One of the Flying Karamazov Brothers has died

Sam Williams, aka Smerydakov Karamazov, died yesterday while driving a bus. Thankfully, nobody else was hurt.

I am a former professional juggler, and the FKBs were huge heroes to me. Juggling is a small community (even more so back then before the Internet) and I was lucky to spend time with the FKBs occasionally. I had only fleeting interactions with Sam, but he struck me as a very gentle, sweet man.

Among his credits, he appeared on Broadway (once doing Shakespeare while juggling!) and taught Mr. Rogers to juggle.

You had quite a life, Sam. Ho!

Sorry to hear this. I saw them only once, at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, and they were amazing.

Sad to know that such a talented performer was working as a bus driver. But to be fair, it is a union job with benefits.

[The Seattle Times has an excellent article about Mr. Williams.

](http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/transportation/viaduct-heartattack/)He was even helpful as he was dying:

What an extraordinary man. RIP Mr. Williams; you done good.

Very sad.

I saw the FKB many, many times, through many personnel changes, starting before Smerdyakov joined them. At the time, I had recently read Dostoyevsky’s book, and recognized that the first four members had taken as stage names the names of the three brothers (Ivan, Dmitri, Alyosha) plus the father (Fyodor). I thought it was clever that when Sam expanded their number to five, he took the name of the bastard son. (As original members left, and new ones joined, they got other Russian names; they didn’t reassign or reuse them.)

Sam was a memorable part of the troupe: he played a sort of befuddled, but always cheerful, childlike character. Along with founders “Ivan” (Howard Jay Patterson) and “Dmitri” (Paul David Magid) Smerdyakov was the most recognizable as other members came and went. I was sorry when he left the company in 1999.

I last saw FKB about ten years ago, and Dmitri was the only familiar one left. They put on a good show, with new material and techniques, but I’m not sure they were quite as good as the old days.

RIP, Smerdyakov.

There’s a good joke, here, I just haven’t worked out the exact punchline.

Any Inhatko memorialized Sam at the very end of the current Macbreak Weekly podcast,and recommended that everyone watch the PBS production of The Comedy of Errors.

I’ve always said I wanted to die peacefully and in my sleep, like Smerydakov Karamazov–not screaming in terror, like his passengers.

I saw the FKBs only once, but it was one of the most memorable performances of my life, in any genre. RIP, Mr. Williams.

Read the article. He was braking and pulling over to the side while he was having a heart attack, concerned with the safety of his passengers.

I’ll second that recommendation. It’s an amazing production.

I read the article (and know what I wrote was inaccurate), but he did ask for a punchline.

I got to see them perform once, at the 1991 Oregon Country Fair, where they juggled filled condoms in an act billed as juggling “the world’s most dangerous stuff!” (They weren’t fans of overpopulation). They were corny and vaudeville and awesome, and I told that hackneyed joke believing that Sam would’ve appreciated it as a memoriam.

Yes! I saw the FKB a half-dozen times and loved them; he was always especially funny. Once I saw him drop a bowling pin (one of five or six he was juggling) and it rolled away; one of the other brothers asked sarcastically, “You want me to get that for you?”

Sam replied in a sleepy-little-boy voice, “Could you, please? I’m all tuckered out.” And kept on juggling.

Great guy - talented comic - insanely skilled juggler. May he rest in peace.

[QUOTE=Left Hand of Dorkness]
I’ve always said I wanted to die peacefully and in my sleep, like Smerydakov Karamazov–not screaming in terror, like his passengers.
[/QUOTE]

[paraphrasing=FKM]My mother wrote that joke and I like it [/paraphrasing]
Seriously, I only saw the them once on a PBS program and I think that would’ve gone over well in their act. I don’t have a VHS player anymore, but that was one of the tapes I kept.