| Reprinted from: The Independant D. NevilMonday 15 November 1999
 For Three generations, the Miller family have   provided the smaller American townships with a taste of the old-   fashioned travelling circus. D. R. Miller followed his father into a wandering circus   life, spending 75 years in the sawdust ring, more than 60 of them as a   circus owner, and his daughter followed him into the business. The   Carson and Barnes Five Ring Circus, billed for many years as "The   World's Largest Circus Under the Big Top", was his life and his passion,   and he became known in America as "Mr Circus". In 1985 he wrote: I want to leave a lifelong impression on each child who   comes to visit my circus. The warm memories of the day spent with Mom   and Dad watching the mammoth tent being pulled up by the elephants; the   excitement he feels when watching the lion trainer work with the big   cats; the kaleidoscope of unique smells, sounds and images of the tent   circus that greets each youngster when he visits the showgrounds. When a young person comes to the circus he is greeted by   so much activity and excitement that he will never forget the   experience. I remember the special wonder and joy that I felt when I saw   my first circus as a child, and I want to multiply that joy. I want to   be the man who brings the circus to town. It's like playing Santa Claus   every day of the year, and I will keep bringing that special joy to the   kids until the day the good Lord decides that it's time for me to stop. Miller achieved that aim, and died on the circus lot at   McCook, Nebraska, during the matinee performance of 8 September. A   special service was held under the big top three days later, but the   funeral has had to wait until now when the show comes off the road and   returns to its home base in Hugo, Oklahoma, for him to be buried   alongside his wife at Mount Olivet Cemetery. Dores Richard Miller started his career in his father's   act in 1924, as an eight-year-old rider on a small pony. He went on to   become a tightwire walker of some considerable skill, and he, his   father, Obert Miller, and brother Kelly started their own show in 1937,   with two monkeys, four ponies and a personnel roster of six people.   Miller died with the satisfaction of seeing his biggest show of all   still on the road, 43 years after the great impresario John Ringling   North had declared that "the tented circus as we know it is a thing of   the past". Miller believed that the American public still yearned   for the golden days of the circus, which came to town for a day only,   its tents mysteriously mushrooming early one morning, to give two   performances to an incredulous audience before disappearing overnight as   mysteriously as it had arrived. More wondrous than the show itself or its sudden   appearance and disappearance were the logistics behind a tour, which   would involve meticulous planning for a season of one-day stands   throughout 36 weeks, taking the show to 20 different states on a tour   covering nearly 20,000 miles. Add to that the gruelling task of erecting   and dismantling the world's largest big top and all its accompanying   equipment day in and day out for months on end, and the transportation   of 25 fully grown elephants, and an assortment of lions, tigers, horses,   ponies and exotic animals like giraffes, rhinos and hippopotamus.   Miller was a past master at planning his tours, and ensured that no   matter what obstacles stood in his way, the circus would come to town. Miller was a fighter all his life. "When your first name   is Dores," he would relate, "you have to defend your manhood, quite   often." Throughout life he was known as Dorey, or plain D.R. Miller, and   nobody would have dared call him Doris. He liked motorcycles and bore scars to his death from   one accident. While serving in the US Army in Europe during the Second   World War, he was detailed to ride his bike around an area purportedly   to find a trail for heavy equipment. "They actually wanted to find out   where landmines had been planted," he said afterwards, "and they knew   that one man was more dispensable than several." Until a few years ago, he flew as a licensed aeroplane   pilot. On one occasion, he had his plane serviced and the oil drain plug   was left out. While he was airborne, the engine froze and twisted out   of its mount, but he crash- landed and walked away unhurt. He casually   rented another plane and continued his trip to Miami. "I was amazed that   it flew for 20 minutes without oil," he commented afterwards. As a teenager, Dores was a pretty good dancer, adept at   the jitterbug. At the age of 17, he met and fell in love with Isla Marie   Beach, the 15- year-old daughter of a farming family, and one of 10   children. Their jitterbugging together clinched a lifelong relationship   when they married at Gaylord, Kansas, and he carried her off into an   uncertain life on the road. The marriage cost three dollars, but the   kindly minister gave them back two as a wedding present. Their wedding night was spent in a small, draughty tent -   Isla awoke with chicken pox and the show they joined up with three days   later could not afford to pay them. But they survived, joining the   Herrington Nickle Plate Circus and then the Seils-Sterling Circus on   near-starvation wages. Each week during those early days of marriage the   biggest argument was how they would spend the 25 cents left over   between them after subsistence had been paid for. Dorey would have a   cigar, and Isla a Power House candy bar. When the Millers started their own show in 1937, it was   known as Miller Brothers' Circus, but, as they prospered, the title was   changed to Al G. Kelly-Miller Brothers' Circus, later acquiring a share   in other shows, including Carson and Barnes. The Kelly-Miller title was   dropped in 1969 but revived by Dorey Miller in the 1980s and continues   today as a second unit. At the age of 80, Miller launched another unit, a   one-ring affair called the Chinese Imperial Circus. It lasted one   season only, after which he switched the Chinese performers to his   Carson and Barnes Five Ring Circus. Miller's wife Isla was known as the "First Lady of the   Circus" in America, but if there was anything Miller loved almost as   much as his wife it was the elephant. He had an almost child-like   adulation for this symbol of the circus, which proved to be his lucky   charm throughout his circus career. He bought his first elephant in 1937   and well over 200 Asiatic and African elephants went through his hands   in subsequent years. Twenty to 25 elephants were always carried by the   Carson and Barnes Circus during its heyday and at one time he had as   many as 57 elephants, more than any other circus proprietor in the   world. He established an elephant breeding facility in Texas, which he   had planned to move to Hugo, Oklahama; he had moved his circus there in   1941 and it had remained his winter quarters and home to many dozens of   performers. Miller was proud that his daughter, Barbara, began   performing when she was only three. His two granddaughters, Kristin and   Traci, also followed him into performing and are now married to circus   artistes, so the future of Carson and Barnes Five Ring Circus, the   world's largest travelling circus, looks assured. Dores Richard Miller, circus owner: born 27 July 1916;   married 1934 Isla Marie Beach (died 1998; one daughter); died McCook,   Nebraska 8 September 1999. 
        
          
            |  |  | On Jan. 28, 1995 D.R. and Isla Miller were inducted into the Sarasota's Circus Ring of Fame. |  
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            |  |  | In 2000 D.R. and Isla Miller were inducted into the International Circus Hall of Fame. |  |