Albuquerque
Journal Article
Clowning around is serious work
September
22, 2002,
Section:
Career Marketplace, Page: I1
Franchesca
Stevens For the Albuquerque
Journal
*
A lighthearted performance conceals the tough task
of making kids laugh.
Debi
Saylor Pierce of Albuquerque isn't clowning around
when she says her primary goal as a performer is to
"promote self-esteem."
As Twinkles the Clown, she says, she only selects
gags and tricks that make people feel good about
themselves because "there's too many examples out
there of people making other people feel bad and I
don't want to be a part of it."
Her character, Twinkles, is known in the clowning
profession as a friendly clown "a clown in
trouble." Pierce says the character allows her to
engage her audiences in her acts without putting
them on the spot.
"Like I don't know what I'm doing," she explains.
"For the magic show the birthday child gets to be
the helper ... and then when the magic works, they
get all the credit."
Pierce, a former social worker with the state of
New Mexico's Children, Youth and Families
Department, has been entertaining kids and adults
as a clown since 1981. She also works part time as
a secretary.
Her clowning schedule includes some 500
performances and appearances a year. Most of her
magic and balloon animal art shows, face-painting
stints and balloon deliveries occur on weekends.
They're usually targeted toward children between
the ages of three and eight. Pierce does, however,
often perform for adults at company parties and
retirement homes.
Learning
the ropes
She says
anyone who wants to work as a clown must take the
job seriously enough to attend some of the many
clown camps and conventions that are held around
the country.
She, for example, has attended three one-week clown
camps at the University of Wisconsin at LaCrosse
and five international clown conventions. She
estimates training and seminars
have
cost thousands of dollars.
To learn how to run her own business, she also has
attended two semesters of entrepreneur classes at
the Albuquerque Technical Vocational Institute. She
says those classes taught her how to create a
small-business plan and how to market her services.
Clown
costs
Pierce, who works out of her Northeast Heights
home, says she has invested more than $500 in
balloon helium and air pumps and spends nearly as
much per month on Yellow Pages ads and party
favors.
At any one time she typically orders 25,000
business cards (which she jokingly calls Twinkles
the Clown Credit Cards) that cost $500.
"I just felt like I needed more joy in my life.
Social work is hard work, and you take it home with
you. You have nightmares. You just wish a better
result for (the families I worked with)."
"I've had parties for people as old as 103 and I
love it," Pierce says.
"I just feel I can bring a little joy to the world.
I love dealing with kids and if you pay attention,
they're so cute. They're so funny. I wish I had
kept a notebook all these years of all the cute
things that they've said."
Pierce says she got into clowning after she started
helping her mother, Mary, who performed locally as
Jingles the Clown (now in Missouri). Pierce
estimates she works 10 to 20 hours per week as a
clown 13 to 20 days per month and says she's only
missed two parties in her 21-year career because of
family emergencies. When she's sick-if she can't
find a replacement, she works anyway downing
antihistamines during allergy season because "to
have a runny nose and be a clown is not funny."
On
the job
Debi Saylor Pierce
JOB:
Clown
HOMETOWN:
Independence,
Mo.; moved to Albuquerque in 1961
EDUCATION:
B.A. in
sociology, University of Albuquerque, 1972;
graduated from Highland High School, Albuquerque,
1968.
PAY:
$25 to $150
per hour
SATISFACTION:
"I just feel
like I can bring a little joy to the world."
FRUSTRATION:
"I find that
some people will just slap on a little makeup and
go out there and they say they're a clown without
training, without education."
DREAM
JOB: "I think I'm
doing it."
INTERESTS:
Travel,
computers and Penny, her puppy.
Debi Saylor Pierce, who performs as Twinkles the
Clown, was a social worker with the state's
Children, Youth and Families Department.