Circus Roncalli

Circus Roncalli
Circus
Founder Bernhard Paul and André Heller
Website Official Homepage
Circus Roncalli (2005)
Winter quarters in Mülheim, Cologne (2009)
Circus Roncalli being transported by rail.

Circus Roncalli is a German circus founded in 1976 by Bernhard Paul and André Heller. According to Bernhard Paul, the name was inspired by a film script of his fellow Austrian Peter Hajek, "Sarah Roncalli, Tochter des Mondes" ("Sarah Roncalli, daughter of the moon", sometimes also cited as "widow of the moon").[1] The reminiscence to the popular Pope John XXIII (1881–1963), whose legal name was Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, served as a key to the success.[1]

History

The first performance of the circus was on 18 May 1976 on the Hofgartenwiese in Bonn, and the tour finished on 16 August 1976 in Munich. After the first season, Paul and Heller disagreed about the concept and rights, so that at a future performance on 4 June 1980 in Cologne, Bernhard Paul directed the circus on his own. (In September 1976 there were already performances without Heller in Vienna, but the show closed after a short run owing to a dwindling audience.) Since then, the circus has toured in Germany and abroad, including the first appearance of a West German circus in the Soviet Union in 1986.

Winter quarters

The winter quarters of the circus have been at Neurather Weg 7 in Mülheim, Cologne since 1984. The building belonged to Circus Williams beforehand, and was rebuilt to accommodate Circus Roncalli, following which it was officially opened on 27 April 1986.

Roncalli Museum

Bernhard Paul owns one of the largest circus collections in Europe, including old costumes, circus books and posters, which he plans to display in a museum.

Projects

Circus Roncalli has taken part in a number of projects:

Transport

Bernhard Paul prefers railway transport, which is becoming more difficult because some of the loading facilities of the Deutsche Bahn are no longer in use.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ziegler, Mathias (2009). "Bernhard Paul: Traum vom Zirkus" (PDF). Wiener Journal (in German) (38): 14–17. Retrieved 2011-02-21.

External links

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