My friend and colleague, Suzanne Bottelli, spent this past week in Oaxaca, experiencing the preparations for El Dia de los Muertos, the Mexican Day
of the Dead. Whatever you call your
festivities this time of year –Samhain, All Hallows Eve – for many it marks the
end of the pre-Christian calendar year, and thus a time when the veil that separates
the land of the living from the land of the dead is at its thinnest and most
permeable. For this reason, we might
have a picnic on the grave of our beloved relative, enjoying his or her
company. We might make sugar skulls, or
an ofrenda with photos and mementos of
our dead friends and relatives. We might
see spirits or skeletons, both friendly and menacing, dancing through the
streets, waiting to be appeased with treats. In the United States, of course, we celebrate
Halloween – the children dressed in costumes, mildly threatening a “trick” if
we don’t give them candy, are only mildly reminiscent of visitors from the
other side, wanting something from us that we had better give them.
One of the most feared visitors on Halloween is, of
course, the evil clown. I spent this
past week in Detroit, experiencing the preparations for Hallowicked, the end of
the Juggalo calendar, a holiday older even than the Gathering itself.
On this day every year, fans of the Insane
Clown Posse gather in Detroit to celebrate the new year, anticipate a new “Joker’s
Card” (or record album), reunite with old friends and join in a veneration of
the Dark Carnival, the symbolic spiritual realm of the Wicked Clowns. “It’s a full moon and the riddles are
calling,” sings Violent J, a Falstaffian wicked clown of epic proportions who
recounts his dream of the Dark Carnival every year at Hallowicked:
In Detroit's historic Fillmore theater |
"I never been afraid of clowns
But these clowns were different
There was nothing funny about these clowns…
They smiled, they juggled, they laughed
But yet something was terribly, terribly wrong
I didn't like these clowns for I could see through them
I knew what they were really like
I knew that this carnival that had come to my village
Was an evil, evil thing."
But these clowns were different
There was nothing funny about these clowns…
They smiled, they juggled, they laughed
But yet something was terribly, terribly wrong
I didn't like these clowns for I could see through them
I knew what they were really like
I knew that this carnival that had come to my village
Was an evil, evil thing."
During the song, “The Show Must Go On,” Juggalos
welcome the “Dead dirty carnies, dead Juggalos” and exhort one another to “walk
hand in hand with the dead carnival.” Many Juggalos paint their faces to
resemble wicked clowns, and inspire fear in others who may not understand their intent. But what is the root of this fear? And what is their intent? What do the clowns do to and for ordinary
people?
Despite their masks, clowns actually serve to unmask
us, remove our illusions of grandeur and immortality, and remind us of our
humanity. Of course this is scary, since
if I remember I am human, I have to remember that I am mortal, and therefore, as
ICP reminds us in “Tilt-a-Whirl,” “All
you muthafuckas are gonna die.”
The week before I left for Detroit, I went to see the
Seattle Shakespeare Company’s production of Twelfth
Night, which, like most of Shakespeare’s plays, features clowns.
The clowns of Twelfth Night are at times bawdy and drunken and at other times
mysterious. Much of the plot revolves
around the clowns’ plot to bring the pompous and self-important Malvolio “down
to earth.” Malvolio is, as the clowns
put it,
Feste and Toby Belch |
“the best persuaded of himself, so
crammed, as he thinks, with excellencies, that it is
his grounds of faith that all that look on him love him.” (Twelfth Night II.3)
crammed, as he thinks, with excellencies, that it is
his grounds of faith that all that look on him love him.” (Twelfth Night II.3)
The clowns concoct an
elaborate plot to humiliate Malvolio, eventually having him imprisoned as a
madman. In Seattle Shakespeare’s
production, the director takes the imprisonment and torment of Malvolio to a
darker level, involving straps and chains and the beginnings of dental
torture. While this is definitely not a
choice I would have made, it made me think of the sinister nature of clowns in
general, and of the Dark Carnival in particular, where the wicked clowns often
sing about strapping people into freakishly violent carnival rides in order to
strip them of their illusions about their lives.
So shouldn’t I be
afraid of these clowns? Certainly, if I
am like Malvolio, who spends his life in illusion and grandiosity, I will be
afraid. Humility and mortality are frightening.
As the calaveras remind us, “as
I am now, you soon will be.”
costume for Dia de los Muertos |
Juggalette |
Happy Hallowicked, everybody.