YENGIBARYAN THE "THINKING CLOWN" WOULD’VE BEEN 75
Tert.am
11:57 ~U 15.03.10
Had he been alive, Leonid Yengibaryan, master of pantomime, well-known
clown and writer, would’ve been 75 today. His father was a chief cook
in Metropol Hotel, while his mother was a homemaker.
Born in Moscow in 1935, he had a long way to go before he would devote
his life to the circus and become a professional clown. Yengibaryan
tried to reveal his hand in various areas, such as the fishing
industry and professional boxing, but when the Moscow State College
of Circus and Variety Arts opened a Department of Clown Art in 1955,
Yengibaryan decided to apply.
>>From early on in his new career, Yengibaryan faced controversial
reactions from his colleagues and the public, with his friends advising
him to quite the "thinking clown" character.
Leonid Yengibaryan said about himself: "I like the sea, the autumn …
Vincent van Gogh. I am afraid of welfare [that is, social welfare].
For me the most important thing in life is responsibility, which must
be borne for everything happening around us."