Authors: Madame Tussaud: A Life in Wax
Tags: #Art, #Artists; Architects; Photographers, #Modern, #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #19th Century, #History
Nelson, Horatio, Lord, 190; funerary wax facsimiles, 236, 237; statue, 309
networking: Curtius, 53, 95; MT, 203
new ideas/fashions
see
novelty
Newcastle-upon-Tyne: MT in, 227
news and current affairs: royal news as speciality, 2; waxworks and, 2, 28, 93â4, 97, 122, 218, 235â6, 242; increasing importance, 99; under the Directory, 171â2; MT's awareness of, 192, 239, 256; dissemination in England, 218; with history in MT's exhibition, 247; ephemeral figures, 277â8; poster,
277
newspapers: England, 218; local press in England, importance to MT's success, 226; rise in production, 261
Nicolet, Jean (theatrical impresario), 30, 41, 44; Louis XVI's patronage, 44
nobility
see
aristocracy; royal family
Norfolk Chronicle
, 169
Normandie, Duc de, 167
Northampton: MT in, 233
Norwich: Curtius show in, 169; MT in, 228, 232, 234
Norwich Mercury
, 228
Notes and Queries
, 167
novelty: importance, 24â5, 38â9, 205; Boulevard du Temple, 44; and Marie Antoinette, 71, 77; fashion icons, 75â6, 77, 78, 171; fashion trends, 79; Madame Tussaud and Sons, 276â7
Â
O'Connell, Daniel: MT's wax model, 240
Old London Bazaar: MT's exhibition, 250-1
opening hours of wax exhibitions: Edinburgh, 202; MT's touring exhibition, 250
Opéra (Paris), 30, 32
optical illusions, 263
Orléans, Duc d' (Philippe Egalité; previously Duc de Chartres): development of Palais-Royal, 26, 82â3; appearance, 51â2, 84; character, 83; popularity, 84; wax model, 94, 103,
104
, 105, 106; charity, 96â7; English memorabilia, 115; as Philippe Egalité, 130â1; in dress of sans-culottes, 133â4
Orléans, Duc d' (father of Philippe Egalité), 82
Oxford: MT in, 226, 232, 256
Oxford Magazine
, 48
Â
Palais-Royal, Paris (
later
Palais-Egalité), 26, 82â3, 85, 86â7; popular entertainments, 32; lack of public jurisdiction, 88; licentiousness in, 88; as headquarters of Third Estate propaganda, 99, 100; soap-box speakers, 100; live attractions, 162â3; backlash against Marat, 164â5; Cabinet of Professor Bertrand, 173;
see also
Salon de Cire (Palais-Royal)
Pall Mall Gazette
: obituary of MT, 310
Palloy, Pierre-François, 114â15, 152
Panklibanon ironworks, 258
panoramas, 114, 245, 262â3
Panthéon: as secular hall of fame, 123; Mirabeau as first admission, 123; Voltaire in, 128
Paris: vs Versailles, 12â13, 35, 37, 70, 90, 94; consumerism, 14â15; fairs, 26; skewed priorities, 37â8, 46; as capital of hedonism, 39; filth in, 45â6; cleanliness, 46, 134; Mercier on, 94; destruction of effgies, 101; military resistance to demonstrators, 105; renewed opulence, 171;
see also
France; French Revolution
patriotism: 265, 274, 275; as fashion, 121; British insignia in MT's exhibition, 285
patronage: de Conti of Curtius, 11â12; change, 25, 176â7; public, 25; Astley, 40; royal, 40, 49, 256â7; Nicolet, 44; MT's patrons in England, 228, 228â9, 256â7, 259, 269
Paxton, Joseph: appeal from
Punch
over Crystal Palace, 316; Crystal Palace, 316
Peacock, Thomas:
Melincourt
, 217
Peel, Robert, 288, 302
people-watching; as part of MT's exhibition, 226
Pepin, François (peddler), 105, 106
Percy, Samuel: wax portraiture, 187â8
Père Duchesne, La
(newspaper), 151
Perrier brothers, 46
Peterloo Massacre, 215
phantasmagorias, 42; Philipstal, 145, 195â6; waning of interest in, 196;
see also
magic-lantern
Philipstal, Paul de: arrest in Paris, 145â6; professional partnership with MT, 175â6, 200; and MT's arrival in London, 188â9; Lyceum extravaganza, 190â1; private performances in London, 191â2; animated models, 192â3; character, 192, 194; interest in celebrity, 192; legal disputes, 192; treatment of MT in London, 197, 200; and MT's Edinburgh success, 201â2; in Edinburgh, 204â5; closing of Edinburgh exhibition, 205; MT on, 205â6, 208; in Dublin, 206, 207; paid off by MT, 207
âphilosophical toys', 41
photography: silhouettes as precursor of, 222, 294â5; wax models as precursor, 235, 255; Daguerre's diorama, 263; beginning of, 302, 309;
see also
likenesses
Pictorial Times
, 288
Place de Grève: second-hand clothing sales, 17; as place of execution, 27, 131; burning of Louis XVI's effects, 143
Place de la Révolution (
previously
Place Louis V;
later
Place de la Concorde), 168; execution of Louis XVI, 142; guillotine, 155, 156
Place du Carrousel, 141
plays
see
theatres
pleasure
see
entertainment; fun
politics: and social change, 35; growth of interest in, 90â1, 98; wax exhibitions and, 93, 217
Polytechnic Institution, Regent Street: diving bell rides, 291
poor, the: the clergy and, 14; theatre-going, 39; escapism, 45; food shortages, 50, 96, 165; support for the monarchy, 96; Bristol, 251, 252
popular culture: MT's belief in, 3; democratization of culture, 20â1, 30; waxworks and democratization, 24, 172; rise of popular entertainment, 30, 35; aristocratic interest in, 31â2, 40; state control, 32, 35; at Palais-Royal, 86, 87; MT and, 235;
see also
culture
Portsmouth: MT in, 226, 227â8
Preston: MT in, 233
printers, Paris: restrictions on, 35; resurgence after Revolution, 122; introduction of colour printing, 262
prisons: massacres, 1792, 138;
see also
Bastille prison; La Force prison; Temple prison
promenade: MT's innovation, 225â6, 250
propaganda: Third Estate, 99, 100; siege of Bastille as birth of, 110
Provence, Comte de
see
Louis XVIII, King of France
public: accessibility to, importance to MT, 2; fickleness, 25; patronage, 25; public opinion, 21, 29, 276; freeing of public opinion, 35; prejudice against, England, 188; MT's discouragement to improper persons, 226;
see also
crowd
public dining, 73â4, 171â2;
see also
food, Paris; restaurant(s)
public exhibitions: England, admission of public, 280, 281â2
public interest, 2; as criterion for choice of wax models, 21, 29â30, 79, 275â6; in British royal family, 274
public taste: change in, 276;
see also
fashion(s)
publicity
see
advertising
Punch
, 4, 291â3, 298, 303, 323; on Crystal Palace, 316; on Great Exhibition, 317
puppet shows, 41
Â
Rackstrow's museum, 185
railway travel: beginning, 261, 276; and MT's exhibition, 261; and travelling shows, 315
rank: confusion of, 17, 18, 30, 39; and French royal family, 64, 71, 72; replaced by wealth as index of worth, 85;
see also
class
Reading: MT in, 256
realism/reality
see
likenesses
ârecreation', and entertainment, 318
recycling of heads
see
heads, replacing
Reform Bill, 262; Bristol riots over, 251
Reign of Terror
see
Terror, Reign of in France
Reiss, Madame Salomé: loan to MT, 169, 213
relic phenomenon, 279; Napoleon's relics, 242, 261, 279, 280, 307
religion: and science, 262;
see also
Church, the
restaurant(s): origin of word, 48; Palais-Royal, 48; rise in popularity, 88, 171; by guillotine in Place de la Révolution, 156;
see also
public dining
Réveillon (wallpaper manufacturer), 19â20, 49; mock murder, 101â2
Richardson's Rock Band,
290
, 291
riots
see
social unrest
rituals: royal family of France, 72, 73â4,
79
, 80; French Revolution, 127â8;
see also
festivals
rival wax exhibitions: Curtius's Grand Cabinet of Curiosities, 169â70; Cabinet of
Professor Bertrand, 172â3; Mrs Salmon's waxworks, 180,
183
, 184
roads: improvement in England, 217â18
Robespierre, Maximilien: death head, 10, 159â60; MT on, 117â18, 134, 146; dress, 134; Curtius and, 145â6; on Marat tableau, 149; on Committee of Public Safety, 151; increase in executions under, 155;
Robespierre, Maximilien (
cont.
) execution, 159; in Festival of the Supreme Being, 159
Rochester: MT in, 238, 256
Roland, Madame, 17, 140
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 10, 21, 57â8, 85, 88; and secularisation, 13;
The Social Contract
, 13; influence, 21â3;
La Nouvelle Hélöise
, 22; appearance, 38; as Curtius's guest, 51; MT on, 52, 65â6; MT's wax model, 57, 94; appeals from his mistress to Madame Elizabeth for money, 65â6; boom in Rousseau busts, 165
Royal Academy (British), 188
Royal College of Surgeons: Hunterian Museum, 307
royal family of Britain, 242; waxworks, 185â6, 237, 242; scandal, 244â5; MT's promotion of, 245; MT's wax models, 245, 247, 264, 304; endorsement of MT's exhibition, 257; public interest in, 274; wax tableaux, 276â7; âHouse of Brunswick at one view' exhibition, 285; changing view of monarchy, 304â5; as entertainment, 305;
see also
coronations
royal family of France: wax tableaux, 28,
79
, 80, 89, 234; MT on, 61â4, 66, 67, 69â70; unapproachability, 72; royal-watching as spectator sport, 73â4; attempts to modernize monarchy, 76; Curtius's wax models of, 78, 88â9, 144; waning of deference, 78â9, 97, 125; role of wax in marketing, 79; public support for, 80, 96; abortive escape, 124, 125; symbolic death sentence, 141; desecration of tombs, 143; Grand Couvert
see
Grand Couvert, Le
royalty: and advertising, 49; MT and, 61â4, 242; change in perception of, 77, 78
Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris, 14â15, 37, 77; guillotine, 156;
see also
Bertin, Rose
rural entertainments: decline in England, 216, 219, 316
Rush, James Blomfield: execution, 303; wax model, 304
Â
Sade, Marquis de (Louis Sade), 109, 147
St Paul's Cathedral, 281, 283
Salon de Cire (Palais-Royal), 26, 86â7,
86
; Paris almanac references, 29; royal family as centrepiece, 78; pseudo-educational style, 86â7; closed by Curtius, 95, 96, 101; handed over to creditor by François, 213; tableaux
see
wax tableaux
sans-culottes, 134â5; dress, 132â4; waxworks as entertainment, 135, 163; and
fédérés
, 136
Sanson, Charles-Henri, 132, 141; guillotine blade,
132
Sarti, Signor, 319
scandals: MT as beneficiary, 242â5
scent: development, 46
Schmidt, Tobias (inventor of the guillotine), 95
science: and religion, 262
scientific advances, 262
scientists: showmen as, 42
Scotland
see
Edinburgh; Glasgow
Scott, Sir Walter: MT's wax model, 240
secular idolatry, cult of
see
celebrity
secularism: rise in France, 13â15
Seine, river, 46
self-improvement, Victorian, 275
Senac de Meilhan, Gabriel, 305
sentimentality and sensitivity, 22
shifting allegiances, France, 124â5, 164
showmanship: MT's inheritance from Curtius, 162
Sieyès, Abbé: wax model, 94; on nobility and clergy, 98
silhouette portraits: Joseph Tussaud's, 222, 294â5,
295
sittings, for wax models, 56â7, 80â1
Smallpage, Rebecca
see
Tussaud, Rebecca (
née
Smallpage; MT's daughter-in-law) Smith, Richard (surgeon), 240
Smithfield cattle show: MT's exploitation of, 269â70, 274â5
snobbery, 275; and MT, 311â12
social change: mirrored in waxworks, 31
social change, France: increased social mobility, 21; and politics, 35; and royal family, 77; equal rights, 85; after French Revolution, 164; fiscal collapse in 1795, 168; and lessening of appeal of waxworks, 172
social unrest, England, 215; Bristol riots, 251, 252, 254â6,
254
social unrest, Paris: food, 50; anti-Establishment feeling, 85â6; demonstration over Necker's dismissal, 102â3, 105â7; destruction of feudal symbols, 125â6; violence against aristocrats, 126
Society for the Suppression of Vice, 216
soldiers
see
military; Swiss Guards
souvenirs
see
commemorative merchandise
Spectator, The
, 267
Staël, Madame de, 70, 123
Staffordshire potteries, 303;
see also
Wedgwood brothers
stars
see
celebrity
Stratton, Charles Sherwood âTom Thumb', 288â9
street performers, Paris, 43â4
subscription clubs, England, 218
sugar, 47; shortage, 130
Surrey Zoological Gardens, 281
Sussex, Duke of: visit to MT's exhibition, 259
Sweet Home, wax tableaux, 304â5
Swiss Guards: dress, 75; Tuileries massacre, 136â7;
see also
military
Â
tableaux
see
wax tableaux
taste, public: change in, 276
Taunton Courier
, 228, 238
technological innovation: acceleration, 300
Temple district, Paris: rise to prominence, 32;
see also
Boulevard du Temple
Temple prison: King and Queen as prize sight, 138; model on tour in England, 170
Tennis Court Oath, 99