 |
ALL WHO GLITTER: Balch, third
from right, performs with the Flying Caceres,
which include Lauren Englehorn, George Caceres,
Elena Egorova, Harmony French, Krizia Caceres
and Sam Luckie.
Courtesy Colby Balch |
There are graduates who fall into a cushy job after
earning their degree, but Colby Balch hangs from a high
bar—as a trapeze artist.
An economics major who had been recruited by the consulting
firm Bain & Company, Balch was living in San Francisco
in his first months after graduation. He met a teacher
at a trapeze school near Golden Gate Park and, “not
really thrilled to enter the world of corporate bureaucracy,”
he took his advice to apply for a trapeze-teaching position
with Club Med. With no experience other than the rock
climbing, wrestling and Ultimate Frisbee he enjoyed,
Balch was accepted to the Club Med program.
“They placed more importance on my having a lot
of positive energy and enthusiasm, and given my athletic
background they were willing to train me,” Balch
says. In Huatulco, Mexico, he quickly learned trapeze
work “was as thrilling as it was demanding.”
He went on to jobs at the Club Meds in Cancun, Mexico,
and Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, and taught at a
trapeze school in New York. (Before and between trapeze
jobs, he caddied professional golf, drove a bus for
tours in Australia and coordinated activities at a hotel
on the coast of Turkey.)
Now Balch is touring Europe professionally with the
Flying Caceres. The Sarasota, Fla.-based troupe of five
women and two men uses four bars in its set-up, and
sometimes puts four flyers in the air at once.
Whether performing three tricks in a row without a
reset or catching other flyers, Balch likes living his
circus dream, even if it means enduring sore muscles
and injuries and living in trailers. “Flying trapeze,
like many art forms, is a skill that is never quite
mastered, but in the pursuit lies the exhilaration,”
he says. “I’m always looking forward to
the next time I get up on the trapeze, which is an incredible
feeling to have about one’s work.”
Balch grew up in Atlanta aspiring to become “a
professional baseball player, a Navy fighter pilot .
. . or a billionaire stock broker,” but he does
remember seeing a circus performance that included Miguel
Caceres, the father of the Flying Caceres’s founder.
“Pretty crazy that twentysomething years later
I would end up living in his house and training with
his family,” Balch says. As for his own family,
“my dad loves to joke about how he put me through
Stanford only to have me run away and join the circus.” |