An interview with Bubble Schmeisis writer/performer Nick Cassenbaum in conversation with Theresa Buchheister, The Brick Artistic Director, 2020-2024.

Theresa Buchheister
Hi Nick! Tell me about your bath house fascination. How did you get into bath house culture and why is it the ideal home for this self-exploratory show?
Nick Cassenbaum
So, I first went to the schvitz with my grandad. For years I would hear about it from the older men in the family. Kind of this mythical place. And when I heard it still existed and that my grandad still went! I jumped at the chance to go. And it truly was a special place. Full of all these old Jewish men at one second shouting and being aggressive and at one moment washing each other and looking after each other. It felt like it was stuck in time. That it could have been in London or the shtetl in Russia in the 1800s.
In terms of why make a show. Well I spent a long time walking around the streets of east London. Kind of like the lower east side. Looking for that authentic Jewish culture and not finding it. When I found it in the baths in such a naked way! I knew this was it. Knew I had to make a show about it.
TB
Oh that is so cool. My grandad would nottttt have taken any of us kids to a bathhouse. Marking this down as another topic for me and my therapist. So, as you have grown more and more into yourself, what kinds of habits or rituals do you do/have – knowingly, unconsciously, carve out time for, daily/weekly/yearly, with others, solo…?
NC
Hahahah I mean. Maybe you got off lightly. Nothing like scrubbing your naked grandfather to bring you down to earth.
I really love going to the barbers. Having my head shaved properly, hot towels. I used to go twice a month! But I can’t really afford to so much. So it’s now a couple of times a year which makes it a bit more special.
Also London in the spring is amazing. A bit of a ritual for me is just walking around the city. Try and find a new bit each time. There is always something to soak up.
Me and my kid bake cakes together too. That’s becoming quite a thing.
TB
Oooooh wonderful. It’s cool that one is a ritual with another person, but a barber, so it is also an exchange of goods and services. And then one is a solo ritual that is different all the time, walking around. And then one is with a loved one, making something together. Do you have any photos of the cakes you make? I am a cake gawker. Probably ever since the 1985 TV version of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. The various cakes in that…. mmmmm I close my eyes and see them.
Do you have any obsessions or fascinations that have compelled you over the years as an artist?

NC
Have attached one! Bare in mind it was decorated by a three year old with no self control.
Obsessions yes. Fascinations. Yes. In my work I’ve always been fascinated by rhythms. The rhythms peoples speak and tell stories. I love the fact you can almost guide and control the energy of a room through the rhythm of telling a story.
I have also been fascinated by how given the chance and the opportunity audience members can and will do anything and be hilarious. I discovered this as a street performer but also got obsessed with variety shows and game shows where hosts would get the best out of an audience.
I also just love jokes!
TB
Oh my god I LOVE this totally maximalist cake. Ha!
Here’s the YouTube of Alice cutting the cake, in the scene with the Lion (Ernest Borgnine) and the Unicorn (Beau Bridges). And the delicious blue Eat Me cake.
Ok! Riffing off of your obsessions:
1. Do you have a favorite song and/or one that just gets stuck in your head?
2. Is there an audience interaction that truly surprised or upended you in some way?
3. Tell me a joke.
NC
I see what you mean about these cakes. Pretty hypnotising.
1. Any old iron! the Peter Sellers version. I’d say this song is in a constant loop in my head like some London pastiche stereotype.
2. So many to choose from. I spent years as a street performer. Being threatened, told to shut up, leave people alone. Also cracking a smile on the scariest looking men was always something I tried and often succeeded to do. There was this one time where a group of drunks came up to me and kept trying to get me to drop character telling me I was lying to them. I wouldn’t drop. They all went away and then an hour later came back with what looked like king of the drunks. I again didn’t drop the character. He put up his hand and said, leave him alone boys. He’s just doing his job. People are just really funny. Oh there was another time I was doing Bubble Schmeisis and a big group of elderly people came. One of them fell asleep and right at the end of the show and woke up with a jolt and said WHERE AM I? WHAT’S GOING ON? I said to her don’t worry, we’re nearly finished. I live for stuff like that.
3. Joke.
TB
This is great. I love an interview filled with hyperlinks (no, really, I do).
Speaking of audiences, it seems like many different sorts have seen Bubble Schmeisis. When you think of the responses that you have gotten, the people who have seen it and connected to it, who do you think in NY should come see this show? I always encourage people to think more specifically than – EVERYONE. 3rd grade teachers? People that like weird 2nd dates? Bike enthusiasts? Jugglers? Young lawyers?
NC
Yeh, I have taken this show just about everywhere and have always been fascinated by the people it connected with. A very common response I get…I’ll come back with my parents. So bring the whole fam!I would say people who has immigration in their family history, people who aren’t WASPS- I found that a lot of people in the UK who weren’t Jewish but working class really connect to the themes. Left wing Jews, Right wing Jewish boomers and all Jews in between. Klezmer fans and of course people who like a sauna or shvitz!
TB
That is lovely. I dig it.
Last question (because I think we have so much good shit) – Do you hope to do anything else while you are in NY?
NC
What do I hope to do. Eat as much as I can. I’ve never been to Queens so want to go there and chow down. I want to go to the Russian baths in Brighton Beach. I do love Coney Island so plan to go there again as well as catch as many other shows as I can!
TB
Thanks for this back n forth, Nick! I hope you have a wonderful time in The Brick and in New York!
