Billy Smart's Circus (c1946 - 2006)
Biography
Billly Smart's Circus was established by William 'Billy' Smart (1894-1966). Billy came from a fairground family from London with an interest in horses and circuses. In 1946 Billy came across Cody's Circus and bought the big top.
Billy Smart's New World Circus made its debut at Southall Park, Middlesex, on 5 April 1946, for the first full season after the end of the war. Initially, Billy run his circus in conjunction with his fun fair, which was being run by his children, but by 1952 the fun fair, which was overshadowed by the circus, disappeared. The success of the circus side of the business however continued to increase and in 1955, Billy Smart's Circus grew from its two-pole tentto a 6,000 seat, four-pole round big top with a hippodrome track around the ring, and a vast entrance tent, thus enabling the staging of spectacular parades, which became a Billy Smart's Circus trademark.
Billy's greatest innovation, however, was his relationship with the newly established television networks when he agreed to broadcast his circus live on the BBC in 1947. Over the years, Billy Smart's Christmas Spectacular became a BBC holiday tradition, which ITV took over in 1979 and carried on until 1982. The BBC's first-ever colour broadcast was a 'Tribute to Billy Smart', while Royal Performances took place in London, raising thousands of pounds for charity.
A large part of the success of the circus was the showmanship that Billy brought to the operation of the circus, the large family he could draw upon to run the shows and his ability as a showman to market and capture opportunities to advertise. Whilst other circus proprietors were threatened by the rise in popularity of television and shunned the cameras, Billy Smart embraced them. Smart's Circus grew to be one of the largest in the world, touring every part of the British Isles, and with permanent quarters and an associated zoo at Winkfield, Berkshire, not far from where Smart began his fairground career. His success took the circus through twenty-six tenting tours, winter seasons, frequent TV appearances and the provision of animal acts to other circuses.
Billy died in his caravan on 25 September 1966 and the circus passed onto his sons Ronnie, David and Billy Jr. who continued travelling Billy Smart's New World Circus until around 1971.
In the 1990s Ronnie and his sons Gary and Lord revived the Smart Circus and started to tour a smaller scale version of the original circus. However, the Smart Circus was never the same after the dead of Billy and soon after, the Smart name was rented out to other circus operators until it stopped operating in the early 2000s.
Found in 1051 Collections and/or Records:
Painting of Circus Performers Travelling in a Line, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Circus Perrier with Horses, a Tolly Clown, and Other Circus Performers, 16 April 1996
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Elephant in Billy Smart's Circus Tent by Derek Gilbert, 1982
Works of art collected by the Smart family.
Painting of Elephants, Horses, Clowns, Trapeze Artist and Other Performers, c1900 - 2000
Gouache.
Painting of Four White Horses with a Blue Background, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Race Cars and Monster Trucks; Collage of Information about the Stock Car Show, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Tolly's Fire Brigade of Clowns, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Two Circus Performers and a Horse with an Outline of a Clown Face, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Two Trapeze Artists and St Basil's Cathedral, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Various Stunt Performers and a Clown, c1900 - 2000
Gouache painting on board.
Painting of Wigan Fair in the early 1920s by H. Walder, c1900 - 2000
Works of art collected by the Smart family.
Palladium Programme, 1952
Programme for circus run 16 April - 30 April 1952. Front cover: silhouette drawings of two dancers, drawing of a woman's profile. Inside: programme in the centre, information and pictures on the various performers, commercial advertisement. Back cover: blank white page. 28 pages.
Paradiso Programme, 1994
Front cover: digital animation of two statues in a garden. Inside: programme near the centre, information and photos from the show, commercial advertisement. Back cover: photo from the show. 8 pages.
Pathe News, Variety Club, Billy Smart Circus Film, 1968
VHS PAL. Pathe News. Black and white with sound.
Pavlov's Puppets Promotional Material, c1900 - 2000
Black and white photocopy of the puppeteers; typescript information about one of their shows on the back. 1 page.
Peace Celebrations Booklet for Putney, Roehampton and Southfields, October 1945
Mentions Billy Smart and Bernard Mills.
Pen and Ink Drawing, c1900 - 2000
Drawing on paper of two men standing on three horses with a female performer balancing on the back of one of the men.
Pen and Ink Drawings of a Small Town Centre, c1900 - 2000
Works of art collected by the Smart family.
Pen and Ink portraits of clowns by Rebecca Lilley [MISSING], 1993
Works of art collected by the Smart family.
Pen and Ink Sketches of Circus Posters for Guerney Zoo and Billy Smart's Circus at Clapham Common, c1900 - 2000
Sketches on paper.