The Flying Karamazov Brothers

The Flying Karamazov Brothers (FKB) are a juggling and comedy troupe who have been performing since 1973. They learned their trade busking as street artists starting in Santa Cruz, California, eventually going on to perform nationally and internationally, including on Broadway stages.

Flying Karamazov Brothers in 2006

The "brothers" took their act's name from the Fyodor Dostoevsky novel The Brothers Karamazov, drawing parallels between themselves and the novel's characters. Though they refer to themselves onstage as "brothers", none are actually blood relatives. The current troupe is led by its sole remaining co-founder, Paul David Magid (Dmitri), who is also its Director and Producer.

Members

The most recent members of the troupe are:[1]

  • Paul David Magid (Dmitri; co-founder; also the Director and Producer)
  • Stephen O’Bent (Zossima)
  • Roderick Kimball (Pavel)
  • Andy Sapora (Nikita)
  • Steven Horstmann (Vanka)
  • Michael Karas (Kara)
  • Harry Levine (Kuzma)
  • Amiel Martin (Mitka)

The troupe started with two members; "Ivan" (Howard Jay Patterson) and "Dmitri" (Paul David Magid).[2] "Alyosha" (Randy Nelson) joined some time after 1975. One-time FKB crew member Timothy Daniel Furst soon joined the other three onstage, taking the name "Fyodor". The line-up remained intact for several years until Nelson took a leave of absence for family reasons. He was replaced by Samuel Ross Williams ("Smerdyakov"). Nelson eventually returned and the group performed as a quintet from 1983 through 1989. Other members have passed through over the years, each taking a Russian name, such as "Misha Karamazov" (Paul Hudert, also known as Paul Garbanzo),[3] and "Rakitin Karamazov" (Michael Preston). Preston also appeared in the film Eight Men Out and directed one of the shows in the Karamazov repertoire. Mark Ettinger joined the troupe under the stage name "Alexei Karamazov" in 2000, but retired from the group sometime around 2016. Andy Sapora ("Nikita") stepped up as his principal replacement.

Randy Nelson ("Alyosha Karamazov") permanently left the group in 1988 to pursue a career in computer programming and education. From 1997 to 2009 he worked for Pixar as the Dean of Pixar University.[4] He has also worked for Apple Inc., and DreamWorks.[5]

Sam Williams retired from the group in 1999 to care for his family after being widowed. He worked as a bus driver in Seattle, and died of a heart attack in November 2016 while on the job.[6]

Tim Furst, who left the group in the early 1990s, currently is a board member, festival producer, and occasional performer at the Moisture Festival, an annual burlesque/variety event in Seattle, Washington.

In late 2006/early 2007 founding member Howard Jay Patterson ("Ivan Karamazov") announced his retirement from the troupe after 30+ years, which would leave Paul "Dmitri" Magid as the sole remaining original member. In mid-2007 Patterson was replaced by Nick Flint ("Maximov Karamazov"). Flint performed with the group for one year before being replaced by Stephen O’Bent ("Zossima Karamazov") in the summer of 2008.[7] The troupe launched a new show in 2007 called 4Play. The Karamazovs debuted their new commissioned show Flings and Eros for four weeks in late 2009.

In July 2019, the four original Flying Karamazov Brothers, Paul Magid (Dimitri), Howard Patterson (Ivan), Randy Nelson (Alyosha), and Tim Furst (Fyodor), reunited on-stage at the 50th Oregon Country Fair.

Shows and performances

The Karamazovs perform a wide range of shows, including conventional narratives that incorporate juggling, "variety" shows that include old and new elements from their repertoire, and shows backed by city orchestras.

The Flying Karamazov Brothers appeared in the film The Jewel of the Nile, the sequel to Romancing the Stone. They also appeared as the Flying Sandos Brothers in an episode of Seinfeld entitled "The Friars Club," and performed on Mister Rogers, with Sam Williams (Smerdyakov) also giving Fred Rogers a juggling lesson.

The Karamazovs performed a unique, broad adaptation of Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors at Lincoln Center. Aired live on the PBS program Live from Lincoln Center on June 24, 1987, the Karamazovs were joined by such "new vaudeville" acts as Avner the Eccentric and members of the troupe Vaudeville Nouveau. The (at the time) five members of the Karamazovs all played major roles: Patterson and Magid as the twins Antipholus, Nelson and Williams as the twins Dromio, and Furst as William Shakespeare himself. Their modern farcical take on the play managed to incorporate everything from juggling, acrobatics and faux knife-throwing to gospel, jazz and a cross-dressing brothel madam. Many jokes made reference to American culture of the 1980s. One running gag was that nobody can pronounce "Epidamnum," a place mentioned several times over the course of the play. After each stammering attempt, all onstage actors would stop, point toward the supposed location, then resume their activities.

"Terror Trick"

Among their repertoire is the "Terror Trick" in which they gradually introduce nine items—a cleaver, a torch, a salt shaker, a ukulele, a skillet, a fish, an egg, a block of dry ice, and a bottle of champagne (which they call a "time bomb")—then juggle them all at once only to end up cooking the fish and the egg in the skillet and drinking the champagne. Post-9/11 the troupe stopped using the word "Terror" in the bit and replaced it with the word "Danger", although as of their 2008/2009 4Play tour, they had restored its original name.[8]

"The Gamble"

They also perform a trick called "The Gamble" in which the "Champ" (portrayed traditionally by Ivan Karamazov, but more recently by Dmitri) will juggle any three items provided by the audience. The objects are chosen by the audience's applause. The objects must conform to the following rules:

  1. Must weigh more than an ounce (28 grams)
  2. Must weigh less than 10 pounds (4.5 kg)
  3. Must be no bigger than a breadbox
  4. Must not be a live animal
  5. Must not be able to stop the "Champ" from being a live animal

"The Champ" is also permitted to make no more than three modifications to the selected items (in total) to make them more manageable. If the Champ can juggle the items for an unbroken pattern of ten throws, he wins a standing ovation from the audience; if he fails in three tries, he receives a pie in the face.

The piece was formerly called "The Challenge".

"Club Sandwich"

Original member Paul Magid debuted an updated version of the Flying Karamazov Brother's "Club Sandwich," performing with Jules McEvoy, Chen Pollina, and Tomoki Sage, who are members of the juggling and acrobatic troupe, Nanda. After an initial short run in Port Townsend, Washington, the revised show later played at Seattle's Broadway Performance Hall from September 19-October 6, 2019, garnering favorable reviews.

Music and technology

The Karamazovs incorporate music into their performances through the use of special clubs adapted as percussion strikers, allowing them to play drums and marimbaphones without breaking their juggling patterns. Most past and present Karamazovs are adept with a great range of conventional instruments, including brasses and woodwinds.

One of their most widely known musical performances is Rockpalast Night 8, held in Essen, Germany, on March 28, 1981. The main acts were The Who and the Grateful Dead. The Karamazovs guested with the Grateful Dead on the "Drums > Space" part of the Dead's second set, performing their act while playing various percussion along with the Dead's drummers Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart. The show was broadcast by German TV channel WDR and has since become a classic of Grateful Dead bootlegs.

In recent years, the group has steadily added technological components to their repertoire, at times with the help of the MIT Media Lab. Clubs, gloves, and other props and wardrobe can include accelerometers, gravitometers, speed and position radar, and radio transceivers that allow the equipment devices to communicate with each other as well as a backstage computer. The Karamazovs exploit this technology in continually evolving ways, ranging from music and lighting that change in response to throws and catches, to games in which the jugglers must constantly adapt their throws, patterns, and passes in response to cues that the computer chooses on the fly, often based on the computer identifying a juggler who's out of position and therefore unlikely to be prepared for a toss.

See also

References

  1. "FKB – The Brothers". Archived from the original on April 18, 2011. Retrieved Aug 21, 2019.
  2. Suzi Prozanski, "Renaissance Roots: The Circus (a.k.a. Chumleighland) Begins", Fair Family News (Oregon Country Fair), volume 14, issue 11, April 2007, p. 7. Accessed online 2009-09-24.
  3. About Paul "Garbanzo" Hudert, Garbanzo Juggling Entertainment
  4. Taylor, William C.; Labarre, Polly (Jan 29, 2006). "How Pixar Adds a New School of Thought to Disney". Retrieved Aug 21, 2019 via NYTimes.com.
  5. https://www.linkedin.com/pub/randy-nelson/0/8/a66
  6. https://komonews.com/news/local/metro-driver-protected-passengers-as-he-died-rider-says
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-23. Retrieved 2008-09-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. "The Flying Karamazov Brothers". www.facebook.com. Retrieved Aug 21, 2019.
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