Cirque du Soleil Master of
Clowns at Independence CC Performance
One
of the few people to hold job titles of “Circus
Director” and “Clown Wrangler,” for the famed modern
circuses Teatro Zinzanni and Cirque du Soleil, will
conduct a performance/lecture on Friday, August 25th, at
Independence Community College. The event is part of
the William Inge Center for the Arts Guest Artist
Lecture Series and begins
at 6:30 p.m. Friday,
Aug. 25 at the Inge Theatre. Admission is free.
(Instructors—please note the 6:30 p.m. (six-thirty)
curtain! Open to the public, including students,
teachers, and so on!
Stefan Haves directed the
world-renowned dinner/circus Teatro Zinzanni and is
Cirque Du Soleil’s North American "Clown Scout,"
responsible for casting clowns, conducting workshops,
and aiding the 2007 touring show. Haves will present
some of his repertoire and discuss the nature future of
physical comedy. While in Independence, Haves will also
conduct comedic workshops for ICC students.
“Stefan is a highly
regarded expert in the field of physical comedy and it
is no surprise that Cirque du Soleil has chosen him as
director of their clown corps,” said Peter Ellenstein,
Inge Center artistic director. “I’ve been lucky enough
to work with Stefan several times and he has always been
inspiring, instructive and very, very funny. We are
thrilled that ICC students will have the rare
opportunity to learn from Stefan and that area residents
have the opportunity to see Stefan perform live.”
While at Teatro Zinzanni
in San Francisco and Seattle, Haves worked with premier
acrobats, magicians, and clowns, as well as stars as
Joan Baez and Tony-winning actress Lilliane Montevechi.
He was also creative
consultant for the Tony Award-winning Broadway hit "Fool
Moon" starring the “Clown Prince” Bill Irwin and David
Shiner, long a featured performer with Cirque Du
Soleil. Shiner, one of the world’s masters of the art,
remarked in the Los
Angeles Times, “Stefan is a great help in my
work and he's a creator in his own right. He has a great
eye for the style and he's one of the rare people who's
trying to bring this style of work back."
Haves’ education includes
Del Arte’ School of Mime and Comedy and the “school of
hard knocks” as a juggler and street clown in Paris. He
credits Philippe Gaulier, for years master teacher at
the Lecoq School of Movement, as “his true teacher.”
A self-proclaimed
“improvisational addict,” Haves has worked with improv
ensembles Second City, the Groundlings, and studied with
renowned instructors Dee Marcus, Keith Johnstone, Paul
Sills and Del Close. As a writer, his hilarious shows
are based on physical comedy and Commedia Del Arte’
techniques.
Haves has performed in
numerous television and stage shows, but he might be
best known to audiences for his comedic one-man show
“Journey Back.” Developed while Artist in Residence
with the Music Center of Los Angeles, Haves toured this
extraordinary show around the United States with the
National Association of Campus Activities. A small
portion of it, titled “Back Man,” achieved global
acknowledgement on various television shows. His comedy
contortion act “Back Man” won $10,000 on “America’s
Funniest People” television show.
As a film director, Haves
wrote, produced, and directed the award-winning short
film “Punch Drunk,” starring Sally Kellerman and Connie
Selleca.
In addition to being a
stage and film director, Haves has helped actors during
the pressure cooker of TV filming as an acting coach for
“Roseanne,” “Joe’s Life,” and “Sister, Sister.”
The William Inge Center
for the Arts is sponsor of the annual William Inge
Theatre Festival, which every year brings southeast
Kansas one of America’s great playwrights for four days
of professional theater workshops and performances. The
28th Annual Inge Festival is April 22-25, 2009, and
honors Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt, creators of
“The Fantasticks,” “I Do, I Do!” and “110 in the Shade,”
among other beloved musicals.
The Inge Center is named
for Independence native William Inge, a Pulitzer and
Oscar winning writer whose works include “Picnic,” “Bus
Stop,” “Splendor in the Grass,” and “Come Back, Little
Sheba.” The Inge Center is supported in part by grants
from the Kansas Arts Commission, the National Endowment
for the Arts, the William T. Kemper Foundation, the AT&T
Foundation, and the Cessna Foundation.
For more information on
the Guest Artist Lecture Series or other Inge Center
activities, call (620) 332-5492 or visit
www.ingecenter.org.