Friday, September 01, 2006
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Welcome to Buckles Blog. This site is for the discussion of Circus History all over the world.
Posted by Buckles at 9/01/2006 05:57:00 AM
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3 comments:
I count five [5] boards. Do they spell [THE WORD] a different way over seas?
Maybe in England it's spelled FUERK!
From Eric:
The Sergeant Cribb episode THE LAST TRUMPET dealing with the crating up of Jumbo is now available on DVD. This was originally a 60-minute episode of a BBC TV series produced in the early 1980’s about a London police detective from the 1880’s, adapted from novels by Peter Lovesey. I originally saw this episode when it aired on PBS back in the early 1980s. Having just watched it again I can say that it was BETTER than I remembered it to be. (The British are always so much better than Hollywood when it comes to making “period” films.) The characters include Jumbo’s handler Scott and “Elephant Bill,” who is there to oversee Jumbo’s transportation to America. The master set that is supposed to represent the London Zoo in 1882 looks substantial enough to be an actual Victorian zoo that somehow escaped being torn down or modernized. And the music score includes what sounds like an authentic old English parlor ballade about poor Jumbo being taken away to America. They actually used an African elephant in some of the scenes. He’s not as big as Jumbo but, through the use of clever camera angles, they manage to give the impression that he’s bigger than he actually is. The final scene is a particularly elaborate one, with the crated-up Jumbo being hauled away by a 40-horse hitch. This was definitely a big-budget production and all the extra time and care shows on the screen. Highly recommended!
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