San Antonio Current

October 13, 2010 Arts » Arts Etc.

Tweet
Email
Print
Share

Bozo assault 

click to enlarge spacer

There’s a numbing sameness to only-in-America Horatio Alger stories: with persistence and determination, underdog succeeds in business and life by inventing or cultivating a contraption, process, or ability that catches on with millions of people. It’s rare that someone achieves renown by purchasing the rights to an existing character — an over-the-top clown, say — then pumping that character full of experiential steroids and spreading his daffy, indefatigable sense of good will and devil-may-care sense of adventure around the world like small pox with rabid evangelical fervor. Yet that’s exactly what the late Larry Harmon did in 1956, securing licensing rights to Bozo the Capitol Clown on a payment plan.

“I didn’t just want to be a clown,” he writes in The Man Behind The Nose. “The world was full of clowns and, sure, they made people happy. I enjoyed seeing circus clowns piling out of tiny cars as much as the next guy, but I wanted to cross over, to do something a bit different. I wanted to be an entertainer.”

Half of Nose tells the tale of how Harmon eventually and essentially became Bozo, training a small army of foot soldiers (a young Willard Scott among them) in the Bozo arts — all the better to franchise the character into cultural ubiquity — donning the iconic red honker, exaggerated make-up, and schooner-sized spats to educate, inspire, and entertain several generations of rapt fans. Of course, he did much more than entertain.

As Bozo, Harmon packed more living into one life than most could pack into a dozen. With a film crew in tow, he flew into the heart of New Guinea cannibal country — ostensibly to inquire into the whereabouts of Michael Rockefeller but also to test “my own strength, courage, and deep-seated belief that humor, compassion, and caring can bring people together.” His instincts did not, ultimately, betray him. During a 1980s presidential run intended to “get young people to vote,” he narrowly ducked several assassination attempts. To help his audience make sense of the inaugural moon landing, he braved multiple zero-gravity parabolas in a military plane: “My challenge, I realized, was to do this without throwing up on camera”

Every page of Nose is laid out like a circus poster, the chapters’ opening paragraphs rendered in ornately ostentatious fonts equivalent to a carnival barker’s megaphone. The latter half of the book is a spectacle in and of itself, a highlight reel that’s more inspirational memoir than straight up autobiography: Harmon’s four marriages, his four children, and the legal, conceptual, and emotional difficulties that must have accompanied his vocation are entirely glossed over.

As it happens, Nose is at its most fascinating in its pre-Bozo/Batman Begins-esque passages, with their thrilling, cascading constellations of coincidence; a drum teacher granting young Harmon the opportunity to play Duke Ellington’s “Mood Indigo” with Lionel Hampton, Gene Krupa, and Buddy Rich; Harmon idolizing Al Jolson as a tot and later having the chance to wow his hero onstage (twice) while serving in the military.

It’s exciting to hear the author recall his formative years — as a drummer in Ohio, then as a celebrated high school and college drum major, and finally becoming involved in a whirlwind of industry, ideas, and artistry without a clear sense of direction.

Harmon “did everything from working as a private investigator to decorating the homes of Hollywood celebrities like Clark Gable to overseeing a wholesale brokerage company” when he wasn’t gigging with jazz groups, starring on Commander Comet, or assisting Fred Astaire with a dance-scene rhythm in Royal Wedding. Nose is, finally, a triumph of the can-do spirit, a celebration of the idea that a tireless work ethic, faith, and relentless effort can reap huge dividends — a shot-in-the-arm aspirational jolt for every modern-day Renaissance man or woman struggling to make side hustles and conflicting passions add up to something meaningful, perhaps even monumental. •

The Man Behind The Nose: Assassins, Astronauts, Cannibals, and Other Stupendous Tales
by Larry “Bozo” Harmon with Thomas Scott McKenzie
Igniter Books
$25.99, 224 pages, (hardcover)


Tags: Arts Etc., Second Story, The Arts, Book Reviews

  • Tweet
« The Southwest School announces a Bachelor in Fine Arts program   |   Art for autonomy »

Latest in Arts Etc.

  • spacer

    Luminaria Returns With a Bold New Vision for San Antonio

    Nov 5, 2014
  • spacer

    Tony Harris Dishes About Fashion Week San Antonio

    Oct 29, 2014
  • spacer

    Taste It: A Q&A with Comedian Nick Swardson

    Oct 29, 2014
  • More »

Most Popular

Most Read
Most Commented
This Issue
  1. Luminaria Returns With a Bold New Vision for San Antonio Read More

  2. Free Will Astrology Read More

  3. Failure Is Not an Option: George Lopez returns to SA Read More

  4. Savage Love: Spank U Read More

  5. SA Design Maven D’Ette Cole and the Topography of Junk Read More

spacer

November 5-11, 2014

  1. Jake Gyllenhaal Carries Creepy, Obsessive 'Nightcrawler' Read More

  2. Ab-Soul and Big K.R.I.T.: Two of Rap’s Most Exciting Players Hit SA Read More

  3. Plenty of fish, shrimp and then some at Las Islas Marias Read More

  4. The Shale Boom's Hard Sell Begins Pushing Up Against Reality Read More

Calendar

Events
Music
Movies
Arts
Dining
Today Tomorrow This Weekend
  1. Dirty Dancing  Read More

  2. Roam Conference  Read More

  3. 2nd Annual ROAM Conference  Read More

  4. David Sedaris  Read More

  5. Carrie: The Musical  Read More

Today Tomorrow This Weekend
  1. Fun Fun Fun Fest  Read More

  2. Sunday Afternoon Live with Adam Johnson  Read More

  3. Fall Jazz Ensemble Concert  Read More

  4. Warrior City Music Project Pre-Veteran's Day Benefit  Read More

  5. True Audio Outland & Guests  Read More

Today Tomorrow This Weekend
  1. National Theater Live: Frankenstein Encore (Miller as Creature)  Read More

  2. South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut Sing-Along  Read More

  3. The Best Years of Our Lives  Read More

  4. Shakespeare's Globe Theater: Macbeth  Read More

  5. Book of Ruth  Read More

Today Tomorrow This Weekend
  1. "Dark and Lovely"  Read More

  2. Greg Kinney: Forty Years of Color  Read More

  3. Kate Ritson: Corona  Read More

  4. Code-Mixing  Read More

  5. Loading...  Read More

  1. Sabor  Read More

  2. Gringo's Mexican Kitchen  Read More

  3. Genchis Grill, The Mongolian Stirfry  Read More

gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.