Emcee, Hostess & Roastess, High Marriage Minister Priestess
February 26, 2010
What Miss Astrid is up to
February 26, 2010
Miss Astrid did a 2009 summer tour of the burlesque clubs of London and there made her West End debut at the Leicester Square Theatre. Other recent activities include hosting the 7th annual New York Burlesque Festival and co-emceeing the Burlesque Hall of Fame weekend in Las Vegas for the 4th year in a row. What made this years Burlesque Hall of Fame extra special? Miss Astrid was asked to officiate a intimate wedding in front of a crowd of 850. It was more like a Dean Martin roast, but if that is the type of wedding you and yours are looking for Miss Astrid is now a fully ordained minister by the Universal Life Church. Or need a host? Let Miss Astrid spit-shine event until it gleams like shiny, shiny, shiny boots of leather.
Miss Astrid has been called “the true weimar fraulein” by Mel Gordon, author of Voluptuous Panic with “Enough attitude to sink the Bismark”, according to the San Jose Mercury News. Arguably, the best emcee in the US, she is known for her deadpan delivery, impeccable timing and razor sharp wit.
The creator of The Va Va Voom Room 1997-present performer with the very first neo burlesque troupe, The Velvet Hammer Burlesque, 1996-present. You have read and heard about her via NPR, BBC, Time Magazine, and the New York Times. Besides having the first bicoastal burlesque show ever in NYC and San Francisco, Miss Astrid and The Va Va Voom Room have performed all over the US and Europe.
Belle Burlesque, The Greatest Geek of them all!
February 26, 2010
The Woman Who Makes You Go Wau!
October 5, 2009


Bach Goes Cajun
August 12, 2009
Sean Grissom is a cute, charismatic, tweedy, talkative and talented cellist who takes the already engrossing cello and kicks it up a notch with Cajun tweaking. Many classical musicians will just come to your event, play and leave with nary a word. Sean Grissom will charm everyone at your event from your antsy 4-year-old niece to your overworked, bored businessman.
Internationally known as “the Cajun Cellist,” Sean has performed his unique brand of Country, Cajun, Classical , Swing, and Rock music from the streets and subways of New York City to the concert halls of Europe and the Far East. “O’Cello” – his hit one-man show – runs the gamut of musical tastes and vaudeville humor.
Witness his genius here.
Sean can also make his cello FANDANGO!
No stranger to the Kennedy Center, Sean has performed as part of the Open House, as well as hosting a ‘Holiday Vaudeville’ show on the Millenium Stage for the past 6 years, and has been a Visiting Artist.
Sean has produced and released eight recordings – his latest being a 20th Anniversary Edition of his first recording “From The Street”. He has published over 10 original compositions under his “Solo Cello Encore Series”, and an improvisation book “What! For Cello?”. He is also a popular lecturer, teacher, and clinician.
He holds a B.F.A. degree in Fine Arts from Pratt Institute, a Masters in Music Performance from Hunter College (he studied with Channing Robbins of the Juilliard School), as well as an A.A.S degree in Graphics and Advertising from the Parsons School of Design, and completed the Teacher Training program in the ‘Suzuki Approach’ at the School for Strings.
Sean is so appropriate for almost any event, from the most staid of settings to the shock and awe stage. He would be perfect with a quartet or quintet of musicians or on his own, wooing the crowd with his words. So why not let him regale your guests and make even the most cynical ones crack a smile at his unassuming charm?

For more information about Sean Grissom, contact BONGARBIZ at info@bongarbiz.com or (914) 734-1177.
PAINTED LADIES
August 4, 2009


Monet & Van Gogh Backs

Dancing Picasso and Monet



Breakdancing Phenom MiRi Park Spins the World Right Round
August 4, 2009

(Photo: Martha Cooper)

MiRi Park has a BFA in modern dance, but she never took a single hip hop class at her university. She also has a BA in journalism and an MA in American Studies. So how did she end up teaching hip hop dance at Steinhardt School of Education’s dance program, winning the role of Alexi Darling in Broadway blockbuster musical “Rent,” winning the Air Guitar Championship, and becoming one of the world’s premier b-girls (for those not in the know: women who breakdance)?
Has your first love always been dance?
I started dancing seriously at 10 years old. Having grown up feeling like I never fit in anywhere, it was the first time I ruled the roost and felt completely in my own skin and present. It was an escape for me — I put on makeup and a costume and went onstage, and all the insecurity went away. I sought out dance and music, this place I could go to and not worry about my looks or skin color. I felt like if I could relate to other people regarding music that we could dance to. I went to college and really fully immersed myself in understanding modern dance.
How did you get into hip hop dance, which is now your primary medium?
When I came to New York, I still didn’t quite fit in in dance. Even with a dance major background, there was still something missing. I felt this separation and distance. DanceSpirit magazine asked me to write this article about b girls, and I met this guy named Breakeasy (a.k.a. Richard Santiago) and he’s been my mentor. I went to his practice sessions at McCarren Park in Williamsburg. Hip hop is really this culture where you’re expected to be an individual, and not to bite anybody’s style. This is totally where I belong.

Breaking is just one element of the total culture that is hip hop. Tell those not in the know about the different elements of hip hop culture that are vitally connected to breakdancing.
Hip-hop culture propagated that there are 5 styles. There is funk style popping and lock and breaking, emceeing and rapping, turntabling and deejaying, writing and graffiti, and then some people would say how you rock it, a lifestyle thing. It’s basically just a mindset in which you structure your life. Everything I do has something to do with the dance aspect of things. My closest friends are my b-girlfriends. My network is based on hip hop.
What other kinds of dance do you do, African, salsa, etc.?
African, salsa, yes, also house dancing, voguing, whacking.
What are voguing and whacking?
Voguing is related to what Madonna does in her “Vogue” video, represented in the Paris is Burning documentary, and done by Benny Ninja and Willy Ninja, who created new extreme poses for voguing. Whacking is about living this fabulous identity of a screen siren. It’s a little bit dancier with less posing, and is a west coast style. You can see it in the movie Break In.
What is your life like these days? Jetting from location to location performing?
I just got hired for the Broadway show “Rent” as Alexi Darling. I will also be teaching as the dance captain for anyone who joins the tour. It will be 14 weeks. I also teach hip hop dance at NYU and am the program coordinator for the oral history MA program at Columbia. I did an oral history of b-girls in 1990 and my thesis advisor started the oral history program at Columbia.

(Photo: Martha Cooper)
How is it teaching at NYU?
I have been teaching for three years now, and the students say they never thought they could do these dances, had no reference for hip hop before, and even though they don’t think they’ll major in it, it makes them have a lot of fun and will always do them at parties. I expect people to take a chance and have fun while they’re doing it.
What can you teach or perform at corporate events?
We can bring a spectacular show with my all female group Fox Force Five. We can also bring b-boys, as we know and work with a crew.
At corporate events, party dancing is the best activity. It is a stepping stone for someone who doesn’t have any background in hip hop dance. Pop culturally, it is the easiest reference, and it came out of a social context. We are not facing the mirror in a line, but facing into a circle, then breaking down into groups and exploring different types of dances, including ones they want to bring in that they’ve ever done in their lives, at parties. Then we do a combination of what they bring and what I teach them. Hip hop dance is the art of improv manifested to particular music. They get to improv within a structure. It happens time and time again that I’ve seen the quietest people light up and completely participate in ways you would’ve never expected.

(Photo: Martha Cooper)
It’s unusual to see female breakdancers, much less an Asian female breakdancer.
I grew up in a small community suburb listening to hip hop in the ’90s. I thought it was something to consume, but didn’t understand the culture or why I connected so deeply with it. It turns out when my dad immigrated to this country, he was also extremely connected to Motown culture and had a huge record collection.
When I was learning breaking at McCarren, it was predominantly male, Spanish and black with a sprinkling of Asians in 2001, all different ages, all different backgrounds. At those practices was the first time I felt completely in my skin. It’s no secret there’s a stereotype of Asian women so it was kind of a benefit at this point, not a bad thing to be an Asian female. There’s a weird thing of Japanese people coming over to New York learning to dance. Academically, that’s the kind of thing I find really interesting because there’s still a lot of discussion about why these things started and became so popular. I started my masters because why I was so interested in these forms. I grew up in upper middle class suburbs but thrived in an art that is traditionally working class and black.

(Photo: Daragh McDonagh)
How was it performing your winning air guitar routine on Conan?
I poked fun at the Hello Kitty type, demure Asian female. It happened to strike a chord, no pun intended. It was quite interesting to be able to do comedy with a message even if people didn’t understand it. That’s what I appreciate about comedy, is that the things that are truly the funniest are also the most intellectual. I actually started taking improv in the fall. I incorporate it and laugh at myself. When you’re doing these dances, you feel ridiculous if you’ve never done them before, so you have to laugh at yourself.

(Photo: Daragh McDonagh)
What’s valuable about learning hip hop dance?
Even though I grew up dancing, I didn’t grow up tumbling. By the time I was a senior I was known as the one who was afraid to go upside down. I’d had a few bad experiences growing up and had a total mental block. I didn’t start professionally breaking until a year into the experience. I was performing in modern pieces, going back to school, had a severe injury in school, and was hampered by those things. When I was injured, I had to ask, does this mean I’m still a dancer and an artist, even when I can’t walk? More than an actual skill, you just learn a new way to learn your life, which is more valuable than anything else, learning to approach something. I was raised Korean Zen Buddhist, deep in the understanding of meditation and dancing my whole life. You learn to beyond survive and not have any fear.
What’s next for hip hop dance?
House dancing is an evolution of top-rocking that you do before you hit the floor in a breaking sequence. Tap, modern dance, lyrical – those are the next step in street dance culture.
Below is a video of MiRi’s b-girls performing at Lincoln Center in the We B-Girlz Battle.
For more information about MiRi Park, contact BONGARBIZ at info@bongarbiz.com or (914) 734-1177.
A Modern Bouffon Who Teaches, Directs and Enlightens
July 28, 2009
You might know the Red Bastard. If you don’t, this video won’t give you the entire feeling of how fun it is to have him poke fun at you in person when you’re a member of the live audience, but it gives you an idea for how great the Red Bastard is and how much fun you WOULD have if he were performing for you!
You should really watch this, even if it means your boss stops and stares and guffaws at your screen. For my favorite part, skip to 2:42.

So you know the Red Bastard. But you might not know Eric Davis, the man behind the Red Bastard.
Eric Davis is a multi-talented clown and a bouffon.
What the heck is that French-sounding word, you ask?
A bouffon is a character developed by Jacque Lecoq, a French actor and mime who trained Geoffrey Rush, Isla Fisher and many a clown, for starters.
The bouffon actually goes beyond the common conception of a clowning buffoon, superseding such mere tomfoolery by transferring the attention from “Let’s mock the clown and, by exposing his vulnerabilities, expose humanity’s flaws,” to “Let’s poke fun at you as an audience member and draw attention to your flaws and your humanity and the fact that you are present here as part of this dialogue.”
In the process, the bouffon makes you laugh so hard that you keep asking for more attention from him.

Eric Davis is one of the best known bouffons in the world. One of Eric’s personas, the Red Bastard, is delightful in contrarian, surprising ways: ridiculously, ruddily misshapen, yet incredibly visually appealing in his complete bizarreness; mocking and exposing of your flaws and vulnerabilities, yet completely accessible and even lovable; stodgy-looking yet incredibly dexterous and light on his feet when he hops and mimes.

Eric is also, as aforementioned, an experienced clown and actor in non-bouffon form, who has acted in various plays and co-founded The New York Clown Theatre Festival.


Eric is also an experienced teacher and director. He is available for corporate workshops in teamwork and communication, private and public events, and development for artists.
Eric’s goal, whether teaching corporate CEOs or full-time artists, is to “seek the ability for people to be present and to connect with the audience, the people they are working with, and themselves, and for them to find a true fearless joy in a high state of play.”
And though it may surprise you, this handsome man is below all those layers of white face paint and those red lumpy body bumps. When you hire him as a teacher or director or see him walking home from the grocery store juggling apples, he’ll most likely be showing up looking like this.

Eric is our Grade A Geek of the Week. He’s a creative genius and a credit to what the performing arts community can produce when it gives freedom of thought and exploration to a intuitively talented, hardworking, intellectual actor and clown who really thinks through his process and applies his theory to his performance. We hope you’ll read our interview with him below.

You’re a teacher and a director as well as a performer. What do you do in those capacities — clowning workshops, movement lessons, improvisation, etc.? Does that work in a corporate environment?
I do corporate workshops with teamwork and communication. I work with CEOs and corporations and crews for all kinds of things using improv as a metaphor for working together, and I do development for artists. I also teach clown and bouffon and movement.
Tell us about your different personas, from the Red Bastard to clowning.
Over the last two years, I’ve been doing more bouffon. I have been doing more of the Red Bastard character recently and developing a show for that. I also have a clown show. Between the two of them, the clown has more range than the bouffon. There’s much more vulnerability.

Why have you done more of the Red Bastard lately?
The responses were just so much more powerful that even as a bizarre thing, it’s more marketable.

Tell us about this little-known character, the bouffon, in your words.
The bouffon style came out of the exploration of the Lecoq school, in trying to find somebody who could mock anything. Initially, they were looking at the medieval age for models for that, people who were outcasts from the city and then would have the chance at the Feast of Fools carnival to turn that around and make a mockery of the audience. It’s someone who’s a bit of a demigod, not even of this earth necessarily, a strange mysterious creature who is watching us. I think more of him as that sort of thing, a collective unconscious, kind of poking at their fears and dreams.
I think there’s a reason that there are not a lot of bouffons, which is probably that it’s not done well often. If you see really fantastic clowns, it’s great, and if it’s bad, it’s the worst ever, and bouffons are the same. Clowns are light, but the bouffon brings criticism to the stage and a sense of grotesqueness. For me, everything has to be on top of a sort of jubilation or pleasure. Before you be mean, you have to be charming. Status and ambitions are good themes. The character is based on plays on themes of elitisim, status and ambitions. That’s something that people can almost always relate to in all different fields.

How did you start down the road to the dangerous, Bond-like world of international clowning?
It’s strange. One day I was looking at my resume and I said, “I have to stop calling myself an actor because my work is clown and bouffon work; I’m going to start calling myself a clown.” It was really scary for me to happen at that point.
I started doing a lot of improvisation at this place called Comedy Sports in Kansas City. I think a lot of the beginnings of the base of my career were in improvisation of comedy. It was the golden age of that era and I worked with really talented people. I did that for 8 years and then I had a couple of influential teachers at the University of Kansas, one of them a movement teacher I’m doing a loving parody of. One day in class he asked if there was something a style we wanted to cover that we hadn’t done yet. We heard that they had done this clown at a school in Paris. He said, “Well, the thing about the clown is, if the people don’t like you, they don’t like you.” We created a clown show of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein with the John Brown theater company and we did this show in Kansas City and then we packed it all in in a U-Haul and moved to New York.
How did you come to found the New York Clown Theatre Festival?
A guy named Devon had proposed to them to do it. He contacted me and Audrey Crabtree. We’ve done it for three years now and have decided to do it every other year, so the next one is in 2010.
This is an opportunity to promote clowning and and it’s interesting because we see a lot of different types of clown there, a broad range that is not just for the circus. These are clowns who are making theater pieces. This is a hazy, interesting line to try to figure out. It’s maybe more intimate and has a longer arc.
It’s a month of shows, usually around 30 different shows from all over the world, and we have a night of cabaret pieces.

Tell us about working with Cirque du Soleil and how that informed the work you do now.
Working with Cirque was a great experience. They treated me really well. I was on one of their touring shows called Quidam. I was in two clown pieces by David Shiner, who’s going to be installing a vaudeville show here in New York. I was working in the circus at a grand scale and it was great getting to go to China and Korea. It was weird not to be doing your own work as a clown but these numbers are very very similar in terms of my sensibility and David’s.
One of them was where I’m a director and we’re filming a movie, an old time melodrama, setting up really clear intentions so that the audience members understand what they’re supposed to do, handing it over to them, and then noticing the deviations of how they do it, and then making fun of and with it.
The other act is me me going out on a date driving this car and trying to get a kiss from this girl in the audience and not getting what I want.
The script is sixty percent and the rest is improv and the audience.
You say you use European and Native American clowning philosophies. I thought the Native American part was an inside joke, but it seems like that’s for real.
The work we try to do in the teaching of clown is to be able to hear and really experience who you really are, how you feel, what you think and how you feel, not to filter it out because of what society wants you to feel. This is who I am, how I feel, acknowledge that and give it a space onstage. So most indigenous tribes or societies have some sort of clown figure in them and it’s usually an important figure, who has a high status within that society and in many tribes in North America, they had just as much power as the chief. It was a system of checks and balances. Clowns were tradition keepers who kept people in line in some sense.
So when Pachinko left the Lecoq School, he started to explore Native American philosophies and combine them with Lecoq. He created this system called Clown through Mask. You make six masks which you wear once and then you’re done with them. This is not exactly Comedia dell’Arte masks, but instead quite unusual shapes. It’s very much an experience of how you deal with pleasure and loss and experience. With these six masks, there are twelve aspects of your personality and the native idea for the clown is to be able to face all directions at once and laugh with the ridiculousness at yourself. And I really like this method. Everyone has their own methods. I really like this because it’s an opportunity in each of these explorations for no particular answer or expectations, delving into your imagination.
THE BONGAR CHALLENGE AT DOWNTOWN CLOWN
July 8, 2009
Olivia Lehrman, Kevin C. Carr at Downtown Clown
ⓒ 2009 Jim R. Moore / All Rights Reserved
On Monday, July 20, speed miming, rapid-fire juggling, fleet-footed unicycling and breakneck acrobatics will take their place as new sports in the pantheon of the Clown Olympics.
If a clown competing in THE BONGAR CHALLENGE doesn’t get his or her routine under three minutes, host Michael Bongar’s stooges will yank the poor rube from the glorious bath of the spotlight so that another aspiring ingénue can take the stage.
Contestants are challenged to present material new to the Downtown Clown Revue that is funny, honest and simple, and most importantly, clocks in at THREE MINUTES OR LESS.
SPREAD THE WORD: THE BONGAR CHALLENGE will reward its most brilliant ruddy-nosed winner with a $200 prize and the chance to audition for a spot on late night television.
The showcase will feature much more than floppy oversized shoes and Rudolph noses. Audience members can expect to laugh and maybe even be enlightened by modern clowns keen on hip irony, impressive acrobatics, juggling, magic and unicycling, singing and instrumentation, and inappropriate behavior of all kinds, packaged in short attention span-sized bundles of three minutes each.
This Olympian event will be judged by a very serious panel of the clown elite that dwells high up in the clouds of Clown Olympus, including:
Dick Monday, former director of Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Clown College
Scott O’Donnell, general manager of the Big Apple Circus and former performer with Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Circus
Eric Davis, a.k.a. the Red Bastard, clown and performer with Cirque du Soleil
Mark Gindick, winner of the Golden Nose award for Best Clown and currently starring with the Big Apple Circus.
THE BONGAR CHALLENGE
Monday, July 20
8:00 p.m.
The Kraine Theatre
85 East 4th Street
Between The Bowery & 2nd Avenue
To sign up for THE BONGAR CHALLENGE, email info@newyorkdowntownclown.com.
For more information about BONGARBIZ, please visit http://www.MichaelBongar.com or contact Michael Bongar at (914) 734-1177 or Michael@BongarBiz.com.






