Katja Schumann
From Circopedia
Equestrienne
By Dominique Jando
The daughter of Max Schumann (1916-2004), the last director of Cirkus Schumann, Katja made her first appearance in the ring of the family circus at age 10, as a ballerina on horseback. She subsequently worked in her family's outstanding equestrian acts, notably in high schoolA display of equestrian dressage by a rider mounting a horse and leading it into classic moves and steps. (From the French: Haute école) (dressage) presentations, along with her father, her uncle Albert Schumann (1915-2001), her aunt Paulina, and her cousins, Benny and Jacques.
Every year, the Schumanns' season included performances at the circus building of Göteborg, in Sweden, then under Cirkus Schumann's big topThe circus tent. America: The main tent of a traveling circus, where the show is performed, as opposed to the other tops. (French, Russian: Chapiteau) in Stockholm, and from May to September at Cirkus Schumann (as Copenhagen's circus building near the Tivoli Park was then known). They spent the winter season in London with Bertram Mills Circus at the Olympia of Kensington. Economic considerations, and the closings of Bertram Mills Circus in 1967 and the circus building of Göteborg in 1969, led Albert Schumann, its director in title, to close Cirkus Schumann in 1969, putting an abrupt end to a long and brilliant story that had begun in 1891.
Solo Career
After the closing of the family circus, Katja easily found engagements with some of Europe's leading circuses. She performed a solo high schoolA display of equestrian dressage by a rider mounting a horse and leading it into classic moves and steps. (From the French: Haute école) act and established a strong reputation as one of the best high schoolA display of equestrian dressage by a rider mounting a horse and leading it into classic moves and steps. (From the French: Haute école) riders of her generation. She participated in the first International Circus Festival of Monte Carlo in 1974, where she won La Dame du Cirque award, given to the best female performer of the Festival. In 1976, she won a Gold Medal at the Circus World Championships in London.
In 1977, Max Schumann revived Cirkus Schumann with his children Philip and Katja, touring under a brand-new big topThe circus tent. America: The main tent of a traveling circus, where the show is performed, as opposed to the other tops. (French, Russian: Chapiteau). Unfortunately, this adventure was short-lived: The new Cirkus Schumann folded its tents in 1983. Since 1981, Katja had appeared during the winter season at the Big Apple Circus in New York with her high schoolA display of equestrian dressage by a rider mounting a horse and leading it into classic moves and steps. (From the French: Haute école) acts, and she decided to settle there. She became a member of the circus's resident company and married its Director, Paul Binder.
From 1983 on, she created a long list of original liberty"Liberty act", "Horses at liberty": Unmounted horses presented from the center of the ring by an equestrian directing his charges with his voice, body movements, and signals from a ''chambrière'' (French), or long whip. and high-schoolA display of equestrian dressage by a rider mounting a horse and leading it into classic moves and steps. (From the French: Haute école) acts, sometimes with the help of her father, Max (who rejoined her in 1992 and remained with the Big Apple Circus until 2003), or of Katherine and Max, her and Paul's children. She also presented her version of the equestrian classic, The CourierAn equestrian presentation created by Andrew Ducrow in 1827 as ''The Courier of St. Petersburg'', in which a rider stands on two galloping horses, one foot on each, and allows other horses to pass between his mounts, catching their reins as they pass, eventually holding the reins a group of galloping horses in front of him. (Also known in French as ''La Poste''.) of St. Petersburg, in 1986 and again in 1989-90.
Katja and Paul separated in 2004, at which time Katja went to work with Circus Flora in St. Louis, Missouri, before returning to Scandinavia in 2007, where she worked with Cirkus Dannebrog and other organizations.
See Also
- Video: Katja Schumann, The Courier in the Big Apple Circus production of Grandma Goes West (1989)
- Video: Katja Schumann, High School presentation in the Big Apple Circus production of Ballerinas, Horses and Clowns... (1990-1991)
- Video: Katja Schumann, The Horse Carousel in the Big Apple Circus production of Greetings from Coney Island (1991)
- Video: Katja Schumann, The Horse and the Dancer, High School presentation with Marie-Pierre Bénac, in the Big Apple Circus production of Greetings From Coney Island (1991)
- Video: Katja and Max Schumann, High School presentation, with Katherine Schumann Binder and Melinda Merlier, in the Big Apple Circus production of Goin' Places (1992)
- Video: Katja Schumann and Max Binder, High School Act, in the Big Apple Circus production of Twenty Years! (1997)
- Video: Katja Schumann, Katherine Schumann Binder and Sasha Nevidonski, Horse Act with Aerial Tissu in the Big Apple Circus production of Dreams of a City (2002)
Image Gallery
- Katja Schumann 1976 web.jpg
Katja Schumann, Cirque Pinder-Jean Richard (1976)
Katja Schumann in "The CourierAn equestrian presentation created by Andrew Ducrow in 1827 as ''The Courier of St. Petersburg'', in which a rider stands on two galloping horses, one foot on each, and allows other horses to pass between his mounts, catching their reins as they pass, eventually holding the reins a group of galloping horses in front of him. (Also known in French as ''La Poste''.)" (1985)
Katja Schumann in "The CourierAn equestrian presentation created by Andrew Ducrow in 1827 as ''The Courier of St. Petersburg'', in which a rider stands on two galloping horses, one foot on each, and allows other horses to pass between his mounts, catching their reins as they pass, eventually holding the reins a group of galloping horses in front of him. (Also known in French as ''La Poste''.)" (1985)
Katja Schumann in "The CourierAn equestrian presentation created by Andrew Ducrow in 1827 as ''The Courier of St. Petersburg'', in which a rider stands on two galloping horses, one foot on each, and allows other horses to pass between his mounts, catching their reins as they pass, eventually holding the reins a group of galloping horses in front of him. (Also known in French as ''La Poste''.)" (1985)