Coney Island SideShow School By: Gloria Vargas Walking through the redevelopment areas around Surf Avenue at Coney Island, a block away from the subway station, you find a colorful if weathered building covered in hand-‐painted banners inviting your inner curious child to enter and check out the snake charmers, the fire eaters, the human curiosities that inhabit the Sideshow by the Seashore. And tucked to the side, a banner tells you of the Sideshow School running during the fall and spring that promises to teach all the skills you would need if you decide to run away with the circus. Adam Rinn, 38 years old, has been teaching at the school for five years after having attended it himself. The only school of its kind in the world, Coney Island’s Sideshow School is now supported by the non-‐profit organization Coney Island USA with funds from the city, Mr. Rinn hopes it will be there for the next fifty years as a reminder of what Coney Island used to be keeping alive the ancient tradition of circus performers. The dangerous acts taught here are no joke, what you see is what you get. The sword swallower is really gliding swords down his throat, the fire will really burn you and the nails are really going into the skull. Mr. Rain teaches the sideshow performances to lawyers, doctors, college professors, bartenders and performers of all disciplines. Many don’t go on to perform, but they all leave with many conquered fears. Graduation ceremonies are not traditional affairs either. The students lay on a bed of nails while Mr. Rinn smashes a cinder block on top of them with the remaining chunks of block being inscribed and given out as a diploma.
Where you can major in Fire Eating, Snake Charming, The Human Blockhead, Sword Swallowing, Magic or Burlesque
Besides being the dean and resident teacher at the Sideshow School and teaching how to hammer nails into his students’ faces, Adam Rinn also teaches Health to first and second graders at an elementary school in Queens. “It is a little bit ironic”, he says.