The King, maybe not as dead as we thought. |
When someone mentions portraits, instantly we picture perhaps the most masterful
of all painters, busily working before his easel while a comfortably posed model
sits patiently to be immortalized on canvas. Think again. How about you walk
into a large, theatrically lit room designed to look like the garden court of a
Baroque villa and all around are dozens of people in small groups, seemingly
frozen in time. And not just people, but instantly recognizable people, Oprah,
Katy Couric, Bill Clinton, Al Roker, Mohammed Ali, Justin Bieber, Elvis...
ELVIS? Elvis is dead...well, supposedly so anyway. Not in this case. He's been
brought back to life...well, almost. If you haven't guessed, you've just
stumbled into one of Madame Tussaud's portrait galleries. There are fifteen of them
now, on four continents.
The Queen, looking very much alive and well. |
And before we go any further, in case you're picturing a dark, meandering
concourse of individually lit museum tableaux with nothing but historic figures
like Queen Elizabeth, Winston Churchill, Hitler, and Roosevelt, forget it. In
New York at least, you can walk right up to the figures, touch them, put your
arm around them, get your picture taken with them, even talk to them...provided
you're good at holding up the entire conversation yourself. They still call it a
museum, and they still refer to them as portraits, but it takes only a few
moments to realize the old term "wax museum" doesn't begin to convey the reality
that you've become a part of the most famous (and best) wax-portrait
entertainment attraction in the world. And yes, taking their lead from Disney,
some of them even move.
Madame Tussaud herself. |
Madame Tussaud's in London proclaims itself to be two hundred years old.
Actually it's a little over that. The talented French portrait artist
opened her gallery there in 1802. Marie Groscholtz was born in Strasbourg
Austria in 1761. She was only sixteen when she modelled her first figure in wax,
that of the French philosopher and author, Francois Voltaire. Success came
almost instantly as Marie was invited to come live at Versailles and teach art
to the children of King Louis XVI's sister. With the bedlam that accompanied the
French Revolution, Marie was imprisoned, sharing a cell with her mother and a
woman destined to become the future Empress Josephine, wife of Napoleon. Upon
her release, Marie was forced to prove her allegiance to the revolution by
making death masks of those being executed, including her former employers, the
King and Queen themselves. And while it may have been a rather gruesome task, it
was important training in her art. After the revolution, she inherited the
sizeable wax collection of Phillippe Curtis, the most prominent wax portrait
artist of her day. The following year, she acquired a husband and the more
familiar name, Madame Tussaud.
Hail to the Chief |
Although her travelling wax figure exhibit began in Paris and toured most of
Europe, it was in London, on famed Baker Street, where Madame Tussaud took root.
It's where, in 1846, there first debuted her famous "Chamber of Horrors" depicting episodes she knew
well from the French Revolution. And it's also there where she died in
1850. Her grandsons moved the museum to its current address on Marylebone Road
in 1884 and saw the enterprise through its first century. By then, a British
cultural institution, despite its French roots, much of the museum was destroyed by
fire in 1925 and then little more than fifteen years later, heavily damaged
again by a WW II bomb, which ironically left their figure of Adolph Hitler
completely unscathed.
Justin Bieber, meet Justin Bieber. |
By the 1950s Madame Tussaud's was back in business with the addition of
England's first planetarium. The 70s saw a branch open in Amsterdam. Then another in Hollywood, also in Hong
Kong, Tokyo, Bangkok, Berlin, Shanghai, Sydney, and New York. Tussaud's sank a solid piece of change ($50 million) into
their five-story, 85,000 square foot Times Square attraction. Almost 200 figures
including George Pataki, Rudolph Giuliani, Woody Allen, Larry King,
Brad Pitt, Elvis, of course, Tony Bennett, President Obama, and others all seem to be enjoying the
attention of home folks and tourists alike. Each one has taken over six months
to craft, entailing over 200 measurements. Each head and each set of hands has
been modelled first in clay, then cast in wax from plaster moulds, hand painted
in oils, adorned with individually implanted human hair, and then attached to a
fibreglass body. In some cases the figures have even donned clothes once
belonging to the celebrities they represent. And lest you think painters may
have been forgotten, thanks to Madame Tussaud and her descendants, you can still
mingle with the likes of Andy Warhol, who seems almost as alive as Elvis.
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