Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Clowns. It includes Clowns that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Female clowns .
Frenchy the Clown – character of the national lampoon comic Evil clown comics series. Fun Gus the Laughing Clown - cursed character in the cosmic/folk horror novel, "The Cursed Earth" by D.T. Neal (Nosetouch Press, 2022). The Ghost Clown – evil hypnotist clown featured in the Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! episode titled "Bedlam in the Big Top"
A clown is a person who performs physical comedy and arts in an open-ended fashion, typically while wearing distinct makeup or costuming and reversing folkway-norms.The art of performing as a clown is known as clowning or buffoonery, and the term "clown" may be used synonymously with predecessors like jester, joker, buffoon, fool, or harlequin.
Loonette the Clown was played by Alyson Court in the amazing, but truly bizarre TV show. While Court is clearly well known for her role as Loonette, sitting beside that her creepy doll, Molly, her ...
Five pictures of a creepy clown roaming a vacant parking lot under a bridge in Downtown Green Bay at night started going viral on 1 August 2016. [14] A Facebook page was created shortly after, claiming that the clown was named "Gags".
Her numbers combined musical aspects and comedic parts. She was one of the first female clowns in the United Kingdom. She performed at the Olympia London. [4] She usually wears a short white wig and a small conical hat . In 1927, she met the clown Albert Adams, who became her husband and partner in their duo act “Lulu and Albertino Adams”.
In his silent-clown way, he imitates ordinary human emotion — the grins and wide-eyed surprise, the innocent moués, the cartoon-sad frowns — with a stylized frivolity.
The heyoka (heyókȟa, also spelled "haokah," "heyokha") is a type of sacred clown shaman in the culture of the Sioux (Lakota and Dakota people) of the Great Plains of North America. The heyoka is a contrarian, jester , and satirist , who speaks, moves and reacts in an opposite fashion to the people around them.