Batton, an ex-Circus Oz and Legs on the Wall performer and one of the troupe's founders, hopes it inspires audiences to ‘‘move it or lose it’’.‘‘And also not to think that once you’re over 50, you have to stop doing things,’’ Batton said.
‘‘I mean that physically, but I also mean, don’t stop having ideas and putting creative ideas out there.’’But there are ways around it. ‘‘You go, ‘I can’t do that anymore, but oh, I’m going to try that move I’ve never tried before, because that’s not going to hurt my body'.’’Batton and her co-founder Sue Broadway will do a double act.Trapeze artist Kathryn Niesche is doing an aerial hammock act in which a length of fabric is more a dancing partner than an apparatus.
This is her first intensive aerial training in four years. She has to be careful, given her injuries, but she wants a challenge.‘‘I don’t want to give up and say, ‘that’s it. That part of my life is over'," Ms Niesche said. ‘‘I still feel like, physically, if I take it slowly but surely, I will be able to achieve something. And so far it’s been going really well.Mr Coldwell who like Ms Broadway helped found Circus Oz — he still works there as ‘‘senior artist, production consultant, rigging designer and tent boss’’ — will reprise his famous roof walk which he first did in the late 1970s but which has been dormant for about five years.Sprucing himself up: Tim Coldwell prepares for his roof walk act.
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