Vaudeville joins technology for 21st century ■ Lazer Vaudeville brings its updated magic and juggling act to Eugene on Sunday By Jen West Oregon Daily Emerald Traditional theater and circus meet high-tech lasers in Lazer Vaudeville’s variety show featur ing juggling, acrobatics and magic. The Hult Center for the Per forming Arts presents Lazer Vaudeville at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $15 for the general public and $14 for youth under age 14. The show comes complete with comedy, rope spinning, au dience participation, hoop jug ! QUACK! QUACK! QUACK! The Adult Store Q/femelu cj°° O . ^ Jlas/e VIDEOS DVDs What you want to watch 1166 South A • Springfield • 726-6969 • Open 24-7 (Almost) off any purchase over one coupon person per per day per S H O gling, a laser light show, a neon cowboy and a seven-foot-tall, fluorescent, fire-breathing drag on named Alfonzo as master of ceremonies. Carter Brown founded Lazer Vaudeville in 1987 and was later joined by Cindy Marvell and Bee Jay Joyer. The show combines the phys ical aspects of theater with the visual arts of lasers and black lights. The trio of performers will juggle balls, clubs, plungers, machetes and running chain saws, and later on in the show they will saw the dragon in half with lasers. “I got started (juggling) as a hobby when I was a kid in New York City,” Marvell said. She said she learned some jug gling tricks from her father and performed her “wacky hobby” for her eighth-grade talent show. While still in high school, she began formal training at the Antic Arts Academy at SUNY Purchase. appetizers • burgers • wraps • soups sandwiches • salads • specialties Celebrgte St. Patrick's Day One green dollar buys you one green Reuben's Beer! Also serving Shepherd's Pie * yelo 344.1960 ° open mon-fri 11am | sat and sun 9 am Courtesy Photo Carter Brown, a Ringling Bros. Circus veteran who founded the futuristic Lazer Vaudeville in 1987, juggles with hoops made from antique bicycle rims. Juggling was a “small, elusive field,” she said, and there were few women who performed it. “Girls in general shied away from throwing and catching,” Marvell said, and usually people took it for granted that boys knew how to throw a ball. But unlike other physical activities, she said 012365 Community Center tar the Performing Arts ■ Friday 8th & Lincoln Live CD Recording The Motet with SonMelao AfroCuban Jazz Funk $8 advance, $io door, 8:oo pm ■ Sunday ■ Everton Blender, wHhCansaman Reggae $14 advance, $16 door, 9:00 pm ■ Tuesday ■ Benefit for Kium s ’’Indian Time” John Tmdellc Bad Dof Native American Singer-Songwriter $15 advance, $15 door, 7:30 pm ■ March 22 ■ The Summit with Ra$in$ Family Hip-Hop $8 advance, $10 door, 8:00 pm ■ March 23 ■ Jupiter Hollow with Incendio Jam Rock/Flamenco $8 door, 9:00 pm ■ March 24 ■ The Meditations Reggae $10 advance, $12 door. 9:00 pm All Ages Welcome • 687-2746 juggling is not a “co-ed sport,” but an activity that men and women can do together. Brown, a veteran of the Ringling Bros. Circus, does a type of jug gling with bicycle rims that is al most a lost art form. He is the only person in the world who performs a seven-minute bicycle-rim jug gling act “as far as we know,” Joy er said. Brown uses three different sizes of rims, and some of his hoops are more than 100 years old, according to Joyer. “It’s difficult to perform,” he said. Joyer’s roots in the juggling arts stem from his childhood. When Joyer was two years old, he went to the circus, and he said he “fell in love with the clowns.” He said as a kid, he dreamed of being an astronaut or fire fighter, but he al ways came back to the clowns. He started juggling in high school and continued at the San Francisco School of Circus Arts, where he trained and taught for five years. Then in July he joined Lazer Vaudeville. Vaudeville was widely popu lar in the' United States from the beginning of the 20th century through the early 1930s, but it is now in decline, Joyer said. Many famous entertainers such as the Marx Brothers, Charlie Chaplin and Houdini started out in vaudeville. Lazer Vaudeville has taken the traditional vaude ville and added modern tech nology to it. “If vaudeville were still going strong, this is probably what it would look like,” Joyer said. In addition to their performing schedule, Lazer Vaudeville also visited elementary schools in the Eugene-Springfield area Tuesday, demonstrating their skills and informing the kids of the history and technical aspects of their show. Marlene Thornton, substitute teacher and clerical worker at River Road Elementary School, said she thought the kids at the school really enjoyed the demonstration. The performers encouraged au dience interaction, she said, and often had students come up on stage to assist them. “I thought it was interesting that they told (the students) about how it all worked,” Thorn ton said. She said she wouldn’t be surprised if the kids went home and tried out some of the lighting techniques with flash lights and their bathroom mirror. “The show is visually appeal ing and a lot of fun,” Joyer said. E-mail reporter Jen West at jenwest@dailyemerald.com.