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How do you deal with a crying kid?

Started by justsomeguytn, March 29, 2010, 11:53:17 AM

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justsomeguytn

Specifically I'm wondering how performers deal with kids that get scared by part of their act and start crying.  Do you stop your act and do something to calm them down, make a joke out of it, or just go on and let the parents deal with it?

Carl Heinz

#1
I'd think that in an act, you'd just ignore it.

I do street meet/greet and I carry a Lightning Scooter-Horse finger pupped that, with the permission of the parents, I'll try tickling.  If that doesn't work, I'll tug my beard thoughtfully and ask the child whether it knows whether Santa might be watching.  Herself is making a Santa cap that I hope to start using this year.  Then, if I do the Santa bit, I'll pull the cap out of the puppet sack and put it on.
Carl Heinz
Guild of St Cuthbert

McGuinness

Depends what it is that caused the crying. Men - men with beards especially - have the most problem with it but I played one of the villains last year and got downright mean sometimes (not to the kids, but they can misinterpret interactions with other actors or what they overhear and see).

Sometimes the best solution is to walk away or at least back up and let the kid have some space - parents usually understand, in my experience. Gifts work too. A little token or coin or jewel have saved me from crying kids many times.

Ambrosine

As a parent and attendee of faire I have my two year old with me at all times, in each situation:

Stage act: let me deal with him if it scared him and he is crying I will remove him from the area so you can continue the act. We may just go to the back and watch from a distance until he is sure it is OK. A respectful parent would do this so as to not disrupt the act and ruin for others.

Street: If you try to calm and do not succeed it is best to back away and let me deal with it again we will most likely see you again at which time if parent persuades the child to try to interact with you again give it another shot. This year my son was very stand offish of a certain fairy the first weekend but by the last (we attend every weekend of BARF) they were best off friends and high fiving at every moment given!.

With both situations it is best to give the child his/her space, the only person who really will know how to deal with the child is the parent and that is who the child is going to look towards for comfort. I myself would not think you cold hearted if you continued your show, that is your job and my child is the one disrupting the show at that point.
Stitch Witch of the Harbinger

dbaldock

"Off with their heads!"   :o   ;)    ;D
Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people... -anonymous

Molden

simple...give 'em an espresso and a puppy....  ;)

THEN let their parents deal wi' 'em sez I!  ;D
Cat-like & Mercurial

Reliably Unreliable

BubbleWright

Although I am just a playtron, my Renaissance Bubble Machine really attracts the nipperkins. The problems start when parents want to move on to other entertainments and the child (children) put up a fuss, wanting to stay. My response is to ask "How stands the hour?" and upon learning the time, exclaim "Zounds! I must be about my business in another part of the Shire. Tell you what, I'll make bubbles for another minute and then I must leave. Thank thee little Master/Mistress". This works out fine since I initiate the break. It also happens when moving about the Shire I may see a nipper is in extreme fuss mode. Speaking directly to the child I say "Look at this" and then start cranking out bubbles. 99% of the time the tears stop and turn to giggles, much to the relief of the parents.
"It is only with the heart that one sees rightly. What is essential is invisible to the eye."
   Antoine de St. Exupery

stonebiscuit

I'm a street performer. I'm also very tall, especially for a woman, and quite loud. The first thing I do is lower my voice, kneel down to the kid's level, and if I'm wearing my giant hat, I take it off. If my being larger than life has scared them, I'll try to become a more kid-friendly size. That and a pretty trinket usually help, and can lead into a little song and dance or something. If it doesn't work very quickly, I'll apologize to the parents and back off.

Fugli

Quote from: dbaldock on March 29, 2010, 06:03:27 PM
"Off with their heads!"   :o   ;)    ;D

That certainly would quiet them down... but the mess...! Oy!
Have you ever imagined a world with no hypothetical situations?

GirlChris

I usually act more scared of them then they are of me. I'll run and hide behind something (usually something that doesn't really hide me, like behind a skinny tree or under a picnic table) and wait them out.

Capt Robertsgrave Thighbiter

Gut 'em in thier weams and hide the bodies!
If the rum's gone, so is the fun
*images and URLs not allowed in signatures* -Admin
Party like it's 1724

Queen Bonnie

 Sometimes I say to the child- "your crying is making me so very sad too! How about a smile?" if no smile- "Now I am going to cry with you." And i start crying in a very funny overstated way. The kid forgets to cry because I am doing it way better! it usually ends up in laughs! And a token Wizard stone or pirate coin. I am a kid at heart. i hate to see rennlets crying at faire.
Wingardium Leviosa!
Tis not the length of the staff- but the magick there in!

Queen Margaret

Sometimes something as simple as taking off your hat or headgear (if it's not too complicated) while you speak quietly to them works.

I've had good luck with "royalty dust." It's nothing more than purple glitter in a cool bottle with a cork. But if you endow it just right, it becomes magic. "If I make you a princess, will you smile?" usually works.

Worst case scenario, a gracious reverance, a smile and an "enjoy thy day" while beating a soft, yet hasty retreat works. Sometimes they're just gonna cry.

Queen Bonnie's right about the "can I cry too?" That's almost always fun and works for every station of character.
A calm sea never made for a skillful manner. -English proverb

Professor M

I've often offered to have a "grumpy contest" with the child.  I explain that I can make a better sad face than them, and if they smile, they're going to lose.  Then I make a silly sad face, and if the child keeps fussing I say "You're winning, I have to get grumpier."  I also seem to get to a point where they start to crack a smile.  Then I say "Oh no!  Don't smile!  Don't do it!  Doooonn't do it!"  and the smile gets bigger.  At that point I'm getting sillier, too, so sometimes they point to me and say "You smiled!  You lose!" and at that point they're smiling too.  Other times they just break into a giggle because the big scary Professor now looks so darned foolish they can't stand it.  I know one regular patron whose little girl now challenges me every year.  This kid has a good poker face.
"You can never get a cup of tea large enough or a book long enough to suit me."
~ C.S. Lewis

Morrigan

It really depends upon why they're crying, but generally the most successful tactic I've found is to cry.

Because my costume changes significantly with each themed weekend, I've often got kids crying around me for various reasons.   

On Fairie or Christmas weekend, it's usually because some parent has thrust their young child into the arms of a strangely-dressed stranger (me) for a photo op.  I start crying too, and either (a) the kid stops and stares in astonishment, or (b) the kid keeps crying and the parents get a funny photo with everybody in the frame bawling.   

On barbarian or halloween weekend, it is usually because I'm scary-looking and I've startled them.  In that case, I back off a little, and sit down and have a good cry.  It surprises them into stopping 90% of the time.   Though, I'll admit, if I can manage to make an older kid (over 12) cry on halloween weekend, I consider it a job well done!

If the kid is crying because of general fatigue, fussiness, or just plain spoiled brat (I'm stationed near the front gate, and at the end of the day it is a veritable sea of cranky children), I give them a wide berth and let the parents deal with it.  There's another kid that WANTS to be entertained just 10 feet down the path.
I used to have a handle on life, but it broke.