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Remembering Bob Jones and Other Great
Hand Balancers of the Time
Stu Goldberg contacted me
because he knew many of the people from The
True Art and Science of Hand Balancing, including Bob Jones. Not
only was he an excellent hand balancer himself, but trained along side
many other great's in his day. Here are just a few of his stories and
pictures. A little piece of history if you will.
*****
I was about 14 when I first met
Jonesy at his printing business near 9th and Venango st. in
Philadelpia, not too far from my house. A wonderfully friendly and
helpful counselor at the local YMCA where I was swimming regularly gave
me the five dollars to buy Bob's book. With another young fellow I met
there, we sort of forced ourselves on Ben Hurtline, an older man who
stored his trampoline at the Y. That was my very first big thrill in
trying learn acrobatics.
After
meeting some other older fellows at the high school I attended, they
introduced me to the professional gym in South Philadelphia on the
second floor above the Mercantile Library, on South 11th st...Professor
William J. Herrmann's gym. It cost 50 cents to work out there, and
evenings and especially Sundays, were always crowded with amateurs and
professional performers of all kinds and ages. There were lots of
tumblers and handbalancing teams, tap dancers and jugglers and it was
great fun.
Bob Jones only came there once in a great while. He was in his forties
then. He would tie a very thin sewing thread which he had premeasured
with loops on each end, to his big toe and to the old fashioned heater
that was prevalent in those days, and then kick up to the handstand on
his fingers. The fine thread was just enough to help him find his way
on to just the thumbs, as he slowly lifted up the other fingers. Bob
was a real great guy, but a character. As quickly as you could show him
some new and difficult one or two man stunt that you were working on,
he would ask you to go one step further and try to do it an even more
impossible way.
The next top notch gym I grew up in was in New York, 42nd st on the
second floor above the automat, between 8th ave and Broadway...George
Bothner's gym. He was about 80 some years old at the time, had been a
famous wrestler in his day. Every performer of note passed through that
wonderful place every day. I often watched the wrestler Gorgeous George
do his routine on the mats in the front window, that he was about to do
that night in Madison Square Garden. This was 1950, and it cost 75
cents to workout there. My friend Dick and I were just kids, about 16
then, and we didn't have the 75 cents to spend. We would lean against
the wall and watch everyone until Lou Leonard, the manager, would go to
the back of the facility to make his regular rounds to check everything
out. It was a very large place, with a barber shop, steam and sauna as
well as the dressing rooms in the back, and a huge floor space in the
front, with mats covering most of the floor. As soon as Lou walked to
the rear, my pal and I would jump into handstands to practice, with our
street clothes on. If Lou would come out and catch you upending, it was
75 cents!
Of
the photos in Jonesy's book, Bonnie Nebelong used to come to
Herrmann's. And Joe Rush and Jimmy Gallagher, who were middle aged by
that time, or approaching it. John Lucyn also. Joe and Jimmy are
pictured featuring the high hand to hand planche. Bonnie in a couple,
one of which is a Marinelli bend (That's the overarched 90 degree ha ndstand
that backbenders can do). John Lucyn is pictured doing the handstand on
stilts. John Lucyn and Lou Karns (both exceptionally gifted hand and
headbalancers, and Lou was also a frontbender/contortionist) used to
take me around
with them as they worked various nightclubs with their solo balancing
acts they did on tables. And Lou taught me the one arm drop. From a one
arm handstand down to catching it in a half arm lever. Nothing compared
to what various performers are accomplishing today on one arm,
seemingly unbelievable feats of both balance and strength.
The one outstanding event I recall from Bothner's back in the 50's was
a handstand contest to see who could stay up the longest. The gym was
filled with the absolute best in the business, all young, strong
professional acts. Renald And Rudy, the first hand to hand act to work
stripped (in tights, like a bathing suit) at Billy Rose's famous
Diamond Horseshoe, Ray Mott and Fritzie, Glenn Sundby w/George Marlin
and Glenn's sister Delores (The Wayne Marlin Trio), Vic and Adio (from
Argentina), Tsilak (also a great Hungarian juggler), The Fontaines
(Ballroom dance balancing act), Wally and Marie Allen (The Glenns), and
various and sundry others etc. The person who won that contest was a
little old chinese lady...Miss Lou, 72 years old, a retired performer
who used to come in to the gym daily to go through her old contortion
act on a high table she kept there for fun and probably to stay in
condition. She was up on her hands over five minutes, just changing
body positions, bending one way or another, but never coming down off
the hands.
I still have some photos of the various acts that I knew at Herrmann's,
and with whom I worked out on a regular basis back then. They were
great times and I really miss them. There don't seem to be any gyms
like that anymore, with open workouts and really friendly and helpful
people. Today everyone's worried about others getting hurt, and
lawsuits, insurance, etc.
The other photos in Bob's book were of one of my early heroes...Unus
(Franz Furtner). But Bob was trying to discredit the performance, and
so those were not the best viewing of Unus. He was truly a wonderful
balancer who did some incredible pressups and one armers. He was 44
when he first came to the US. The first at the time to do the one armer
on the cane and spin five hoops simultaneously. And he stayed up there
a long time. One of my favorites was his press up and one arm on the
pool cue. Tho' I didn't know him, I did later work with his daughter
Nina, a beautiful amazon who was with the Alberto Zoppe bareback act
with the Polack Bros Circus.
That's it for the nonce.
Stu Goldberg
P.S. Forgot to mention. Late in his life, Bob Jones moved to Sydney,
Ohio. I was fortunate to find him there thru Gay wah Ng, an old army
pal, and get to talk with Bob at some length before he passed away. He
was a true original.
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