New England Center for Circus Arts’ 7th Annual Dazzling Fundraiser, held live, is an amazing evening of circus acts presented by guest performers from all over the world. All proceeds from this event support outreach programming by the New England Center for Circus Arts.
How many people does it take to make a sign? Mel Martin, volunteer for New England Center for Circus Arts’ capital campaign effort, has found out over the last two years. “It’s more than one might think,” he says, “especially if it is a 12-foot diameter sign and you’ve never designed a sign before.”
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-vermont-business-magazine-january-6-2017-FEAT.jpeg375500Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2017-01-06 08:23:532022-03-31 18:02:18Two Huge Signs to be Installed at NECCA’s New Home
New England Center for Circus Arts (NECCA) has received a $75,000 matching grant from the Jane’s Trust. Jane’s Trust offered NECCA the matching grant at the end of 2015. NECCA supporters met the challenge and the match was received in December. The total raised to date is now $1.218 million toward the $2.5 million goal.
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-vermont-business-magazine-january-2017-FEAT.jpeg8561280Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2017-01-06 08:20:262022-03-31 18:02:18New England Center for Circus Arts Gets $75K Matching Grant
January 2, 2017—New England Center for Circus Arts (NECCA) is pleased to announce receipt of a $75,000 matching grant from the Jane’s Trust. Jane’s Trust offered NECCA the matching grant at the end of 2015. NECCA supporters met the challenge and the match was received in December.
The total raised to date is now $1.218 million toward the $2.5 million goal.
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-vermont-business-magazine-january-2017-FEAT.jpeg8561280Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2017-01-05 08:27:472022-03-31 18:02:18New England Center for Circus Arts Receives Match from Jane’s Trust
It was very big news when Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus announced earlier this month that it will close after 146 years.
But in Brattleboro, Vermont, the New England Center for Circus Arts will continue training aspiring circus performers. And the staff says that in many ways the future of circus arts has never been brighter.
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-wbur-january-2017-FEAT.jpg7501000Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2017-01-04 08:07:422022-03-31 18:02:18Keeping Circus Arts Alive in Vermont
A circus performer made a courageous return to the ring after suffering from a tragedy that took both of her legs.
Aimee Hancock has been coaching a professional circus artist for nearly nine years. “She has a lot of experience under her belt she knows her body really well,” said Hancock. “She’s just so encouraging,” said Erin Ball, circus performer.
Ball is a 36-year-old from Ontario and has been performing in circuses since 2008.
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-brattleboro-reformer-december-2016-FEAT.jpg12011800Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2016-12-22 08:34:412022-03-31 18:02:1836-year-old Double Amputee Circus Performer Returns Back to the Ring
Erin Ball, from Kingston, Ontario, tries to visit the New England Center for Circus Arts at least two or three times a year. Ball a double amputee, takes to the ropes at NECCA for its annual “The Flying Nut 2016: Bratt in Bayou” performance this weekend.
In 2008, Ball started doing circus arts after attending a festival where she saw a person doing a handstand on the arm of a partner. The show inspired her to look for places that she could train and learn the skills that these people were performing. She stumbled onto the website for NECCA after traveling near Vermont.
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-brattleboro-reformer-december-2016-FEAT.jpg12011800Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2016-12-20 08:30:452022-03-31 18:02:18Never Stop Doing What You Love
The holiday season wouldn’t be the same without the colorful silks and skillful acrobatics of New England Center for Circus Arts’ “The Flying Nut,” happily returning next week for its 8th production. Annually NECCA adapts the timeless Nutcracker story for a different rendition. This year “The Flying Nut 2016: Bratt in Bayou” will bring the magic of carnival-style Mardi Gras to center ring.
https://mail.necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/necca-elf-magazine-december-2016-FEAT.jpg12011800Erika Radcliffehttps://necenterforcircusarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/NECCA-Black_Logo.pngErika Radcliffe2016-12-04 08:36:342022-03-31 18:02:18Aerialist Soars to New Heights
“Imagine a trapeze, a single bar suspended high above a net, free to swing between two platforms. Two women stand on these platforms, one holding the bar in her palms. One launches, lets go and then flips once, twice, three times in open space. She seems to hover for a small eternity before her partner cleanly catches her and the two swing as one. It’s only after they return to the platforms and the bar lingers empty in the air that you realize you have been holding your breath.
When audiences watch the dazzling performances of Cirque de Soleil, the Ringling Brothers or even Vermont’s Circus Smirkus, this is the precise and effortless image that they’re presented. But as the performers soaring through the air, tumbling across the mats or juggling eight clubs in dizzying arcs will tell you, there’s a world of hard work that goes into this demonstration of grace, strength and skill.”