Lauded For Aerobatic Performance
Airshow performer Jim LeRoy
of Missoula (MT) has been selected to receive the WORLD Airshow
News "Bill Barber Award For Showmanship" for 2003. "LeRoy is a true
showman, and has rapidly risen to Airshow stardom over the past
decade," says Dave Weiman, editor and publisher of WORLD Airshow
News, sponsors of the award.
"His performance in his highly modified Pitts S2S is action
packed and full of energy, just like the man behind the controls."
A selection committee made up of past award recipients reviewed
nominations made by the industry at large, and cast their votes by
individual ballot. The nominee receiving the highest overall
ranking was named the recipient.
LeRoy and his wife,
Joanie, grew up in the small town of Bartlett, Illinois, and
attended high school in nearby Elgin. They got married 10 years out
of high school after meeting again at a class reunion. Joanie has
since learned to fly, and has become her husband's greatest critic
and supporter. She is now expecting their first child.
LeRoy comes from a family of aviators. His father, an uncle and
his grandfather were all captains for major airlines, but LeRoy
chose instead to pursue aerobatics as a profession after first
serving in the U.S. Marine Corps as a marksman, and receiving a
degree in aero nautical engineering. In 1982, LeRoy began to dabble
in aerobatics at Art Scholl Aviation in Rialto (CA), and gained
experience competing in International Aerobatic Club (IAC) contests
beginning in 1992.
The Latest In A Line Of Awards
LeRoy won two bronze medals at the 1994 Advanced
National Championships, and received his low-level waiver and flew
his first Airshow that same year. He made the decision to become a
full-time performer in 1997.
In the beginning, what LeRoy lacked in experience, he tried to
make up in his demeanor and attitude. His intensity and aggressive
flying style helped him to get noticed quickly, and it wasn't long
before LeRoy was getting compared with the top performers. In 1996,
Plane & Pilot Magazine chronicled him as one of several top
rising acts in the business and he was featured on the cover of the
2001 edition of AIRSHOW PROFESSIONAL, and also on the cover of the
November/December 2001 issue of WORLD Airshow News. LeRoy thinks
the difference between his act and others lies in its entertainment
value.

"Airshow flying isn't really about flying so much as it is about
entertaining, whether you're on the ground or in the air,"
commented LeRoy. "It doesn't matter if your routine is brilliant
from a pilot's perspective. If the crowd isn't emotionally moved at
the end of your performance, then you've failed."
Out To Please The Average Joe
LeRoy has always identified his target audience as the person
who doesn't really know too much about flying, but who came out to
the show looking for a bit of excitement before heading back to
work on Monday morning.
"To me, it isn't the maneuver or the plane that makes the
performance," said LeRoy, "but rather the amount of 'heart' that
the performer puts into the show." But even with heart, comes hours
and years of practice." The Bulldog showplane started out as a
factory-built Pitts S2S. LeRoy and his crew strengthened the wings;
added a more powerful engine; replaced the propeller with an
oversized, composite model; increased the sizes of all the control
surfaces; reshaped and strengthened the tail and fuselage; and
re-designed the fuel and oil systems.
The Bulldog has a 400-plus horsepower engine, compliments of
LeRoy's sponsor, LyCon Aircraft Engines, and LeRoy pushes it hard
to get as much power out of it as he can. And that is exactly what
he is trying to do with the Airshow industry... Push it hard to get
as much power out of it as he can.

LeRoy puts the success of the industry ahead of any personal
success. "I've had a bit of success as a performer, but I also want
to contribute to improving the industry as a whole," said LeRoy.
"My dream is that when it's all over, I will be able to look back
and think that I helped to make the Airshow business a better
place."
In addition to his career as a solo performer, LeRoy has been
the driving force behind the innovative Airshow troupe called the
"X Team," which involves other big names in the industry including
John Mohr, Jimmy Franklin, Warren Pietsch, Bobby Younkin and Scott
Shockley. Mohr and Franklin are past recipients of the Barber
award.
The WORLD Airshow News "Bill Barber Award For Showmanship" will
be presented to LeRoy on Wednesday, July 30 during EAA AirVenture,
Oshkosh (WI), sometime between 7:30 and 8:30 p.m.