'Lord of the Lions' circus legend dead at 80Wolfgang Holzmair, one of the greatest lion tamers of the 20th century and a legendary figure in circus history, has died at the age of 80. Friends told AFP on Wednesday that the German-born Holzmair, who spent the final decades of his life running a restaurant in Cahors in southwestern France, had passed away after a long illness. He made his name with the celebrated Barnum & Bailey circus in the United States, where he would regularly enter cages full of lions with only a couple of canes and his Roman centurion outfit for protection. The so-called "Lord of the Lions" later performed with the Amar, Pinder and Jean Richard circuses in France. Pinder's current owner, Gilbert Edelstein, hailed Holzmair as one of the greatest figures in circus history. "Those who had the chance to see him in action will never forget his performances. No one has ever repeated what he did in mastering 22 lions in a cage." Jacques Bousquet, the founder of France's Christmas at the Circus festival, said Holzmair had made his mark on a certain era in the circus. "He was one of the first Europeans to be recruited by Barnum, the greatest circus in the world. "He was a strong personality, very lovable, and very respected but who could appear rude at times," Bousquet added. An orphan, Holzmair entered the circus world as a teenager and soon discovered he had a natural authority that was to help him in his perilous speciality. The Amar Circus's Stephane Gistau added: "He had an uncanny ability to tell whether this or that beast would be trainable or not. |
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
From Mike Naughton
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10/16/2013 03:25:00 PM
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Bandleader Keith Killinger used to tell a story about the music used for Wolfgang Holzmair’s lion act on the Ringling show: on March 31, 1971 Irvin Feld told him to add some marches to Holzmair’s music. Killinger complied, using some marches written by Karl L. King. At about the time he started putting these marches into the band books, Karl L. King was stricken in Fort Dodge, Iowa and was rushed to the hospital. By the time Killinger had finished adding these marches to the music books, King had passed away at the age of 80. This story may or may not be totally true, but some Karl King marches were played for Holzmair’s act while he was with Ringling. (Holzmair’s music included “The Northwind March,” “Burma Patrol,” “Alhambra Grotto,” “Caravan Club,” “The Fez,” and the “Golden Calf Bacchanalia Music” from DeMille’s “The Ten Commandments.” )
Keith & Kathy along with Dave King
were a fun bunch to party with
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