Mongolian circus performers fly through a cavernous hall inspectors have warned could collapse any time, one of the few places left to train if they hope to travel the world with their country’s spectacular big top shows. The decaying, more than a hundred-year-old venue at the Mongolian Circus School is where hundreds of young artists, many now performing at celebrated outfits like Cirque Du Soleil, started their careers.
Defying gravity in a building shaped like a traditional Mongolian ger, the performers practise acrobatics and trapeze, suspended on ropes lashed to the building’s dilapidated rafters.
One performer, 18-year-old N.Uuganbayar, said he hopes to follow in his sister’s footsteps and take part in international competitions. With paint peeling off the walls and rusty equipment, the building where the artists practice is simply not safe, authorities have warned. But for the performers, the high-vaulted ceilings provide an ideal space to perfect the daredevil feats that made the Mongolian circus world famous.
The circus was long one of Mongolia’s most popular forms of entertainment, bringing crowds from across the country to see breathtaking shows packed with extreme gymnastics, aerial stunts — and even wild animals. Its contortionists — known as Uran Nugaralt, a practice dating back centuries — were particularly renowned. But faced with meagre prospects at home, hundreds of the country’s top talents have gone overseas in recent years.
“When we go to international competitions and festivals, we’re always asked to train international students,” P.Bolortuya, Dean of the Circus Faculty of the Mongolian Conservatory, told AFP.
Mongolia’s only modern circus venue was built in the Cold War by Romania as a gift to the socialist ally. The government sold it in 2007 to Dagvadorj Dolgorsuren, Mongolia’s first Sumo champion, who was keen to splash his wealth on investments back home. He renamed it Asa Circus and it was intended to provide a rent-free training facility for circus students.
But it has instead been used for high-profile concerts and events, with fewer and fewer circus acts taking to the stage in years. That venue was home to the Mongolian Circus School’s only training facilities, leaving few options for performers to hone their craft. The public school — which has dozens of students and 15 teachers — now severely lacks training spaces, with a new venue having been under construction for years. Performers are demanding the government speed things up. (source: AFP)
Related News