“I think that is the last free show I doing”, says Cassius, as I help him load gym equipment into his van. “I never charge for a show yet, but I feel I will have to. I can’t put out all that for nothing”. The ‘nothing’ he was reflecting on was the poor attendance at his free show, held a few Sundays ago at the Accra car park. In addition to the Eggs band, with which he sings, there was an eclectic set of performances. Lolita, the limbo dancer and Cassius himself in full fire eating mode, as well as assorted other acts. Although I wasn’t clear on how many persons attended the show he was clearly dissatisfied with the turnout, “I put a big light in the middle of the car park but everyone stayed at the edges – that was a mistake”, he observes.
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Back in Bim, he continued to box, but as the sport atrophied and the crowds dwindled, the take from each match continued to be embarrassingly low, making it difficult for any boxer to justify the training and dedication necessary to stay in the ring. He then concentrated on his entertaining, becoming a ‘fire eater’, and perhaps the only man ever to balance a full size wheelbarrow on his teeth (try it, you’ll see how difficult it is), and his son on the top of a step ladder. He could also balance glasses on trays on glasses on trays on a broomstick, walk a tightrope while doing other things, walk on broken glass and jump through a ring of knives. He also formed a band (and played with several). He is credited with originating a type of Spouge – Dragon Spouge – Barbados’ indigenous 60’s beat and even had a hit song “Sweeter Than a Sno-cone” which was very popular in Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean (click opposite to play). He took up painting and mounted a full exhibition at the Grand Salle in the Barbados Central Bank. In later years, to supplement his entertaining, he became a tour guide, driving tourists around in a pseudo safari tour of the country, where he would entertain them with the wheelbarrow trick. But there is less interest these days in fire eating, and the take from these activities does not go very far, never did.
From the time of his return from Canada, Cassius has pursued various charitable pursuits. He just says he want to help the youth. So he formed a roller hockey league, put together a team, and for a while it flourished. And a tackle football league. And formed a highly successful girls cricket team which toured as far as Canada. He organised various community activities. ‘His’ band, Eggs, was formed about five years ago when his son expressed an interest in playing drums. A neighbourhood girl asked if she could play too. One thing led to another and out of Cassius’ pocket came funds for two drums, keyboards, guitars. His son is a bit older now, but the drummer is twelve, others are thirteen, fifteen, “the bass player is 18, but he gone off to come back”, he says, enigmatically. Cassius is the lead singer. They perform at various venues, often for free, including the annual ‘Carols by Candlelight’, the charity do held in the grounds of the Prime Minister’s residence every year just before Christmas.
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He never did learn to read or write. I asked him about this, and he shrugs, “too late, you know, a foreign lady had offered to teach, but …” I assure him in the security of my intellectual comfort zone, that it isn’t, it can’t be.
Getting back to the matter at hand, I discuss with him possible alternatives for the next show. You need to charge something, I say, even if you give it to charity, and advertise it, perhaps find a radio station to partner with you. And sell tickets in advance. “That is not for me”, he says, “I will have to find somebody to do that. I’m an entertainer, that is not my skills. Rihanna don’t organise her own shows, she have somebody to do that”. “ I just want a regular job” he says wistfully, as I admire the way he has managed to fit ten pieces of gym equipment plus assorted paraphernalia into his modest van. “The tour driving is long hours, I don’t even get home until well after dark. If I had a job as a security in a building, finish by 4.30, that would be good.”
It seems a modest goal for someone as talented and resourceful as Cassius, but as always, he has only his own resourcefulness to fall back on. And so he struggles on a daily basis to make a living in a world where his talent is undervalued, and his charity over-used.
Born Winston Yearwood in 1945, Cassius’ story is well told in “Cassius, from Wharf Boy to Role Model - The Life and Times of an Extraordinary Barbadian”, by Keith A P Sandiford, and from which I have borrowed the black & white photographs featured above. Cassius sold me a copy the first day I met him, “the money goes to charity” he said. In 2001 he was given the Barbados Centennial Honour in recognition of his achievements and contributions to society and more recently, an O.B.E. – Order of the British Empire. Cassius can be found around the Garrison most afternoons or reached on 420 2567 for bookings or to purchase his biography.