The Prague Post - Mongolia's circus performers fight to preserve their craft

EUR -
AED 4.27842
AFN 79.494691
ALL 97.349401
AMD 446.812545
ANG 2.084672
AOA 1068.137432
ARS 1532.17935
AUD 1.784886
AWG 2.099582
AZN 1.984813
BAM 1.956408
BBD 2.35013
BDT 141.413924
BGN 1.955838
BHD 0.436
BIF 3470.67801
BMD 1.164817
BND 1.495765
BOB 8.042498
BRL 6.327057
BSD 1.163962
BTN 101.918656
BWP 15.66073
BYN 3.842894
BYR 22830.409242
BZD 2.338026
CAD 1.602031
CDF 3366.320968
CHF 0.9415
CLF 0.028776
CLP 1128.882661
CNY 8.365137
CNH 8.374014
COP 4710.519131
CRC 589.78319
CUC 1.164817
CUP 30.867645
CVE 110.29926
CZK 24.442055
DJF 207.0117
DKK 7.468228
DOP 71.082078
DZD 150.227409
EGP 56.111766
ERN 17.472252
ETB 161.509866
FJD 2.623522
FKP 0.866489
GBP 0.865906
GEL 3.149503
GGP 0.866489
GHS 12.279814
GIP 0.866489
GMD 84.453703
GNF 10093.13498
GTQ 8.930774
GYD 243.516683
HKD 9.143585
HNL 30.477466
HRK 7.538741
HTG 152.297304
HUF 395.54894
IDR 18935.378351
ILS 3.998246
IMP 0.866489
INR 102.186757
IQD 1524.773603
IRR 49067.908029
ISK 143.074897
JEP 0.866489
JMD 186.357884
JOD 0.825901
JPY 171.994565
KES 150.498758
KGS 101.863677
KHR 4662.408141
KMF 491.727858
KPW 1048.34466
KRW 1617.663071
KWD 0.355887
KYD 0.970014
KZT 629.005372
LAK 25182.821914
LBP 104288.692604
LKR 350.05873
LRD 233.374491
LSL 20.631208
LTL 3.439402
LVL 0.704587
LYD 6.31096
MAD 10.540574
MDL 19.541902
MGA 5136.595453
MKD 61.541171
MMK 2445.247438
MNT 4178.468115
MOP 9.410763
MRU 46.428421
MUR 52.894772
MVR 17.942534
MWK 2018.335569
MXN 21.643815
MYR 4.939263
MZN 74.502122
NAD 20.631208
NGN 1784.83757
NIO 42.833304
NOK 11.985889
NPR 163.06965
NZD 1.955966
OMR 0.444652
PAB 1.163962
PEN 4.11978
PGK 4.909525
PHP 66.10379
PKR 330.266983
PLN 4.248949
PYG 8717.707765
QAR 4.254221
RON 5.073131
RSD 117.596454
RUB 92.486284
RWF 1683.64463
SAR 4.371747
SBD 9.571376
SCR 16.475752
SDG 699.476769
SEK 11.155782
SGD 1.497377
SHP 0.915363
SLE 26.911539
SLL 24425.630445
SOS 665.200904
SRD 43.42325
STD 24109.355964
STN 24.507612
SVC 10.184163
SYP 15144.895085
SZL 20.623406
THB 37.511348
TJS 10.871223
TMT 4.088507
TND 3.41346
TOP 2.728122
TRY 47.38777
TTD 7.90059
TWD 34.836297
TZS 2894.570133
UAH 48.148355
UGX 4153.290033
USD 1.164817
UYU 46.704507
UZS 14658.553022
VES 149.967542
VND 30547.32053
VUV 138.055319
WST 3.095243
XAF 656.160807
XAG 0.030371
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.147976
XCG 2.097752
XDR 0.815486
XOF 656.160807
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.080622
ZAR 20.668281
ZMK 10484.753138
ZMW 26.974378
ZWL 375.070534
  • RBGPF

    1.2400

    73.08

    +1.7%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    15.88

    -0.76%

  • RIO

    1.0900

    61.86

    +1.76%

  • RELX

    -1.0566

    48

    -2.2%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    23.05

    +0.39%

  • NGG

    -1.0700

    71.01

    -1.51%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    34.14

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    -0.5050

    73.55

    -0.69%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    14.42

    -0.14%

  • BTI

    0.5500

    57.24

    +0.96%

  • GSK

    0.2200

    37.8

    +0.58%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    23.58

    +0.25%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    11.36

    +0.88%

  • JRI

    0.0250

    13.435

    +0.19%

  • BCC

    -1.1000

    82.09

    -1.34%

  • BCE

    0.5700

    24.35

    +2.34%

Mongolia's circus performers fight to preserve their craft
Mongolia's circus performers fight to preserve their craft / Photo: Pedro PARDO - AFP

Mongolia's circus performers fight to preserve their craft

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.

Text size:

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 Uuganbayar Nerguibaatar, said he hopes to follow in his sister's footsteps and take part in international competitions.

"I want to try and become a circus artist," he said.

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 so popular. We all want to revive it," Gerelbaatar Yunden, a former circus art director, told AFP.

"It is our duty."

- 'Don't have facilities' -

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," Bolortuya Purevdorj, Dean of the Circus Faculty of the Mongolian Conservatory, told AFP.

"But we politely say we don't have enough teachers or human resources," she said.

"We don't have training facilities."

Performers told AFP they estimated about 85 percent of their colleagues live and work abroad, with at least 400 artists in Turkey as well as 500 contortionists in the United States and Europe.

"Antarctica is perhaps the only place that Mongolian circus performers have not performed," Gerelbaatar told AFP.

- 'Rise again' -

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.

"Once we build a proper circus school facility, (circus art) will succeed," Gerelbaatar, the former circus art director, told AFP.

After that, he said, "the government can expect results and success" and the Mongolian circus can "rise again".

In the meantime, the school has rented a space far away from its headquarters, forcing students to endure long commutes to train.

"There are a lot of problems. Circus is the art of space, but space is very limited here," Bayarchimeg Erdenebayar, a juggling student, said.

"I will keep improving my skills for another year."

- 'Cannot teach everything' -

In light of the privatisation, many contortionists split away from the main Mongolian circus to set up smaller, more specialised schools.

During a visit to one such school, AFP saw students twisting themselves into all sorts of weird and wonderful shapes and sizes, legs held high as heads poked through hips.

But teacher Erdenetsetseg Badarch, who trained as a contortionist under the country's Soviet-backed regime and performed thousands of times on the stage of the Mongolian Circus, said the facilities available are far from enough.

"In order to become a circus artist, we need to learn many other aspects of the art such as costume design, stage speech and body language," she said.

"My little studio cannot teach everything."

Another contortionist teacher there said that despite the obvious talent on display, his hopes for the future were bleak unless the state steps in to help.

"Our own state ignores its talented artists, who deserve better recognition," Bud Tumurbaatar told AFP.

"That's why Mongolian artists are leaving Mongolia for other countries for better treatment and a better income."

R.Krejci--TPP