Category Archives: Arts & Culture

Arts & cultural activities and events in Bricklyn

Barnum & Bricklyn Circus Ringmaster

The Barnum & Bricklyn Circus Returns Home!

Bricklyn Eagle masthead

April 13, 2025

by Amanda B. Starr, Metro Desk

Barnum & Bricklyn Circus troupe entering the Big Top in Bricklyn, Vermont.
All photos and graphics in this article prepared by Bricklyn Eagle staffer Ann Tiler Anderson with assistance from Dall E-3 AI.

After a two year absence, the famed Barnum & Bricklyn Circus has come back to its home base at the Bricklyn Fairgrounds, after touring more than twenty other Inland LEGO cities and realms.

Clowns arriving at the Bricklyn Fairgrounds last week for the 2025 edition of the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus.

The Bricklyn Legotary is lead sponsor of the Circus’s much anticipated return to Bricklyn. As Legotary president Jerry Plater-Zybrick told us:

“The Barnum & Bricklyn Circus is undoubtedly the most popular attraction that we in Bricklyn share with the rest of the Inland world.”

“Crowds of LEGO people from Realms around the globe,” noted Plater-Zybrick, “have marveled at Barnum & Bricklyn’s dazzling Big Top show. Legotary chapters have been the principal sponsors of Barnum & Bricklyn during its 2024-2025 tour — and it’s all for a great cause, helping raise money to ensure that lower income LEGO families can afford high quality child care.”

“We at the Bricklyn Legotary,” Plater-Zybrick added, “are excited to see the Barnum & Bricklyn return to its home base of Bricklyn. The Big Top will be packed for both afternoon and evening shows so Bricklynites, get your tickets now.”

Calvin Plater Hobbs, Ringmaster of the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus since 2020.
The spectacular opening act had the sold-out Bricklyn crowd enthralled on opening night last Wednesday.

Tom Brickorti, CEO of the Bricklyn Chamber of Commerce, also applauded the Circus’s return. As Brickorti told us: “The Barnum & Bricklyn showcases the very best of Bricklyn. It’s an event that brings families together, and puts a smile on everyones’ face. It’s especially welcome during these challenging days we’ve been facing, when so many people are worried about Bricklyn’s future. The Barnum & Bricklyn is the perfect tonic we all need.”

Free donuts provided by Dunk Them Donuts to all attending the Circus.

During the Circus’s stay, Bricklyn donut mogul David Tiler Broffman is providing free donuts for all attendees.

As Broffman noted, “Dunk Them Donuts is proud to be a chief sponsor of the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus. We could think of no better way of supporting the Legotary’s fine work than by providing free donuts to every visitor … and that even includes Homer Simpson. As Homer would say, “there’s nothing like munching on a tasty Dunk Them Donut while sitting under the Big Top.”

Changes Under the Big Top

Visitors to the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus will find a few big differences this year. Most notably, the absence of lions and tigers and bears, oh my!

We asked Barnum & Bricklyn CEO Marv Strawbrick about this change.

Jugglers showing off their skills.

As Strawbrick explained, “We’re focusing more on the artistry of our amazing performers, our jugglers, high wire artists, horse riders, acrobats, and clowns.”

“Circuses have come to realize,” said Strawbrick, “that having wild animals is not necessary to the circus experience. In fact, in surveys we have seen, a growing number of circus visitors have indicated their concern about the ethics of using wild animals in a circus.”

As Strawbrick continued, “while we at the Barnum & Bricklyn have always given priority to treating all of our animal performers kindly and with care, we understand these concerns, based though they are on some of those ‘bad apple, low-budget’ circuses you still find in parts of the Outland world.”

While these LEGO critters no longer perform under the Barnum & Bricklyn’s Big Top, they are still considered part of the Circus family. Barnum & Bricklyn has purchased and set aside 100 acres along the Brickooski River for them to live. Still, the former performing animals were excited by the return last week of their long-time Barnum & Bricklyn friends, and attended a special preview performance..

What Circus-Goers Like Best

Blonde haired Melissa and brown haired Thomas at the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus on Saturday.

In walking through the fairgrounds, we asked several circus-goers what they liked best about the circus. Among the many young people with smiles on their faces, we spoke with ten year old Melissa and twelve year old Thomas, both of whom were about to get some cotton candy, always a favorite at the circus.

“Wow. we Just saw the Big Top show,” Melissa said. “It’s so much better than even two years ago. I was just eight years old then. What I love best is Miss Tracy on the high wire. I thought, oh my god, how can she walk up there like that! While it would be scary, it would also be so exciting to be so high and see everyone looking so little down below. I just love the circus!” Then turning towards her parents, Melissa called out, “Mom, Dad, can we please come back to the Circus again next week?”

Miss Tracy in the Big Top, high above the ground.

Thomas told us that what he liked best “was definitely the clowns,” explaining that “maybe it’s because I also like to clown around. Hey, I’m joking about that!”

Thomas added, “Most of the clowns are happy, but some are sort of scary looking and some look sad. Don’t know why. If I had a job as a clown I’d be walking around smiling all the time, while sticking out my tongue at people, or just playing jokes on them.”

“Being a clown,” Thomas concluded, “sure would be very cool and lots of fun.”

Barnum & Bricklyn Circus Poster from 2012.

Outside the Big Top we chatted with some others in the crowd. Ellen Brickhouse, an elementary school teacher and resident of Bricklyn Junction, told us:

“It’s so enjoyable to come here with my sister and her two kids. They’re six and eight and it’s their first circus. What a great job Barnum & Bricklyn does. It really is a show for all ages, but especially for kids, or those of us older folks who are still kids at heart. With all the bad news I’ve been reading — and, yes, including in your newspaper — it’s so nice to be able to spend some stress-free time here at the Fairgrounds.”

We also spotted Federal Council member Bill B. Butler exiting the Big Top. “Yes, I’m using my day off from Brick Rail to see the circus,” Butler told us, explaining that “I’m a big fan of Barnum & Bricklyn, and especially love their beautiful horses and the fancy tricks they and their riders can do.”

“As you know,” Butler added, “we [the Bricklyn Federal Council] voted recently to make sure that the Bricklyn Fairgrounds — along with Riverside Park — will never become the site of a nuclear power plant.

“We’ve called for an investigation of that plan cooked up by former YMK Brickburger to sell the Fairgrounds to Nu-Clear Bricklyn so they can build a nuclear power plant right here where we’re standing. The Fairgrounds is really the only place in Bricklyn where we can hold a big event like the circus, and we’re going to keep it that way!”


Reporter Amanda B. Starr

That wraps it up for today. Reporting from the Bricklyn Fairgrounds and the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus, Amanda B. Starr for The Bricklyn Eagle.

p.s., I also want to report to you that photographer Ann Anderson, who caught me with that mega-sized chocolate donut, is also at this very minute munching on an equally large strawberry frosted donut loaded with sprinkles! ✥

We welcome Letters to the Editor. Please email to: bricklynvt@gmail.com

To the Editor: Thank you for your coverage of this exciting event. Let’s hope that the Barnum & Bricklyn Circus spends more time in its hometown of Bricklyn. Coming every other year is just not often enough! — Nancy Sugarbrick, South Bricklyn, VT.


To the Editor: Just what’s the status with the Fairgrounds in light of the deal Nu-Clear Bricklyn “cooked up,” as Councilor Butler put it. Maybe we need a nuclear power plant, but I agree with the Councilor that it shouldn’t be at the Fairgrounds, especially since it’s the only site in Bricklyn that can accommodate the Circus and the Fall Expo. As I’ve said many times before, “common sense is something that everyone needs, few have, and none think they lack.” — Franklin B. Benjamin, Bricklyn Jct., VT.

Burns and Broffman at Nu-Clear Bricklyn offices.
Photo provided to the Bricklyn Eagle by an anonymous source of Mr. Burns and Dunk Them Donuts CEO Broffman at Nu-Clear Bricklyn offices.

Reply from the Editor: The Bricklyn Eagle will continue to follow the Federal Council initiated investigation into the deal former Yuppie-Mayor-King Brickburger made with C. Montgomery Burns that purportedly sold the Fairgrounds and Riverside Park sites to Nu-Clear Bricklyn, Inc. for construction of a nuclear power plant. It is noteworthy that Dunk Them Donuts magnate David Tiler Broffman has also been implicated in the Nu-Clear Bricklyn deal.


To the Editor: As a Vermont neighbor of Bricklyn, I want to make sure that readers are aware of the amazing Vermont-based Circus Smirkus, which tours with performances given by talented teens every Summer. Perhaps the Barnum & Bricklyn folks could arrange to have teenage Bricklynites visit a Circus Smirkus performance, as I believe one or two are scheduled within Vermont’s Outerlands. Here’s a delightful short video with highlights from the Circus Smirkus 2024 tour. — Terri S., Waterbury, VT.


Members of the Bricklyn, Vermont, chapter of The Alliance Française

A Chapter of the Alliance Française Grows in Bricklyn : A Conversation With Its Co-Presidents

Logo of The Bricklyn Eagle newspaper featuring the title and subtitle.

February 12, 2025

by Bricklyn Eagle correspondent Gloria Vanderbrick

Gloria Vanderbrick, Patsy Brickerson, et Jeanette Brickehl
Our reporter Gloria Vanderbrick in the center, with Alliance Française of Bricklyn co-Presidents Jeannette Brickehl on the left and Patsy Brickerson on the right.
All images & photos in this article are by Ann Tiler Anderson of The Bricklyn Eagle, with assistance from Dall E-3 AI.
© Bricklyn Eagle.

Lire l’article en français.

Gloria Vanderbrick (The Bricklyn Eagle)

As most of you know, the founders of Bricklyn are of Danish origin. So, it’s surprising to find that there is a strong and growing chapter of the Alliance Française in Bricklyn, Vermont.

Today, we are discussing the work of this Francophile organization with its two co-Presidents, Jeannette Brickehl and Patsy Brickerson.

Hello Jeannette, hello Patsy! Sorry for my bad French. When I was a student at Bricklyn University, I started studying this beautiful language, but that was a long time ago.

Jeannette: No problem. In fact, one of the most important objectives of the Alliance is to offer courses to Bricklynites who want to discover the beauty of the French language. We have people like you, Gloria, who also want to reengage with the language.

Patsy: If I may add, the Alliance offers courses at many levels from “beginner” to “advanced.” There is a wide range of subjects covered by the courses.

For example, last year I took a course that explored the simple but profound novel The Little Prince.

A scene depicting a LEGO meeting, with a speaker in a suit addressing an audience seated in chairs. A map of France hangs on the wall behind them, and the attendees hold cups and briefcases.

We also find it very important to provide our students with courses that are enjoyable and relaxing. It is best to learn in a stress-free environment.

Jeannette : We also employ teachers who are not only smart but friendly. Of course, they are also fluent in French!

Our classes meet in a spacious office next to Patsy’s cafe.

It’s a very nice place, and Patsy is an extraordinary hostess! …

A business license certificate for Patsy's Café in Bricklyn, Vermont, featuring colorful LEGO-like graphics and an illustration of a smiling woman.

Bricklyn’s Avatar law requires that Outland owners of Bricklyn businesses must use as an avatar a LEGO resident of Bricklyn. Here you can see a photo of the “real” Patsy, a little disguised.

Patsy: Thank you, Jeannette. I think our Café is an excellent addition to the downtown area,

It’s important, Gloria, that your readers also know that we use the freshest ingredients, often from the Vermont “Outerlands” — like their many delicious cheeses!

Gloria: I’d like to take a minute to ask you why there are so many Bricklynites who want to learn French?

Patsy: As you know, Gloria, Bricklyn is not far from the kingdom of Montbrick in Quebec. So many people share ties with the LEGO peoples who emigrated from Denmark in the great exodus of the 1980s. Yes, most landed in Bricklyn, but many decided to go to Montbrick.

Brick Rail is currently installing a railway line between Bricklyn and Montbrick in Quebec. One day the new “Brickstar” TGV trains will run on this track.

Jeannette: I must add another reason that may explain the growth of the Alliance Française here, it is because we are a very friendly group!

Gloria: Yes, and I know you offer not only French classes but also other activities.

Jeannette: Certainly! We have monthly evening get togethers. Sometimes you need to relax and eliminate the stress of everyday life.

A lively bar scene featuring LEGO figurines gathered around a counter, enjoying drinks while watching a soccer game on a screen displaying an exciting match.
Alliance Française members gather at the Bricklyn Tavern to watch “Les Bleus.”

Patsy : The Alliance has also started offering trips to France.

Last September, some of our members took a vacation in France! We collaborated with the organization Rogue Schoolers. I believe you have an article on your website describing this journey.

Gloria : Yes you can find it here.

Gloria : Will you have other trips in the future?

Patsy : In fact, we will be talking tomorrow with Rogue Schoolers about a trip in autumn to Provence!

Des étudiantes arrivent à Bricklyn.
Students arriving in Bricklyn from the five LEGO realms found in France.

We also make connections with the LEGO realms that can be found in France, and we offer five scholarships each year to students of the sixth grade who come from the LEGO realms in France. This allows them to spend a semester in Bricklyn.

Gloria : I must ask you this question that I am sure our Outland readers will have: How can the Alliance Française of Bricklyn have the means not only to pay these scholarships, but also to own a great edifice in Bricklyn that seems almost as spectacular as the Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte in France (which the Rogues Schoolers visited last year)?

A picturesque view of a grand chateau surrounded by water, featuring intricate architecture and a clear blue sky.
Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte. Photo par Wayne Senville.

Patsy : And don’t forget, Gloria, that all the courses we offer are free!

Jeanette: Let me explain.

In 1988, shortly after the first LEGO people from France arrived in Bricklyn, they saw this wonderful building, which was simply called “The Bricklyn Chateau.”

But it was a complete mess. These new Bricklynites decided to buy the Chateau at a very low price, and they slowly restored the large building.

A group of LEGO figures dressed in various formal outfits poses in front of a building adorned with a large French flag.
Members of the Alliance Française of Bricklyn in front of their “Chateau Bricklyn.”
Le Centre d'Innovation de Bricklyn.
The Great Hall of the Bricklyn Innovation Centre.

Today, three-quarters of the building has become the “Bricklyn Innovation Center.” The Center hosts some fifteen startups employing more than seventy Bricklynites.

The other quarter of the Chateau houses both the Alliance offices and a large room that we use for various meetings and social events.

The revenues we receive from the Innovation Centre allow us to cover our costs. …

The main salon of the Alliance Française in Bricklyn. For some reason, the members of the Alliance Française of Bricklyn prefer old American westerns.

A group of LEGO figures dressed in nautical attire playing a French game of petanque outdoors, with colorful balls scattered on the ground and greenery in the background.

Jeannette : I should add that we have many other local events. For example, when the weather is nice we have weekly petanque competitions. It’s an easy game to learn, but not easy to master. 

Gloria : So, Jeannette and Patsy, thank you for this interesting conversation. May I ask how can we become members of the Alliance Française de Bricklyn?

Patsy: I’ll register you right now! And for our readers from the Outland, you can join the Alliance Française chapter of the Lake Champlain Region.


Illustration of a stylized LEGO eagle with vibrant colors, showcasing a blue background with circular building blocks in red, pink, green, and yellow.

We welcome letters to th editor. Please email:  bricklynvt@gmail.com

Rogue Schoolers en France.

Bricklynites Join Residents of Other Inland Cities on “Rogue Schoolers” Trip to France

September 23, 2024

by Gloria Vanderbrick, Bricklyn Eagle People in the News correspondent.

Rave reviews are in from 17 participants hailing from Inland communities across America who joined a recent expedition to France focusing on art and artists.

Among the travelers’ reactions: “An exhilarating trip;” “history and beauty surrounded us;” “incredible food and drink;” “wonderful to meet our LEGO hosts in the Realm of Paris;” “learned so much in just ten days;” “delighted to travel with residents from other LEGO cities, and make new friends.”

For much of the trip, the Rogue Schoolers (as they are called) — led by the knowledgeable, intrepid, red beret-topped Jennifer Brickdon — travelled along the Yonne and Seine Rivers on a French passenger barge that slowly made its way from the Cathedral City of Sens towards the City of Light and Love, Paris.

Photo of Rogue Schoolers group. The name Rogue Schoolers was apparently based on a member of the League of Inland Cities hearing an Outland visitor say he was traveling in Bricklyn with “Rogue Schoolers.” Investigation by The Bricklyn Eagle determined that the visitor, apparently under the influence, slurred the words “Road Scholars” so that it sounded like he was saying Rogue Schoolers. This whimsical Rogue Schoolers moniker stuck and was used by the League of Inland Cities when naming their new travel program.

Note that all photos and illustrations in this post, unless otherwise noted, were taken
with the assistance of Dall E-3 Chat GPT.

Among the Rogue Schoolers’ trip highlights were visits to:

Rogue Schoolers in front of the Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte.

Getting from Bricklyn to Paris

Meeting of the League of Inland Cities.
Meeting of member realms of the League of Inland Cities. Photo from The Bricklyn Eagle archives.

The League of Inland Cities sponsored the Rogue Schoolers trip as a pilot project to broaden tourism between Outland and Inland cities around the world.

Fortunately, the next generation of high speed passenger jets recently put in service by Brick Air has more than halved the travel time for the 3400 mile flight between Bricklyn, VT (hub of Brick Air) and Paris, France.

A flight which used to take over 50 hours now takes just a little over 20 hours. The planes offer comfortable seating and multiple in-flight entertainment options.

📍 Editor’s Note: As previously described in our report on Bricklyn’s new high-speed rail service, there are striking speed differences between LEGO and non-LEGO modes of transportation. The new Brick Air jets have a maximum speed of a remarkable 166 mph — equivalent to 1200 mph for human-built supersonic jets.

The Rogue Schoolers trip was also facilitated by residents of the Lego-based Realm of Paris, which is located in the basement of an undisclosed house in Paris’ “Marais” neighborhood. The location borders the old city wall, which is similar in many ways to the Great Wall of Bricklyn.

Residents of the Realm of Paris graciously provided accommodations to the Rogue Schoolers group while in Paris, and helped arrange travel outside of Paris, including the barge voyage along the Yonne and Seine rivers.

Given the notable success of this first Rogue Schoolers trip, tour organizer and guide Jennifer Brickdon is confident that many more LEGO visitors will follow. ✥

📍 Editor’s Note: Coincidentally the LEGO Rogue Schoolers tour tracked a remarkably similar itinerary offered by the non-profit Road Scholar organization. Our Vermont-based Outland correspondent, Wayne Senville, participated on this Road Scholar tour (he would have been much too large to join the Rogue Schoolers group). Senville provided us with several photos we’re posting below. Unfortunately, the Road Scholar and Rogue Schoolers groups did not connect with each other while in France, as their travels were a week apart. C’est dommage!

Road Scholars in France, September 2024

CroisiEurope’s peniche (barge) Deborah on the Yonne River in Sens, France
— the Deborah was home for a week for the Road Scholar travelers.
Seventeen Road Scholars, plus guide Jennifer Burdon and several crew members of the Deborah.
View through water level cabin window on the Deborah of church
and houses bordering the Yonne River in Sens, France.
Courtyard of the Palais de Fontainebleau
Interior of the Musée d’Orsay, located in the former, Gare D’Orsay train station. The Road Scholars explored parts of the museum’s amazing collection of art after disembarking the Deborah.

Above: Monet’s Le Bassin aux nymphéas, harmonie, seen at D’Orsay Museum in Paris.

Below: Reflections on Monet & Giverny — works by Japanese artist Hiramatsu Reiji at the Museum of Impressionisms at Giverny. For an excellent illustrated overview of this exhibit, see Hiramatsu “Symphony of waterlilies” in Giverny, by “Jacinthe.”
Giverny, Water Mirror of the Pond, by Hiramatsu Reiji (at the Museum of Impressionisms at Giverny).