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Those afraid of clowns brace for new 91ƵIt91Ƶ movie

Coulrophobia sufferers get prepared ahead of Stephen King remake
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Graeme Maclean/Creative Commons Graeme Maclean/Creative Commons

While Jaclyn Andrews can91Ƶt rationally explain her fear of clowns, she91Ƶs been avoiding them for years.

Walking the midway at local fairs is totally out of the question, and lately she91Ƶs considered double checking with fellow parents before attending kids91Ƶ birthday parties.

She realizes that might sound a little silly to some, but the clowns that haunted her nightmares as a young girl still evoke bad feelings.

91ƵI91Ƶm panicked, can91Ƶt breathe, sweaty,91Ƶ says Andrews, 35, describing how she feels when she sees a clown.

91ƵI get the overwhelming need to get out 91Ƶ and now.91Ƶ

The fear of clowns, known as coulrophobia, is a relatively new phenomenon with very little research behind it. And while it91Ƶs not considered an official phobia by the World Health Organization, its sufferers say the experience is very real.

Andrews, a resident of Hamilton, feels anxious thinking about the days ahead when evil clowns will be a focal point of popular culture and practically impossible to avoid.

A remake of Stephen King91Ƶs 91ƵIt91Ƶ arrives in theatres next week and is expected to draw huge audiences intrigued by the titular shapeshifter, also known as Pennywise, who often takes the form of a clown.

And the upcoming sixth season of 91ƵAmerican Horror Story,91Ƶ which begins airing Tuesday on FX Canada, is generating buzz for the return of Twisty, a demented clown with a taste for trickery and murder.

Clowns have existed since ancient Egypt, although their trademark white faces and colourful costumes weren91Ƶt established until the early 1800s when British entertainer Joseph Grimaldi began playing Joey the Clown. A similar look was adopted by Scottish businessman John Bill Ricketts when he brought the modern circus to the United States a few years later.

For many decades the happy-go-lucky personas of modern clowns like Bozo and Ronald McDonald seemed in style, but a notorious American serial killer is considered to be the inspiration for the advent of the more sinister brand of clowns.

Before he was convicted for the murders of 33 young men in 1980, John Wayne Gacy seemed like a relatively average guy, who sometimes dressed as Pogo the Clown, a character he created while volunteering at children91Ƶs hospitals. After he was jailed, Gacy painted portraits of himself in clown costume and the artwork became the focus of exhibitions 91Ƶ and protests.

91ƵPeople learn to be afraid from the movies they see, and from the news they read 91Ƶ watching other people be afraid,91Ƶ said Martin Antony, a professor of psychology at Ryerson University.

91ƵGacy may have triggered certain directors and writers to portray clowns in that way, and that may have exacerbated fear of clowns.91Ƶ

Two years after Gacy91Ƶs conviction, the film 91ƵPoltergeist91Ƶ featured a scene in which a young boy is dragged under his bed by a toy clown brought to life in the middle of the night. And King91Ƶs novel 91ƵIt91Ƶ was released in 1986 and adapted for TV in 1990, with Tim Curry playing the creepy Pennywise.

Andrews swears watching the 91ƵIt91Ƶ miniseries in middle school scarred her for life, especially moments like its opening scene in which a young boy is lured by the killer clown to a sewer.

91Ƶ(91ƵIt91Ƶ) just did it in for me,91Ƶ she says.

The fascination with vicious clowns only grew as 91ƵIt91Ƶ became a favourite at video stores during the 1990s and other forgotten films like 198891Ƶs 91ƵKiller Klowns from Outer Space91Ƶ found another life on DVD alongside the clown-like doll used by serial killer Jigsaw in the 91ƵSaw91Ƶ horror movies.

Much to the dismay of professional clown performers, those portrayals helped take the wholesomeness out of a character once considered a fixture of family entertainment.

Rami Nader, a psychologist at the North Shore Stress and Anxiety Clinic in Vancouver, says some people are leery of clowns because they fear their exaggerated painted smiles obscure their true emotions, which makes them unpredictable.

91ƵYou don91Ƶt know really what they91Ƶre feeling, what they91Ƶre thinking or what they91Ƶre going to do,91Ƶ Nader says.

A spate of creepy-clown sightings reported across North America last year didn91Ƶt help their negative perception. Perhaps inspired by popular prank videos on YouTube, reports of individuals wandering through neighbourhoods while wearing menacing clown masks began to spread. In the U.S., Target stopped selling scary clown masks as a result.

Frank McAndrew, a professor of psychology at Knox College in Illinois, says he learned how deeply opinions of clowns have eroded after his study of 91Ƶcreepiest occupations.91Ƶ

The online survey, which canvassed 1,341 people, found respondents were bothered by people whose jobs held ambiguous threats, and in particular individuals who made physical contact or exhibited 91Ƶnon-normative, non-verbal behaviour.91Ƶ

Clowns ranked as the creepiest, worse than taxidermists, sex shop owners and funeral directors.

McAndrew says he found the ambiguity of a clown91Ƶs performance art seemed to rattle the respondents the most.

91Ƶ(They said), 91ƵWe don91Ƶt know if there91Ƶs something to be afraid of, but we have a paralysis about not knowing whether we should be scared,91Ƶ91Ƶ he said.

The professor also discovered some members of the clown community weren91Ƶt exactly helping rebuild their reputation as non-threatening. After his study was published, McAndrew said some clowns began to 91Ƶstalk91Ƶ him on social media and called the president of his college in an attempt to get him fired.

But McAndrew also found that discussions about his findings online revealed a stark apathy from even those who aren91Ƶt afraid of clowns.

91ƵI don91Ƶt recall seeing anybody ever saying, 91ƵYou know, I really like clowns,91Ƶ91Ƶ he added.

David Friend, The Canadian Press





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