In a traditional flying trapeze act, flyers mount a narrow board (usually by climbing a tall ladder) and take off from the board on the fly bar. For a trick involving a catch, the flyer must wait for a call from the catcher to make sure they leave at the correct time. Otherwise, the catcher will not be close enough to the flyer to make a successful catch. The flier then performs one of many aerial tricks and is caught by the catcher, who is swinging from a separate catch bar. Once in the catcher's hands, the flyer continues to swing and is thrust back toward the fly bar in a maneuver called a "return". A return could consist of some kind of twist back to the bar, an "
angel" (when the catcher holds the flyer by the feet and one arm), or any other trick that a flyer can think of to get back to the bar. Once back to the fly bar, the flyer can return to the board, and another flyer takes a turn.
Variations Although many people define a flying trapeze act as an act involving two
trapezes and a catcher, as of 2008, many innovative styles of flying trapeze have been performed in circuses all over the world, such as
Cirque Du Soleil, The Flying Farfans, and
The Flying Caceres. Cirque Du Soleil's
La Nouba features a bar-to-bar flying trapeze act, and Cirque Du Soleil's
Corteo presents a high-flying act quite similar to flying trapeze, but without bars. The flyers fly from one catcher to another in an innovative adagio-influenced aerial act. Still other flying trapeze acts focus on high-flying aerial tricks from the flyers, but perform their release tricks to the net, rather than to catchers. Also, some flying trapeze acts have other equipment (which includes 2
Russian swings, with one for the swinging catcher and the other one below the fliers' pedestal, a Korean cradle above the catcher, and a static cradle above the flyers' pedestal), along with the traditional fly bar and catcher method. ==Safety==