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REVIEWS
Wolf Boys no freaks, just kids proud of who they areBy David Staples Not many press releases really grab my attention, but one came in last week from the Mexican National Circus that I could hardly believe.
The Wolf Boys have a condition known as hypertrichosis, said the release, and are covered head to toe in hair. They were raised by their grandmother in a poor Mexican village, then adopted by the circus eight years ago, when Larry was 9 and Danny 6. "They have traveled to many countries in search of an answer for their condition, but as of yet no known cause or cure has been found." I wondered if the boys were a freak show act, but circus promoter Roxanne Press assures me this was never the case, that both boys were trained from the start to be skilled performers. Roxanne agrees to take me out to the International Airport to meet Larry and Danny when they arrive from El Salvador, where they've been performing solo for a month. On the way out, she tells me she grew up in Grande Prairie, but has been living in Mexico and working with the circus for the past five years. She was performing as a jazz dancer in Las Vegas when she heard that circus dancers were wanted in Mexico and decided to take a chance and go. What she found was a dream world and opportunity to join in with a friendly, gutsy group of performers and travel the world. She says she made about $10,000 last year. "Your payment is the people's applause," she says. "Money is just a non-issue in the circus. Money comes, it goes. There will be more tomorrow." As for the Wolf Boys, Roxanne says, "I stared at them for about the first four months. You do. You can't help it. But after that you get totally used to them. I don't even notice it much any more. When people see the show they're much more fascinated in the end by the fact that they're such great circus performers." The boys don't have steady girlfriends, but are always surrounded by pretty young women, Roxanne says. " I don't know what it is, whether it's just curiosity, or if it's just that they're nice kids. They're really loving and outgoing. They look odd to begin with, but they're really kind of cute, just like little teddy bears." In the show, Larry does the music for the sound system and helps with the announcing. Both he and Danny are trampoline acrobats. Danny also does somersaults off a motorcycle. Six months ago, he smashed during the stunt, his shoulder popping out of its socket. But he didn't get much sympathy. "The idiot tried to do five somersaults and he's only allowed to do four," Roxanne says. "He overdid it, trying to be a hot shot." Outside of circus life, Danny likes to play video games and board games, while Larry is interested in science, taking correspondence courses in astronomy. At the airport, my first impression of the boys is they have very, very, very, dark faces. Both are short, wiry guys, dressed in tracksuits, with expensive looking sneakers and dark hair that never ends. Their facial hair isn't like the normal course hair of a beard, but looks soft and curly. They look like miniature Chewbaccas from Star Wars. Danny has a great smile full of white teeth. I ride back in the van to the city with them, Roxanne driving and translating the short answers in Spanish that Larry gives me. Both boys are friendly enough, but look exhausted. They've been travelling two days, from El Salvador to Guatemala to Mexico to the United States, then to Edmonton. The only time they perk up is when we pass a trailerhome lot; Larry lives in a motorhome in Mexico. When the circus moves, he pulls Danny's trailer. I asked Danny about the somersault accident. "The problem was I meant to do four, but I accidentally forgot," he says. After a few minutes, the boys seem like pretty normal teenagers to me. They're just trying to have fun, to figure out the world, and to grow up and become men in their adopted circus family. I ask if the part in the press release about them searching the world for a cure for their condition is true. "I'd never take it off," Larry says. "I'm very proud to be who I am." Just what I figured. |