Sunday, January 20, 2008

No 1- RBBB in Chicago Aug. 2, 1941 #1


P02368, originally uploaded by bucklesw1.

"A Flying Concello washes out a few flimsies."

Somehow a towel from the Brown Hotel got mixed up in the laundry.
Buckles

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Buckles,
Now day´s it would be a chair from Such and Such Arena, that got mixed up with the props. Same deal, different generation.
Wade Burck

Anonymous said...

Great, well-preserved color work! Must have been stored in a cool, dark place for a long time! Kodachrome was introduced in 1936 in 35mm and 828 formats for still cameras and while there had been earlier and delicate color processes, Kodachrome produced exceptional results with ease for the amateur. It would be fun to know of other equally early color circus photographs. Both Sverre Braathen of Madison, Wisconsin, and Jim Hoye of Newington, Connecticut, were taking color circus photos in the 1940s but just how early I do not know. 8mm color movie Kodachrome was first on the market in 1935 and I believe there is a 1941 Cole show movie in color at CWM.
Dick Flint
Baltimore

Roger Smith said...

On Miller-Johnson, in '67, a well-known chimp trainer whistled the lion guy over to his trailer one day. The show had just played a building which had a storeroom full of bentwood chairs. He didn't get one--he got 6 of them, all neatly stenciled with the building name under the seat. What the hell--the lion guy always took out the seat portion anyway.

Roger Smith

24-HOUR-MAN said...

Roger: The Public Hall in Cleveland, kept Cat Acts supplied with bentwood chairs for many years. I can remember Bill.J. getting some for that same lion guy.

Anonymous said...

The only part of a bentwood chair left after "a lion guy" got a hold of it, was the BENT WOOD back. After you replaced the legs with prod-pole pieces and reinforced them with angle-iron, and put 3/4 inch plywood in the seat - you were good to go!!!
:-)
Cindy Potter

Anonymous said...

One famous Brown Hotel was in Louisville and was most remembered from the lobby flooding when the Ohio River went out of its banks.

Anonymous said...

Roger,
Didn't Clyde have about 20 of these chairs on top of one the cages in 1964. Seems to me that they came from somewhere out east.
Bob Kitto