Atlanta Journal Constitution: The story of Red Panda, the amazing halftime act

BleedGopher

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per the AJC:

At the age of seven, in her home city of Taiyuan, 250 miles southwest of Beijing, she enrolled at a boarding school for acrobats. Niu said that the stunt is a traditional Chinese acrobat act, but slightly different, as it has been done with the bowls stacked inside each other, not rim to rim. Her father suggested a modification.

Niu tried flipping the bowls rim to rim, and they landed on top of her head, stacked, “and we were all shocked,” she said. “And then my dad just said ‘Keep on going’ until I got pretty stable with two bowls and then we practiced three and it added up.”

To put the whole act together – learning to ride a unicycle, to balance the bowls on her foot, held steady by her leg, to flip five bowls onto her head – took six or seven years, she said. With her father by her side, picking up bowls when they fell, she practiced seven hours a day. At times, she wanted to quit. When she enrolled, there were 40 students in her class, but just 10 when they graduated seven years later.

She was driven, she said, by the challenge of mastering the act and that, “if I do this, maybe I can be the first girl to do this.” She’s not sure if she is particularly gifted for it.

“I feel like if I can practice to do this, somebody else can practice to do it, too, if you put the time and work on it,” she said.

She began performing at 12 and traveled the world with the Shanghai Acrobatic Troupe but moved to the U.S. in the 1980’s. She got a job performing at Disney World. After a little more than a year, she went independent. Niu declined to provide her age, and various stories written about her in the past differ with timelines. According to one ESPN story, she first performed at an NBA game in 1993.

Niu travels by herself, lugging her unicycle, bowls and outfits in two bags. It can be a lonely life, particularly for someone who seems as eager to engage as Niu. She calls home (she lives in San Francisco) to her mother and friends and makes conversation with people she meets in airports.

In 2012, she stopped performing to take care of her father, who had been diagnosed with cancer. He died in 2013. She began practicing again, but in 2014 broke her arm, the first time she had ever been injured in her act going back to childhood, and had to wait another year to return.

It is a life she scarcely could have for herself as a child, entertaining basketball fans in the U.S. But she has a job where she feels appreciated and that continues to challenge her.

“I love it,” Niu said. “It’s always a challenge. I like that feeling.”

She has seen more of the country than most Americans and has experienced its differences in culture throughout.

“From the bottom of my heart, America is very generous, a generous country,” Niu said. “Very forgiving people and very helpful a lot of times.”

And, in each arena she visits, supremely amazed.

http://www.myajc.com/sports/college...-amazing-halftime-act/FpFjOpsfKFW7nQ7XtC9vqM/

Go Gophers!!
 


She's fantastic. Halftime concession sales take a beating whenever she performs.
 

I tried to hire her for my work christmas party and her booking people never got back to me.
 




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