Post-Standard, The (Syracuse, NY)
August 3, 2000
All Doug Rougeux needs to amuse a crowd of kids is some bubble soap and a wand. But when he's working as "The Bubble Man," Rougeux goes beyond your basic bubbles.
As his audience filed in, Rougeux silently tossed a bubble wand toward a bowl of soap, missing by a mile and grimacing as if embarrassed. The kids giggled as he missed again and again. When he finally made the shot, they cheered wildly.
Rougeux, 35, of Liverpool, is the star of "Bubble Mania," a show he has performed all across upstate New York since 1991.
Rougeux, who charges $200 to $290 a pop for his bubble show, is also a juggler, an actor in community theater productions and a member of the Syracuse-based Off-the-Cuff Comedy Troupe.
He began performing at age 12, when, he says, "I bought a "Learn to Juggle' kit for a friend and never gave it to him."
Juggling taught him that he enjoyed entertaining audiences. After graduating from Liverpool High School in 1982, he attended the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Clown College in Venice, Fla., obtaining his clown degree in 1984.
In 1986, he returned to Upstate New York and worked on a television production degree at State University of New York at Binghamton and State University of New York at Buffalo. In college, he got his first paid juggling performance. After graduating, he hooked up with a fellow Ringling Bros. clown, Casey Carle, and the two performed for a year as "The Loons."
"Slowly, performing became enough to pay all my bills," he said.
It was Carle who taught Rougeux the art and science of bubble-making. Carle invented "Bubble Mania" after seeing a street performer in California use bubbles in an act. Soon after launching "The Bubble Man," Carle decided to move to Connecticut. He offered to bring Rougeux into the business and teach him everything he knew about bubbles. Rougeux agreed not to perform outside of New York State and to pay Carle royalties for using his material. Today, Rougeux says, "80 percent of what I do is bubbles."
"This man is so wonderful," said Carol Simson, who booked Rougeux to perform at Sumner Pre-K. "He puts on these round glasses that look like a bubble. His whole body is fluid like a bubble. He captivated everyone's attention, young and old."
Rougeux figures he did 300 performances last year, mostly in Central New York. He plans to keep at it as long as he is able.
Five years later, he thinks his job will be fun as long as he can look out and see kids smiling. "But," he adds, "doing the 20 percent of the stuff that's not bubbles - learning the scripts, doing the improv - really does keep me sane."
Visit Doug's Website:
http://www.bubblejuggle.com/whois.html