Binder was a
street performer in Europe when he and Michael Christensen, whom he met while both were with the San Francisco Mime Troupe, decided to make circus performing their profession. At the time, they were in
Kent, England, where they polished their act in a barn over 10 days. In 1976, they finalized an accord with
Annie Fratellini and
Pierre Étaix to tour France with their new traveling show, the Nouveau Cirque de Paris. Along with Christensen, Binder also participated in the famed
Casino de Paris, as well as on French television shows. In 1977, inspired by his time with the Nouveau Cirque de Paris, Binder founded the
Big Apple Circus in New York City, with Christensen later being named co-founder. Glen Collins, reporting for
The New York Times, described Binder as, "big of voice, broad of shoulder and barrel of chest, the impresario is a fast-talking six-footer with a
carny barker's lung power and a smoldering cigarette perpetually threatening to burn his index finger." In October 2008,
The New York Times reported that Binder would be retiring from his role as ringmaster and artistic director for the Big Apple Circus in 2009, although he continued to work behind the scenes as "founder and founding artistic director." In April 2013, Binder published his memoir
Never Quote the Weather to a Sea Lion and Other Uncommon Tales from the Founder of the Big Apple Circus. It has a
foreword by
Glenn Close. In 2017, Binder and Christensen performed at the 50th annual
Smithsonian Folklife Festival to "hand over the keys" to the circus' new leadership after it emerged from filing for bankruptcy the year before, which in the Big Apple Circus' case was a rubber chicken and a top hat. ==Other career==