Direct from New York,
The Flying Karamazov Brothers are four entertainers who are comedians, musicians, acrobats, dancers and jugglers.
The Flying Karamazov Brothers were part of the fiery finale of the first-ever Midnight Show at the 1975 Oregon Country Fair, when the show was not yet a sanctioned event.
After a five-year hiatus, the Flying Karamazov Brothers return to the fair with a new lineup this year.
You can explore the far reaches of the Adirondacks through the Adirondack Journeys series, learn interactively from natural scientists and ecologists in Adirondack Views, explore the Adirondacks close-up in A Closer View, and come to understand natural systems in
the Flying Karamazov Brothers Theatre.
In another development, a stage backdrop for the juggling troupe
The Flying Karamazov Brothers used electric field sensing of the performers to create the illusion that unlikely objects were being juggled though they were merely images projected on a screen in response to the performers' movements.
Despite this relative thumbs-down, Icontinue to believe in the dramatic mission of
the Flying Karamazov Brothers. Perhaps what is needed is the further cognitive dissonance implicit in their name and made explicit on the first page of the show's Playbill, which announces Shakespeare's The Three Sisters.
Perhaps summing up the whole political-entertainment situation in both cities is the Boston offering from
the Flying Karamazov Brothers, "Life: A Guide for the Perplexed."
Granola goofballs
the Flying Karamazov Brothers go high-tech in "L'Universe," an otherwise typically surreal, silly, sometimes inspired history of the cosmos, or rather man's historical theories about same.
And in January, during a run of "L'Universe" (a collaboration between
the Flying Karamazov Brothers and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology), the theater did its best single-day box office ever: $17,372.10.
The SCA had been advertising
the Flying Karamazov Brothers in a "pre-Broadway" production of "Room Service," a play the Karamazovs have appeared in on the West Coast.
A Mark Taper Forum presentation of a play in one act by John Murray and Allen Boretz, adapted by
the Flying Karamazov Brothers with Paul Magid and Robert Woodruff.