Brian Viner: A circus true to its roots

Country Life: 'We were by far the most cheaply educated people under the Giffords Circus big top in Cirencester'

News in pictures
News in pictures
Opinion blogs

Circular firing squad at a crossroads

Politico has identified seven dreadful clichés of campaigning in and commenting on the Republican pr...

Reminders of Iraq

I was sorry to learn from Paul Waugh of the death of Brian Jones, the former Defence Intelligence Se...

Mervyn King is more than keeping up on Gilt purchases

The Bank of England is taking more UK government bonds out of the market each month than the Debt Ma...

Suggested Topics

We have a friend who, when she was a girl growing up in Birmingham 25 years ago, ran away to join the circus. Running away from home to join the circus is a bit like eloping to Gretna Green, romantic storybook stuff that nobody you know has ever done, except that our friend did. And when she recounted the tale to our youngest son, nine-year-old Jacob, I'm sure I saw a purposeful glint in his eye. Certainly, if any of our children are inspired to follow suit, he'll be the one. He already has some impressive party pieces; it's not many people who can give a word-perfect rendition of "American Pie" while reaching up their left nostril with their tongue.

Anyway, if Jacob does run away to join the circus, we have found just the one. For at least the past two years, we have been hearing great things about the Cotswolds-based Giffords Circus, and kept meaning to go, only to find it sold out every time. About 10 days ago, however, we finally went. And it was every bit as wonderful as we'd hoped it would be. Also, I love the idea of a circus based in the Cotswolds. We told Jacob that if ever he does pack a rucksack and shin down a drainpipe one night, he might as well head for a big top on Minchinhampton Common, rather than one located more exotically in Bratislava or Budapest.

We went to a performance just outside Cirencester, a drive of about an hour and a half from where we are in north Herefordshire. We embark on long car journeys these days with trepidation, partly because the cost of filling the Volvo has now pushed past £80, and partly because Jacob and his brother Joe on the back seat do a decent impression of the Israeli defence forces and Hamas, and their 15-year-old sister Eleanor is now too tall to sit between them facilitating a ceasefire.

Yet the three-hour round trip was worth both the cost and the argy-bargy on the back seat. I can't remember ever going to a show that all of us enjoyed equally; normally, there's some boredom either on the children's part or on our part, but this time we were all charmed.

The Giffords charm offensive began even while we were queuing to get into the big top, when everyone in line was handed a pack of nuts, seeds and dried fruit, the sort of thing that middle-class mums put in their children's lunchboxes. This was perfectly in tune with the audience demographic. If the long-legged woman next to me wasn't called Jocasta, and her pink-cheeked husband Piers, and their children Ivo, Rupert and Hermione, then it can only have been because they were called Camilla, Henry, Tarquin, Charles and Araminta. This was replicated all the way round the big top. We were by far the most cheaply educated people there.

The performance itself was a beguiling throwback to the Mitteleuropean circus tradition: incredible horsemanship (notably by a Hungarian called Attila, who also dished out goulash during the interval), great acrobats, a dazzling knife-juggling act, a spot of falconry, and the best clown I have ever seen.

During the interval, I told the children how tacky the circuses were that I went to at their age. I can remember one next to the pleasure beach in Southport at which an emaciated lion arrived in the ring on its backside, having slipped on some fresh elephant dung. Even at the age of 10, I was disgusted. This, needless to add, was a different experience altogether.

The origins of Giffords Circus were explained in the programme. Nell Gifford has a degree in English from Oxford University but fell in love with the circus on her gap year, returned to it afterwards, and some years later found a kindred spirit in her husband Toti. They started their circus nine years ago, intent on making it true to its countryside roots. Toti, meanwhile, also has a landscape-design business. He must be the only man in the world who supervises the building of sluice gates by day, and the juggling of knives by night.

After the show I had a brief chat with him. He told me that the circus effectively represents diversification of agriculture. He should get an EU grant. I have hardly ever seen a better example of European union than a Hungarian horseman called Attila serving goulash to an Englishman called Piers, near Cirencester.



Giffords Circus: 0845 459 7469; www.giffordscircus.com

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Career Services

Day In a Page

How an abortion divided America

How an abortion divided America

Single mother who took a pill to end her pregnancy is now fighting a landmark prosecution in a conservative state
Can you master a language in a weekend?

Can you master a language in a weekend?

Ed Cooke insists he can use his techniques as a memory expert to help novices learn even the hardest tongues.
The 10 best heaters

The 10 best heaters

From the DeLonghi Retro Fan Heater to the Dimplex MicroFire
Coming soon to a shelf near you: The publishing industry has gone mad for film-style trailers

Coming soon to a shelf near you

The publishing industry has gone mad for film-style trailers
Mad, bad and delightful to know: How Lord Byron became a cultural superstar

How Lord Byron became a cultural superstar

As the poet takes centre stage in the West End, Boyd Tonkin looks into the life of the outspoken champion of the poor
Did they all live happily ever after? That's up to you...

Did they all live happily ever after? That's up to you...

New digital novel will overturn centuries of literary tradition by allowing readers to choose how they would like story to end
How to look good for less – Primark in copycat row

How to look good for less – Primark in copycat row

With London Fashion Week starting tomorrow, designers are closeted in studios putting finishing touches to their collections
James Lawton: Arsène and Arsenal are living in the past

James Lawton

Arsène and Arsenal are living in the past
How Docherty's resurgent Reds beat Dutch greats

How Docherty's resurgent Reds beat Dutch greats

United have met Ajax only once before in Europe, in 1976. The key performers recall an electric occasion
Civil war at Ajax

Civil war at Ajax

A rift between two club legends has torn the Dutch giants apart
Lewis Moody: For an idea of where England are headed, look at Wales now

Lewis Moody column

For an idea of where England are headed, look at Wales now
Geoff Toovey: Little gem with huge incentive to become king of the world

Geoff Toovey interview

Little gem with huge incentive to become king of the world
Picture preview: Portrait of London

Portrait of London

Picture preview
No secularism please, we're British

No secularism please, we're British

Arguments about the role of religion in national life have recently acquired a new urgency
Harold Tillman: 'Chinese tourists can save the high street – if we let them'

Harold Tillman interview

'Chinese tourists can save the high street – if we let them'