Placerville morning
/A beautiful and peaceful morning in Placerville.
A beautiful and peaceful morning in Placerville.
The Placerville show last night was the perfect start to the tour: a full house of enthusiastic people in a lovely setting. Today we travel about 6-7 hours to Arcata on the coast. This preview article from the local paper was written by our generous host, Jamie:
How can a house full of Hippos sleep so soundly? Because we all worked hard last night.
I lie here awake at 6:30 AM. There is no longer a possibility of further sleep. There are 7 other Hippos lying around the room. I wonder how many of them are actually awake also. Most certainly lie quite still and make very little sound. My sleeping bag, rated to 20 degrees, was certainly warm enough, perhaps too warm for our host's living room floor. But if we have to be outside, it will be nice and comforting.
This is my view from the floor:
One of the Hippos just dropped their phone upon arrival to Placerville. It's the tragedy that allows the comedy to come through.
Old school Navigation
John's in the back now.
We're on the way!!
It's 8:32 AM, I'm at where I think the office that will help me get a parking permit is. I need this permit so I can leave my car parked in the garage while I'm on tour. I've been told they open at 9:00 but I'm not holding my breath. This is the gate I need to go through, but the door upstairs to the office is locked.
It's very early, and time for my last breakfast before we leave this morning. It was sad to be without my wife and family this morning.
Am I taking too much stuff?
This is what my feet look like, one day before the tour starts.
The sets are gone, and the costumes, and that giant blue-and-yellow tent. Master clown and performance maker John Gilkey has ended his fourth stint with Cirque du Soleil since 1996. But if the wiry, often wild-haired Gilkey and his Muppet-like mug are no strangers to the big time, they move just as ferociously through a bare stage in a small venue wearing not much more than, these days, a bushy beard.
It’s been three years since Gilkey last performed in San Francisco — flanked by comedians Alec Jones-Trujillo and Donny Divanian, the deadpan naïfs of his avant-comedy trio, We Are Nudes. Just as the very funny yet vaguely unnerving, off-center style of Nudes occupied some indeterminate territory between sketch comedy and Dadaist destruction, Gilkey’s latest venture — the Los Angeles–based eight-member improvisational ensemble known as Wet the Hippo — takes its audience beyond the usual endpoints of improv.
Born out of his Idiot Workshop classes in clown, Wet the Hippo is a big brand new baby of a beast, only four months old but charging forward with gusto — and an edgy, searching brilliance Gilkey is clearly thrilled with. He is frankly in love with his cast members, with whom Gilkey interacts as director, prodding them from onstage and off. Ahead of their first tentative tour (a three-stop zero-budget swing through Arcata, Placerville, and San Francisco), Gilkey picked up the phone from his LA roost to talk Hippo-thetically.
SF Bay Guardian Wet the Hippo is quite a change from Cirque du Soleil, more low-to-the-ground, very much autonomous.
John Gilkey Yeah, what we’re doing now — there’s eight of us, there’s no budget. Yeah. Low-to-the-ground is a good way to put it.
SFBG It’s a big contrast, but maybe there are similarities?
JG One way I describe the show: I’m taking everything I learned from Cirque about the creation process they have — although I should be clear about that: The creation process changed after Franco [Dragone] left. But when Franco was still there. And also when I was on Franco’s creative team for [his independent Las Vegas spectacular] Le Rêve — I’ve taken that process and I’ve applied that to this ten-dollar-a-ticket show with eight people. It’s an amazing contrast. And in some ways it’s quite similar. When I’m working with the performers, I work with them similarly to Franco in that he’s trying really to get to the nut of the person. His number one question is, “Who are you?” He’s trying to figure out what is it about this person that’s interesting. Their strengths, their weaknesses, their physicality, their voice, all this stuff — how can we magnify this person into an interesting stage presence?
The rest of the story is online
Copyright Michael Lieberman 2021