Always clowning around
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SHE IS:
Star, the clown from Mars.
IN THE BEGINNING:
Susan Van Tuyl began clowning six years ago when she found herself
with free time on her hands. After proper training from a mentor and
friend, Van Tuyl’s first event was on a hot afternoon in Buena Park
at a birthday party.
An excited Van Tuyl painted on her make-up very thick before she
set off for the park where she would be making balloon animals for
the kids.
“I suffered a melt down,” she said with a laugh. “I forgot to
powder and so my makeup ran down my face, looking like red freckles.”
But Van Tuyl’s fun was just beginning. Her balloon-making skills
were as unique as the dogs she created that only had room enough for
one leg -- alien dogs -- she called them.
Her first day on the job would, in effect, create her character.
She became Star, a 4-year-old clown from Mars -- a character she
loves to be. As the story goes, Star’s parents live on Mars, but she
lives in Huntington Beach with her Earth mom, Susan.
MAKING KIDS SMILE
During the school year, Van Tuyl is a fourth-grade teacher at
Shoreline Christian School in Fountain Valley. However, Star does not
sit idly by while Van Tuyl teaches. Star performs in school
assemblies and at church functions promoting messages of self-esteem
and equality. Star’s hair is blue unlike all the other kids on Mars
who have red hair, Van Tuyl said.
“It doesn’t matter the color of your hair, your skin or anything
else,” she said. “Differences are OK because everyone is special.”
Such messages of acceptance and diversity, Van Tuyl said, reach
the children because she is in costume. Van Tuyl delights in making
kids happy by doing magic tricks, making animal balloons and painting
their faces.
“When the kids are smiling, that is my reward,” she said. “Kids
have it so hard sometimes, they need time to just be happy and
imagine.”
As a teacher, Van Tuyl loves to instill creativity in her students
by challenging them to stretch themselves and achieve whatever they
desire. Van Tuyl has taken dance classes, vocal lessons, an air brush
class and plans to take a cartoon drawing class in the future all in
hopes of becoming a better clown.
Later this month Van Tuyl will be attending Mooseburger Clown Camp
in Maplelake, Minn. where she will be critiqued by Ringling Brothers
clowns on her costume, makeup, presentation and other aspects of
clowning.
“I am very excited for it,” she said. “I know I’m going to come
out the better for it.”
A FAMILY AFFAIR
Entertaining seems to run in the Van Tuyl family. Her husband Doug
uses puppetry and ventriloquism to promote anti-violence in schools.
Van Tuyl’s son Ryan, 18, took to clowning last year as he became
the character “Pepp E. Ronih” -- a big slice of pizza that
accompanies Star to her events.
Van Tuyl’s daughter Stephanie, 21, breaks from the family
tradition by studying to be a psychologist at Cedarville University
in Ohio.
“Stephanie thinks that maybe she will be able to fix us all,” Van
Tuyl said with a laugh.
Story by Wendy Gabbe and Photos by Greg Fry
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