| Reprinted from: Kentucky Educational Television  "He grew up in a dairy barn but believed he   could train an elephant," Liz Fentress says of Wayne Franzen in her play   Liz's Circus Story. Like everything else in the play, Wayne Franzen   is real. He was born July 15, 1946 in northern Wisconsin and grew up to   teach industrial arts at Stevens Point High School. He saved enough   money to buy an elephant, which he drove to his farm from the airport in   his pickup truck, then quit his teaching job in 1974 to start a circus.   The Franzen Bros Circus premiered June 24, 1974 in Rosholt, Wisconsin.   Wayne  kept the show going for 23 years, against all odds. By 1984, his one-ring "mud show" (circus lingo   Franzen bros.for a show that is performed in a tent, as opposed to   indoors) had grown from a three-truck to a ten-truck show, was playing   250 dates a year, and billed itself as "America's Fastest Growing   Circus." From the beginning, Wayne's animal acts took star billing. The   1984 program promised "Ferocious Felines, Terrifying Tigers, a Veritable   Cage of Fury Presented by the Incomparable Wayne Franzen." In the 1990s, though, changing times caught up   with many circuses, including Franzen Bros. According to a CNN report on   Wayne Franzen in 1997, the number of circuses in America dropped from   125 in 1900 to 20 in 1997. By 1996, increasing regulatory and insurance   costs and dwindling audiences forced Franzen to cut back to seven trucks   and 20 people. Still, in 1996, the circus traveled 30,000 miles through   22 states, and Wayne kept working 16-hour days. "I kept myself so busy,   the last 23 years have gone by like shot," he told a CNN reporter. Just   days before his death, he said that if the 1997 season didn't lift the   circus from debt, it would be the last. Wayne Franzen died on May 7, 1997, moments after   a 6-year-old Bengal tiger attacked him in a performance in Carrollton,   PA. He was 50. He was buried in Luther Memorial Cemetery in Russell, WI   on May 12, 1997. Liz Fentress' childhood friend, Brother Paul-Vincent   Niebauer, who worked for Franzen Bros. as the clown Paulo the   Magnificent and later as ringmaster, officiated at the funeral. Brian Franzen tried to continue his father's   legacy, but in late 1997 the circus tent folded for the last time. Brian   continues to provide animal acts for other performances. Click here for more information and more photosof the Franzen Bros Circus.
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