Authors: Madame Tussaud: A Life in Wax
Tags: #Art, #Artists; Architects; Photographers, #Modern, #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #19th Century, #History
ââ
Nicholas Nickleby
(inc.
Nickleby Advertiser
), monthly, April 1838 to October 1839
ââThe Old Curiosity Shop
,
Master Humphrey's Clock
, weekly, April 1840 to February 1841
ââOliver Twist
, monthly, February 1837 to April 1839
ââ
A Tale of Two Cities
(Penguin, 2000)
âââOur Eyewitness' in âGreat Company'
All the Year Round
, 31 December 1859 and 7 January 1860
Michael Slater (ed.),
Dickens's Journalism
, vol. 2:
The Amusements of the People and Other Papers: Reports, Essays and Reviews 1834â51
(Dent, 1996)
Bernard Darwin,
The Dickens Advertiser
(Elkin Matthews & Marrot, 1930)
Paul Schlicke,
Dickens and Popular Entertainment
(Allen & Unwin, 1985)
On advertising
âA Paper on Puffing',
Ainsworth's Magazine
, July 1842
âThe Advertising System', 77,
Edinburgh Review
, February 1843
Charles Dickens, âBill-Sticking',
Household Words
, 2 March 1851
âAdvertisements',
Quarterly Review
98 (JuneâSeptember 1855)
The Grand Force, Frasers Magazine, 79, March 1869
Henry Sampson,
A History of Advertising
(Chatto & Windus, 1874)
On change, and the Victorian world view
John Copeland,
On Roads and their Traffic 1750â1850
(David & Charles, 1968)
Richard Altick,
The English Common Reader: A Social History of the Mass Reading Public 1800â1900
(Oxford University Press, 1957)
ââ
The Presence of the Present: Topics of the Day in the Victorian Novel
(Ohio State University Press, 1991)
H. Turner,
A Collector's Guide to Staffordshire Pottery Figurines
(MacGibbon & Kee, 1971)
Thomas Balston,
Staffordshire Portrait Figures of the Victorian Age
(Faber, 1958)
Cyril Williams-Wood,
Staffordshire Pot Lids and their Potters
(Faber, 1972)
Louis James,
Print and the People 1819â1851
(Allen Lane, 1976)
Thomas Carlyle,
On Heroes, Hero Worship and the Heroic in History
(James Fraser, 1841)
ââ
Past and Present
(Oxford University Press, 1843)
ââ
Sartor Resartus, The Tailor Retailored
(1833â4)
Helmut and Alison Gernsheim,
L. J. M. Daguerre. The History of the Diorama and the Daguerreotype
(Secker & Warburg, 1956)
On Madame Tussaud
Although I have taken a very different route, the following authors who made earlier journeys helped me to plot my course:
Leonard Cottrell,
Madame Tussaud
(Evans, 1951)
Anita Leslie and Pauline Chapman,
Madame Tussaud: Waxworker Extraordinary
Hutchinson, 1978)
Pauline Chapman,
The French Revolution as Seen by Madame Tussaud, Witness Extraordinary
(Quiller Press, 1989)
ââ
Madame Tussaud in England
(Quiller Press, 1992)
Teresa Ransom,
Madame Tussaud
(Sutton Publishing, 2003)
On Madame Tussaud's
John Theodore Tussaud,
The Romance of Madame Tussaud's
(Odhams Press, 1921)
Edward Gatacre and Laura Dru, âPortraiture in le cabinet de cire Curtius and its successor, Madame Tussaud's Exhibition', conference paper (âatti del I congresso internazionale sulla ceroplastica nella scienza e nell'arte', Florence, 1975)
Pamela Pilbeam,
Madame Tussaud and the History of the Waxworks
(Hambledon amp; London, 2003)âan excellent academic but accessible study spanning the origins of exhibition to the present day
Sources for the Epilogue
Peter Bailey, â “A Mingled Mass of Perfectly Legitimate Pleasures”: The Victorian Middle Class and the Problem of Leisure',
Victorian Studies
21, 4 (summer 1978) 7-28
The Economist
, 31 May 1851
ââ26 October 1850
ââ28 October 1851
Fraser's Magazine
, January 1852
Illustrated London News
, May, June, July 1851
Punch
, 13 April 1850 and 1 February 1851
Other sources
Ephemera, catalogues, posters, advertisements, newspapers and periodicals in the Guildhall Library, the London Library, the British Library, the British Library Newspapers Collection at Colindale, the Theatre Museum, The Dickens Museum, the John Johnson Collection of Printed Ephemera, the Bodleian Library, and Madame Tussauds Archives in Acton and Marylebone
Note: Entries in this index, carried over verbatim from the print edition of this title, are unlikely to correspond to the pagination of any given e-book reader. However, entries in this index, and other terms, may be easily located by using the search feature of your e-book reader.
Â
Numerals in italics denote illustrations.
Â
Adams-Acton, Mrs: on MT, 92
admission fees, 3; Palais-Royal, 28; tiered, 28; reduction in 1792, 130; to deter general public, 188, 201; reduction in Edinburgh, 205; social segregation in, 228; competing wax exhibitions, 237; Great Exhibition, 317
advertising: MT as pioneer, 4, 49â50, 188â9, 216, 237â8, 298, 300, 310; during Louis XV's reign, 16; live-action, 43; Paris, street cries, 47; customized wrappings, 49; royal endorsements, 49, 256â7, 264; dressed wax dolls, Bertin, 78; marketing monarchy, 278â9; Carlyle on, 297; London boom, 297â300,
298
,
299
advertising by MT, 4, 49â50, 298, 300,
300
,
306
, 310; pre-publicity, importance of, 188â9, 221; in Scotland, 201, 206; in Dublin, 207, 209; targeted marketing, 216, 270â1; use of attendance figures in, 232; of coronation models, 246; in
Pickwick Advertiser
, 264; of memoirs, 267, 272; of topical attraction,
277
; posters in French, 79; on omnibuses, 298,
300
; in catalogue, 301â2; endorsing product, 301
Albert, Prince: marriage, 274; image used in promotion of products, 302; Sweet Home tableau, 304; legal action over infringements of privacy, 308
Alembert, Jean (with Diderot):
Encyclopédie
, 13
Allemand, Madame: MT's letters to, 202, 206
America: Madame Tussaud on, 28; French involvement in, 37, 97; contrasted with France, 40
American War of Independence, 37, 97, 115
L'Ami du peuple
, 126â7
amusements
see
entertainment(s)
anatomical waxes, 10â11, 44, 173, 185, 319
Andras, Catharine (wax modeller), 236
animal entertainments, 40â1, 224, 229, 231; flea circuses, 43, 211, 230â1; performing poodles, 180â1; whale skeleton as attraction, 231â2,
231
animated likenesses, 192â3, 307â8
Annual Register
: obituary of MT, 311
appearance
see
dress; fashion
aristocracy, France: appearance, 16; middle-class aspirations, 16, 19â20; interest in popular entertainment, 31â2, 40; anonymity in theatres, 32; ennui, 44â5; hit and run accidents, 45; diet, 48; power, 98
army
see
military; Swiss guards
Art Journal
, 303â4
Artois, Comte d'
see
Charles X, King of France (Comte d'Artois)
aspiration: MT and, 2, 24, 224, 277â8, 319; Curtius's appeal to, 13, 24; as selling point, 16, 251; vehicles as status symbols, 19; Palais Royal, 86;
see also
middle classes
assembly rooms, English, 225â6
Astley, Philip (equestrian showman): circus, travelling show, 219; popularity in Paris, 32; royal patronage, 40; in London, 110
attendance at waxworks: importance, 50, 257; decline in 1789, 110; increase in English tour, 232
Audinot (theatrical impresario), 41, 44
Augusta, Princess: endorsement of MT's Brighton exhibition, 256
Â
Babbington, Elizabeth
see
Tussaud, Elizabeth (
née
Babbington; MT's daughter-in-law)
Baker Street exhibition: MT's exhibition, 257â9, 268, 282â3,
282
, 310; Golden Corinthian Saloon, 258â9; exhibition's status, 268, 292â3; hands-on exhibits, 280; liveliness of exhibition, 280; historical display of Brunswick family, 285; and glamorization of crime, 303â4; expansion of exhibition after MT's death, 315; as respectable genteel venue, 319; exhibition's status for tourists in London, 320; literary
allusions to, 320;
see also
Madame Tussaud and Sons
ballads and ballad singers, 27, 28, 44, 79â80, 83, 89
Barnum, Phineas Taylor, 287â8, 289â90
Bartholomew Fair, 182, 220
Bastille prison, 108â9, 114; siege, 106â10; conditions in, 108; prisoners, 108â9, 114; demolition, 109, 114; commemorative merchandise and relics,
112
, 114â15; significance of siege, 115; MT on, 117â18; myths about, 118
Bath: MT in, 220, 222, 226, 256
Baudelaire, Charles: on photography, 309
Baxter, George (printer), 261â2
Bayswater Hippodrome racecourse: showmen at, 265
bazaars, London: MT's exhibitions in, 250â1;
see also
Baker Street exhibition
Beauharnais, Joséphine
see
Joséphine, empress of France
Beaulard (hairdresser), 36
Beaumarchais, Pierre de (Pierre-Auguste Caron), 21; commemorative merchandise, 39;
Marriage of Figaro
, 85
Bécu, Jeanne
see
Du Barry, Madame
Beffen, Sarah, 220â1
beheading
see
decapitation; guillotine Belfast: MT in, 211â12
Belzoni, Giovanni, 302
Bergami, Bartholemew: alleged affair with Princess Caroline, 244; MT's wax model, 244â5
Berne, Switzerland, 9, 10, 15
Berthier de Sauvigny, Louis Bénigne François, 111
Bertin, Rose, 15, 37, 77, 83; and Curtius, 23â4; MT on, 37; royal patronage, 49; at court, 76, 77; dressing of wax models, 78; exploitation of image of royal family, 79
Bertolloto, Signor: Industrious Fleas,
230
Bertrand, Professor: wax exhibition, 172â3
Birmingham: Curtius show in, 169; MT in, 226, 232; Joseph's marriage in, 249
Birmingham Gazette
, 170
Blackburn Mail
, 246
Bombelles, Marquis de, 69
Bombelles, Marquis de, 85
Bonaparte, Prince Lucien, 279
Bonaparte, Napoleon
see
Napoleon Bonaparte
Boswell, James, 184
Boucher, François: original paintings at Madame Tussaud's, 319
Boulevard du Temple, Paris: popular entertainments, 32, 43, 46â7
Boulevard du Temple, Paris: wax exhibition, 26, 27, 95, 96; Caverne des Grands Voleurs, 27, 96, 151; decline in attendance in 1789, 110; Bastille models, 118â19; response to changes, 122; MT's increased importance in, 124, 130; Marat tableau, 146,
148
, 149â50, 234; new models under the Directory, 171; competing distractions, 175
brand: MT as, 3, 4, 5, 212, 213, 322
branding: beginnings in Paris, 49
Brandreth, Jeremiah (executed criminal): wax model, 237
bread: Paris shortages, 50, 96, 165; price rise, 98
Brewster, Sir David: on Philipstal's show, 191
Brighton: MT in, 226, 256
Bristol, 251; MT in, 220, 226, 232, 251â3; MT's possible purchase of death masks, 240; Assembly Rooms, 251â2, 254,
254
, 255; richâpoor divide, 251, 252; riots over Reform Bill, 251, 252, 254â6,
254
; salvaging of MT's exhibition, 255
Bristol Gazette
, 251, 255
Bristol Mercury
, 226, 232
British Museum: military defence, 215â16; admittance of general public, 280, 282; management, Davy on, 281; elitism, 282; lack of facilities, 282; comparison with Tussaud's, 283
Buffon, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de: wax model, 29
Bullock, William, 242, 280
Burke, William: death mask, 240â1
Bury St Edmunds: MT in, 232
Butterbrodt, Paul,
42
, 43, 162
Byron, Lord: MT's wax model, 240, 272
Â
Cagliostro, Alessandro, 29, 39, 42
Calcutta: Curtius's wax models in, 155
calendar: changes in French Revolution, 141
Calonne, Charles Alexandre de: wax model, 97; effgy hanged, 101
Cambridge: MT in, 139â40, 160, 232; Curtius show in, 169
Campan, Madame Jeanne-Louise-Henriette, 65; on Louis XV, 12; on public opinion, 35; on Franklin medals, 39; comparison with MT, 64â5;
Memoirs of the Private Life of Marie Antoinette
, 64; and MT, 65; similarity of memoirs to MT's, 66, 69; on the Grand Couvert, 74, 75; on Marie Antoinette, 76â7; on Louis XVI, 90
Canterbury: MT in, 256
capital punishment
see
execution Carlyle, Thomas, 285; on demonstration after Necker's dismissal, 105;
History of the French
Revolution
, 267;
Past and Present
, 276, 297;
Lectures on Heroes and Hero Worship
, 285; on advertising, 297
Caroline, Princess of Wales, 243; MT's wax model, 243; alleged adultery, 244â5; popularity, 244, 245
Carra (journalist), 116
Carrier, Jean Baptiste, 163â4
Casanova, 15
Castile, Madame, 283â4
catalogue, MT's: value of, 188, 282; in Edinburgh, 204; aim, 271â2; circulation, 301â2, 310
Caverne des Grands Voleurs, 27, 96, 151;
see also
Chamber of Horrors
celebrity: attitudes to, and MT, 308; cult of, 4, 34, 193, 301, 302; rise and fall, 5, 24â5, 124; and criteria for inclusion in waxworks, 21, 29â30, 79, 276; France, 21; self-made celebrities, 21, 276; disadvantages, 22; ephemeral nature, 24â5; public fickleness, 25; replacing of heads of wax models to reflect rise and fall, 25,
25
, 93â4, 125, 272; MT's appreciation of, 34, 192, 255, 321; radical reformers as, 94; Philipstal and, 192; as mass-market phenomenon, 303; changing perception of, 308â9; and infringement of privacy, 308; present-day relationship of public to stars, 308;
see also
admiration, cult of
celebrity endorsement of goods, 301â2
censorship, Paris, 30â1, 35
Chabert, Monsieur (the Fire King), 223
Chamber of Horrors: MT and guillotined heads
see
modelling by MT of death masks and guillotined heads; and MT's picture of the Bastille, 118; guillotine blade in, 131â2,
132
; contents, 141; first use of name, 291â2; murderers in, 303; expansion after MT's death, 315;
see also
Caverne des Grands Voleurs
Chambers's (Edinburgh) Journal
, 180, 268
Chambers's Journal
, 3, 234
Chamfort, Sébastien de: on Third Estate, 98â9
Champ du Mars: Revolutionary festivals, 120â1, 159; republican rally quashed, 129
change
see
adaptability; heads, replacing; novelty; social change
Chantrey, Sir Francis: bust of Scott possibly copied by MT, 240
Charles, Henri-Louis, 181; âThe Auricular Communications of the Invisible Girl', 181, 199; in Edinburgh, 199; friendship with MT, 200, 203
Charles X, King of France (Comte d'Artois), 199; as MT's patron, 228
Charlotte, Princess: funerary wax facsimiles, 236â7; MT's model, 240
Chartres, Duc de
see
Orléans, Duc d'
Chartres, Duchesse de (
later
Duchesse d'Orléans), 23
Chateaubriand, François René de: memoirs, 113, 136
Chatham, Earl of: wax model by Wright, 186
Chelmsford: MT in, 226â7
Cheltenham: MT in, 226
Chester: Curtius show in, 169
Choderlos de Laclos, Pierre, 99;
Les Liaisons dangereuses
, 99
Church, the: association with wax, 13; undermining of, 13â14;
see also
religion
Clarendon, Earl of: on Paris, 39
Clark, Mary Anne: MT's wax model, 243; scandal, 243
class: and food, Paris, 48; mixing at Versailles, 76; mixing at Palais-Royal, 87; prejudice in England, 281, 317; mixing at Great Exhibition, 317;
see also
middle classes; rank; working classes
cleanliness: Paris, 46; after Revolution, 134
clergy, French, 14; power, 98
clothing
see
dress
Cobbett, William:
Rural Rides
, 216â17, 252; wax model, 217; product association, 302
coffee: Paris coffee wars, 47; Bastille blend, 108; shortages, 130
coffee houses: Palais-Royal, 100â1
coiffure
see
hairdressing and headdresses
Coleman, Mr: representation of coronation, 245, 246
Collins, Dennis: attempted assassination of William IV, 256
Collot d'Herbois, Jean Marie, 158â9
Colosseum, Regent's Park, 263, 290; passenger lift, 290
Comédie-Française (Paris), 30
Comédie-Italienne (Paris), 30, 129
commemorative merchandise: Beaumarchais, 39; Bastille siege,
112
, 114â15; guillotines, 156; executions, England, 190; Napoleon, 242
commercial entertainment: Curtius and, 24, 25â6; requirement to pay fees to Opéra, 32; England, 188, 316
Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur: on MT, 93
concerts, promenade: MT as pioneer, 291
conflicting loyalties, France, 124â5, 164
consumerism: and shopping, 14, 15, 48, 49, 87-8
Conti, Prince de, 10, 11, 25; as patron, 11â12
Corday, Charlotte, 146, 147; wax model, 149,
150; MT on, 150â1
Cornwall: MT in, 228
coronations: MT's representations, 2, 233, 235, 245â6; of George IV, 246, 278â9
costume
see
dress
court at Versailles
see
royal family of France; Versailles
couture
see
dress; fashion
crime: Curtius and, 27; interest in, 27, 303; in Boulevard du Temple, 43â4; glamorization of, 303â4;
see also
Caverne des Grands Voleurs; Chamber of Horrors; murderers
criteria for choice of waxworks, 21, 29â30, 79, 275â6
crowd: fear of, 2, 216, 244, 316, 317, 318; as consumers, MT's use of, 3, 178â9, 209; mob, 50; incitement after dismissal of Necker, 102â3, 105â6; destroying effigies, 102; as murderous mob, 111; atrocities, 136, 137; rioting in Bristol, 255; at Madame Tussaud's, 315;
see also
class