
Ware circus show is a 'high flying rebellion against ageism'
A "unique" circus show whose youngest performer is 52 and oldest is 77 hopes to "defy expectations" about age.Will You Still Love Me? takes place in Ware, Hertfordshire, on 14 and 15 June and promises a "joyful performance" from the amateur troupe.Carol Masson, 69, will perform a trapeze routine and said: "Our bodies are ageing, but it's sparked off that inner child in us all."The show, put on by Generation Circus and Can Do Circus company, is a fusion of aerial and ground-based circus as well as film, movement and storytelling.
"We're not just telling stories — we're reclaiming space. This is a high-flying rebellion against ageism," said director Emma Taylor.
Emma, who lives in Harlow in Essex, set up Generation Circus with her daughter Masie. They both have a long background in "social circus" - which uses performance skills to help people and communities.She decided to run an "experiment" using funding from the National Lottery."I thought, if we train a group of people who are over 50 for a year in aerial circus, rope, silks, hula hoop - can they make a show at the end of it?"Actually, the skill and professionalism of these ordinary people – who've never done anything like it – the standard is incredible," Emma said.
Carol, who lives in Cheshunt, joined the project after seeing a notice on Facebook."I thought, what the hell, I'm just going to go for it. Why should we feel that at our age it's too late to learn something new?"At the time I was in a very, very bad place so I knew I had to wade my way out of it somehow – this was the perfect opportunity."Ms Masson had lost her daughter two and a half years earlier, and said joining the circus "helped me to navigate my way through a journey that's never going to end"."It's given me back the zest for life," she said.Waiting for a hip replacement did not put her off, nor did her fear of climbing."Before I started this, I felt nervous standing on a chair to get something out of the kitchen cupboard."At first, I tried the lower trapeze. When I did it, it was like a two fingers up to those who thought I wouldn't do much in life."Now I'm performing on the next one up – I'm like 'Feel the fear and just do it'," she said.
Claire Howard, 53, performs hula hoop from her wheelchair."I saw the advert and said to my husband 'I'm going to run away with the circus'."I think I wanted to prove to myself that I wasn't useless. I'm disabled, in a wheelchair, and I had stopped believing in myself."Mrs Howard suffers from a number of medical conditions and has had 120 strokes, leaving her partially paralysed.She said: "At first I didn't think there was anything I'd be able to do."Everyone else was going up on the trapeze, ropes and silks, and I just sat there."But I started to juggle with the silk scarves, and then I happened to pick up a hula hoop."It was exhilarating, spinning this plastic thing around you."
The social side had been "phenomenal", after Mrs Howard found friends "dwindled and disappeared as my health got worse"."I pushed myself to go to the circus and now I have a whole group of friends," she said. "It's given me a reason to get to out."It's an amazing show. The fact that we're all over 50, it doesn't seem possible."
Will You Still Love Me? is at Ware Drill Hall on Saturday 14 and Sunday 15 June.
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