Year: 1991
Runtime: 87 mins
Language: English
Budget: $1.4M
Shakes is a party clown adored by children, coveted by women and a favorite among bartenders, yet his life revolves around endless drinking. When fellow clown Binky lands a coveted spot on a local children's TV show, Shakes spirals deeper into despair. His boss warns that without getting his act together, he’ll be out of work.
Warning: spoilers below!
Haven’t seen Shakes the Clown yet? This summary contains major spoilers. Bookmark the page, watch the movie, and come back for the full breakdown. If you're ready, scroll on and relive the story!
Read the complete plot breakdown of Shakes the Clown (1991), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.
In the offbeat town of Palukaville, Shakes the Clown is a gifted yet caustic birthday-party performer whose talent is shadowed by alcohol and a bruising personal history. Shakes, Bobcat Goldthwait is raised after his father’s death by his father’s friend, Owen Cheese, who gives him his first job in the world of clowning. The two share a complicated bond rooted in loyalty and necessity, with Cheese acting as a stern, pragmatic father figure who believes in discipline as the path to keeping Shakes grounded.
Shakes clings to a flicker of ambition that burns bright at the Twisted Balloon, the local clown bar, where he hopes to land a coveted job hosting a children’s television program called the Big Time Cartoon Circus. The dream is intoxicating, especially since Peppy the Clown, the beloved former host, is forced into retirement after a scandalous act. Peppy the Clown, Sydney Lassick, becomes a cautionary memory of how quickly a career in kids’ entertainment can sour into tragedy. The moment Shakes learns the job has gone to another clown, the world around him tightens into a new kind of pressure: a cocaine-fueled rival named Binky the Clown, Tom Kenny, is installed as the new host, a snide, neurotic, and vindictive performer who seems to embody the worst excesses of the circus.
Shakes’s closest clown friends—Dink, Adam Sandler, and Stenchy, Blake Clark—watch with concern as his drinking worsens. They worry not just about his health, but about what his instability could cost the people around him, especially Judy, the waitress at the Twisted Balloon who also dreams of bowling success. Judy, played by Julie Brown, becomes both Shakes’s romantic partner and a stabilizing counterpoint to his self-destructive impulses. As Shakes teeters on the edge, Cheese gives him a stark ultimatum: sober up or lose his job. It’s a cruel test of loyalties and pride, and Shakes fights to prove he can stand on his own without the bottle’s fog.
For a time, Shakes seems to gain control, wrestling with withdrawal and attempting to forge a path back to respectability. Yet temptation and a fraught pride pull him back into old patterns, culminating in a dramatic, alcohol-fueled relapse at a birthday party where he shatters the home and ends up unconscious in the back room. Cheese—often the toughest, most pragmatic voice in Shakes’s life—decides to give him another chance, only to discover that a drug-fueled plot is spiraling out of control. The party’s atmosphere shifts from carnival to crime when Binky, along with two drug-selling rodeo clowns, Ty and Randi, and others, murder Cheese in a moment of panic, and Binky frames Shakes for the crime.
On the run and wrongly accused, Shakes becomes a fugitive pursued by both the law and a heavy dose of public suspicion. Judy, Dink, and Stenchy rally to prove his innocence, while Shakes must confront the terrifying possibility that he did, in fact, fall into blackout—leaving him to wonder what memories might truly belong to him. To hide from his pursuers, he infiltrates a mime class led by the domineering Jerry the Mime, a role that brings Shakes into contact with an entirely new kind of performance and a different kind of vulnerability. The mime space becomes a laboratory for identity as Shakes tries to understand who he is when he’s not on a stage.
As the truth emerges, the trio learns that Cheese’s murder was carried out by Binky, who then intensifies his assault on Judy by attempting to kill her live on air with knives to stage an accident. Binky’s plan to erase any trace of the crime risks spiraling out of control as the clown world closes in around his crimes. Meanwhile, the rodeo clown scene—the Broken Saddle bar and its denizens—offers critical clues about the murder and the key players involved, including the dangerous web of deceit that Binky has woven around the victims. A confrontation at the studio becomes inevitable: Shakes and his friends confront Binky, a tense showdown that culminates in a dramatic fight in which Shakes is wounded but survives thanks to a lucky reserve of liquor that slows the killer’s aim.
The climactic pursuit leads to the studio where Judy’s life hangs in the balance. Shakes, Dink, and Stenchy intervene just in time to thwart Binky’s deadly plan, rescue Judy, and bring the murderer to justice. With Binky arrested, Judy and Shakes reaffirm their bond, and Shakes publicly renounces his drinking, attending an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting to share his vow to stay sober. The personal victory mirrors a professional one: Shakes steps into the spotlight as the new host of the Big Time Cartoon Circus, a show that proves to be a big hit with children. Together with Dink and Stenchy, he helps to shape a program that delights audiences while also poking gentle fun at the world behind the curtain. The trio’s success on screen becomes a form of redemption, and their antics—often involving playful chases of Jerry the Mime—cement their place as a beloved ensemble in a show that thrives on humor, heart, and a circusy resilience.
In the end, the film presents a wry, human portrait of show business as a place where talent, friendship, and the will to reform can overcome addiction and misfortune. The once-troubled Shakes finds not only professional triumph but personal peace, leaning into sobriety and the notion that a life spent entertaining others can still be a life worth living. The final images celebrate a kinder, wiser kind of spectacle, where a clown’s craft becomes a beacon of hope for a man who once seemed destined to fall apart. The story remains a sharp, darkly funny examination of fame, failure, and the possibility of renewal, anchored by a memorable ensemble and the unsettling, unforgettable world that only clowns can inhabit.
Last Updated: October 10, 2025 at 16:04
Don't stop at just watching — explore Shakes the Clown in full detail. From the complete plot summary and scene-by-scene timeline to character breakdowns, thematic analysis, and a deep dive into the ending — every page helps you truly understand what Shakes the Clown is all about. Plus, discover what's next after the movie.
Track the full timeline of Shakes the Clown with every major event arranged chronologically. Perfect for decoding non-linear storytelling, flashbacks, or parallel narratives with a clear scene-by-scene breakdown.
Discover movies like Shakes the Clown that share similar genres, themes, and storytelling elements. Whether you’re drawn to the atmosphere, character arcs, or plot structure, these curated recommendations will help you explore more films you’ll love.
Shakes the Clown (1991) Scene-by-Scene Movie Timeline
Shakes the Clown (1991) Movie Characters, Themes & Settings
Shakes the Clown (1991) Spoiler-Free Summary & Key Flow
Movies Like Shakes the Clown – Similar Titles You’ll Enjoy
Clown (2016) Detailed Story Recap
Klown Forever (2016) Detailed Story Recap
Apocalypse Clown (2024) Complete Plot Breakdown
Gags the Clown (2018) Spoiler-Packed Plot Recap
Clownado (2019) Complete Plot Breakdown
The Plight of Clownana (2004) Full Summary & Key Details
Clownery (1989) Detailed Story Recap
The Clown (1917) Spoiler-Packed Plot Recap
The Circus Clown (1934) Plot Summary & Ending Explained
The Perfect Clown (1925) Complete Plot Breakdown
The Clown (1953) Full Summary & Key Details
The Clown and the Kids (1967) Plot Summary & Ending Explained
Clifford (1994) Movie Recap & Themes
The Clowns (1970) Movie Recap & Themes
Clown Princes (1939) Film Overview & Timeline