much has already been written about them. I have also limited the book to those whose career started before the Great War, primarily because it would take a decade, at least, to include juggling to the present day.
Finally, this book would not have been possible without the help of some wonderful historians: Dr Mark St Leon, without whom there would be no circus history in Australia; David Cain of the United States, who is the world’s foremost juggling historian; and Erik Aberg, who is the absolute expert on Cinquevalli. All were astonishingly generous with their time and I am grateful for their patience, advice and help. I would also like to thank the family of Arnold (Arnoldi) Jarvis, particularly Trevor Hoath and Brenton Maile, who kindly made time to discuss their famous ancestor.
According to Kenny Cheung, Australian world record holding juggler, ‘Juggling is not only an artform, but a skill or a sport. To me, juggling is everything.’ All the jugglers mentioned here had one thing in common, a shared joy and passion for juggling. That passion inspires the few Australian jugglers who continue to juggle today. For us, juggling really is everything.
BEFORE THE BRITISH
Human beings have been manipulating objects for a very long time. The first visual evidence of a kind of juggling seems to be a set of pictograms found on a wall in the Beni Hassan tombs in Egypt. There are also tales of ancient Chinese warriors juggling swords in front of armies to prevent wars, stories of jugglers entertaining kings, queens and emperors, and accounts of impoverished people using juggling to extract coins from enraptured crowds.
There is also a history of juggling in the Pacific Islands. Women in Tonga have juggled for centuries. Their tradition originated with the story of a goddess of the underworld who would snatch, and juggle, the eyes of those who trespassed in her domain. The Tongans call this juggling Hiko, and it is practised primarily by women.
Long before the English came to Australia in 1788, there were thriving communities of Indigenous people on the continent and, like many communities, their culture included play. Unfortunately, much of that Indigenous culture was destroyed after 1788 and most accounts of Indigenous play were written by the colonisers. Those accounts include stories about Indigenous games, which suggest that the Aboriginal people of Australia played with and manipulated many different objects. Among the games were skipping, string games, ball games, top spinning, and fire games. It is easy to extrapolate some sort of juggling from this list.
Therefore, although not a proven fact, it seems reasonable to suggest that the first jugglers on the Australian continent were Indigenous people. Given that they have been in Australia for over forty thousand years, juggling could possibly be one of the oldest activities ever pursued by humankind.
THE CONVICT JUGGLERS
The idea of juggling as it is known today is a relatively new one. Before the mid-nineteenth century, juggling was used as a synonym for deception or trickery. Jugglery was frowned upon as the art of the criminal.
In 1788, a fleet of ships carrying convicts from England arrived in Gadigal country, which the English later called Sydney. Thus began the European invasion of Australia. It is possible that some of those convicts and perhaps some of the crew manipulated objects for entertainment. It is even more probable that some of the passengers were involved in jugglery in the more nefarious sense.
Among the convicts were several musicians, singers and actors. In the early years of the colony, there were scattered accounts of ad hoc performances in ale houses, inns and in some private homes. However, theatrical activity in a formal capacity was frowned upon as a morally corrupting influence, and although there was some early convict theatre, an officially authorised industry was not permitted until around the 1830s.
One of the earliest convict colonies was the penal settlement of Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania), and its most feared gaol was Port Arthur, a harsh prison which employed convicts as slave labour. The worst criminals were sent there, the irredeemable, the recidivists, those doomed to a lifetime of servitude.
Next to these ruffians and hoodlums lived a small coterie of officers’ wives and families who needed to be kept occupied while their husbands kept order. Among these were William Champ, commandant, and Thomas Lempriere, his assistant. Lempriere had several children, and in mid-1848 he obtained a pass for a convict to visit his house to entertain the family. The convict entertainer was Joseph Crapp.
Joseph, also known as Joseph Pain, was a short, dark-complected ex-sailor with tattoos of women and anchors etched on his arms, and inked bracelets around his wrists. Joseph stole a hat in Devon, England, was caught, and in 1831, at the age of twenty-two, was transported to Australia for fourteen years.
Upon arrival in the colony, Joseph was assigned a job. Shortly afterwards, he entered the ‘dwelling house of Mrs M Reid taking improper liberties with her person when she was in bed’ and was sentenced to twelve months’ hard labour for the crime. Subsequently, he was assigned as a shepherd, but he deserted the sheep; when he was a watchman, he deserted the post. He was convicted of laziness,