Last performance for ‘the greatest show on earth’

Published May 23, 2017
Uniondale (US): Big cat trainer Alexander Lacey hugs a tiger during the final show of the Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus on Sunday.—AP
Uniondale (US): Big cat trainer Alexander Lacey hugs a tiger during the final show of the Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus on Sunday.—AP

UNIONDALE: Ringling Bros. & Barnum and Bailey, America’s best-known circus, has staged its final show after 146 years, marking the end of an era brought on by animal rights advocates.

The final performance of “the greatest show on earth” took place on Sunday at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum on Long Island, New York State.

“It’s sad,” said Angel, son of the general manager, after taking a selfie in front of the circus’s famous logo on the side of a truck. “It’s all my life.” Members of the audience also took the end of the last show hard. Some still lingered at the venue nearly an hour after the performance ended.

There’s a place for circuses in the United States, said Puja Hathi, who brought her five-year-old daughter.

Children “need to see what real entertainment was back in the day instead of electronic media entertainment,” she said.

News of the closure came only in mid-January, when the circus’s parent company, Feld Entertainment, made the surprise announcement that it would shut down in four months.

The decision to end the elephant show in May 2016 after public outrage about the animals’ treatment caused a steep drop in attendance that made the circus no longer profitable, the company said.

Not everyone buys that explanation, however, pointing to audiences that are often packed. “It wasn’t handled properly,” said Greg Packer, whose memories of Ringling Bros, like most spectators’, go back to his childhood.

Now in his forties, he said the circus should have been sold, not closed.

“People are being pushed out, losing their jobs,” he said. “You’re ripping a community apart.” Although Ringling Bros isn’t the only circus in America, “this one’s the best,” said spectator Crystal Porvaznik, 30, who has seen the show almost every year since her childhood.

“We don’t like the small ones,” she said. “We don’t care for those. Which is why it’s sad that this is over.”

Published in Dawn, May 23rd, 2017

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