WEEKEND: New Old Time Chautauqua in town

PORT TOWNSEND — When the Juggling Jollies, the Pipia Sisters and a sword swallower known as Justin Credible join the Flying Karamazov Brothers, you know the circus is coming to town.

It is one strange and wonderful circus, promises Sophie Pipia, the younger half of the Pipia Sisters.

The New Old Time Chautauqua is a vaudevillian blend of magic, feats and music to tumble across the American Legion Hall stage at 7 p.m. Sunday.

“It’s not something that happens in Port Townsend very often,” said Pipia.

To wit, the New Old Time Chautauqua performers include, but are not limited to:

■ The larger-than-life yet nimble puppet known as Godfrey Daniels;

■ The Flying Karamazov Brothers, who declare they have “reinvented juggling forever;”

■ Poet Kevin Murphy, author of Between Onions and Oxygen;

■ The Fighting Instruments of Karma Band;

■ Chautauqua Ring Leader and youngest juggler Miles Freelan, 11;

■ The Skitnik band, purveyors of Balkan-inspired music;

■ Pipia Sisters: Phina, 25, on guitar and Sophie, 21, on accordion;

■ Those Juggling Jollies, acrobatically inclined young men from Bellingham.

Old-fashioned fun

The New Old Time Chautauqua’s mission is to bring old-fashioned live entertainment to small towns, schools, prisons and retirement homes across the country.

The three-decades-old company has traveled from Louisiana to Alaska; last summer, a couple of the stops were the Oregon Country Fair and a prison in eastern Oregon.

“How lucky we are” to perform at such a variety of places, said Joey Pipia, the tuxedo-clad Port Townsender who is the Chautauqua’s Commissioner of Comedy.

“People should not be allowed to have this much fun in one night,” he joked.

Seriously, each performer goes all out with his chosen art form, Joey said.

“What you’re getting is everybody’s finest 10 minutes,” whether it’s juggling or playing genre-defiant music the way the Pipia Sisters — yes, his daughters — do.

The Chautauquans had a peak experience this past July, Joey added, when they did a show at the Eastern Oregon Correctional Facility. Afterward, they received a message from Dale, an inmate.

Impact on people

Dale writes: “Most of us are ordinary people who made a few bad choices. We really appreciate your large group looking beyond our pasts and coming in to share so much energy and excitement . . . The best words I could use to describe your group were ‘Freedom of Expression.’ You guys just have no inhibitions, no reservations, and live life to the fullest.

“Nearly every member glows with happiness because they are doing what they want to do. Too many people live in self-imposed prisons, with walls built from trying to conform to what others want or think.

“You gave us a taste of real personal freedom, which is so much more than removing the bars and walls. Once again thank you for bringing so much to us. Best wishes, Dale.”

“Isn’t that incredible,” Joey said softly.

Doors will open at

6:30 p.m. for Sunday’s New Old Time Chautauqua show at the American Legion, 209 Monroe St. Tickets, at $16 for adults and $12 for children 11 and younger, are available at www.brownpapertickets.com and at the Food Co-op, 414 Kearney St.

The Chautauquans’ visit to Port Townsend this time is sponsored by SOS Printing, Pane d’Amore Artisan Bakery and Metro Bagels.

For more information about the New Old Time Chautauqua and to read its blog, which includes Dale’s letter in its entirety, see www.Chautauqua.org.

More in Life

A GROWING CONCERN: Work now to avoid garden problems later

WITH THE SEVEN reasons to prune last week, you should be ready… Continue reading

Eva McGinnis
Unity speaker set for Sunday

The Rev. Eva McGinnis will present “Living Our Prime… Continue reading

Bode scheduled for OUUF weekend program

The Rev. Bruce Bode will present “Ritual Pause” at… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: A photograph of a place, a memory and a feeling

THEY SAY A picture is worth a thousand words. Recently, while looking… Continue reading

Tim Branham, left, his wife Mickey and Bill Pearl work on a 500-piece jigsaw puzzle entitled “Days to Remember.” The North Olympic Library at its main branch on South Peabody Street in Port Angeles sponsored a jigsaw puzzle contest on Saturday, and 15 contestants challenged their skills. With teams of two to four, contestants try to put together a puzzle in a two-hour time limit. Justin Senter and Rachel Cook finished their puzzle in 54 minutes to win the event. The record from past years is less than 40 minutes. The next puzzle contest will be at 10 a.m. Feb. 8. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Piece by piece

Jigsaw puzzle contest in Port Angeles

HORSEPLAY: Planning can help prevent disaster in an emergency

ISN’T IT TRUE in life, when one door closes and appears locked… Continue reading

A GROWING CONCERN: In pruning, why and where matter

WELL, DAY 10 still has no frost and the mild temperatures are… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: Freedom and the stranger

FREEDOM AND OPPRESSION are at the very heart of the Torah portions… Continue reading

Jamal Rahman will discuss teaching stories and sacred verses that transformed his life at 11 a.m. Sunday. Rahman will be the guest speaker at Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.
Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship speaker set

Jamal Rahman will present “Spiritual Wisdom and Practices for… Continue reading

Pastor Omer Vigoren set for retirement

Bethany Pentecostal Church will honor retiring pastor the Rev.… Continue reading

The Rev. Glenn Jones
Unity in Olympics program scheduled

The Rev. Glenn Jones will present “Come Alive in… Continue reading

Shanna Bloom, who lives at the intersection of Fifth and Cherry streets in Port Angeles, plans to keep her American flag lights up well into spring. "These aren't Christmas lights anymore," she said. "They are patriotic lights now." (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Patriotic lights

Shanna Bloom, who lives at the intersection of Fifth and Cherry streets… Continue reading