Kate Berridge (46 page)

Read Kate Berridge Online

Authors: Madame Tussaud: A Life in Wax

Tags: #Art, #Artists; Architects; Photographers, #Modern, #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #19th Century, #History

BOOK: Kate Berridge
5.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

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, 93–4, 97, 122, 218, 235–6, 242; increasing importance, 99; under the Directory, 171–2; MT's awareness of, 192, 239, 256; dissemination in England, 218; with history in MT's exhibition, 247; ephemeral figures, 277–8; 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, 24–5, 38–9, 205; Boulevard du Temple, 44; and Marie Antoinette, 71, 77; fashion icons, 75–6, 77, 78, 171; fashion trends, 79; Madame Tussaud and Sons, 276–7

 

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, 82–3; appearance, 51–2, 84; character, 83; popularity, 84; wax model, 94, 103,
104
, 105, 106; charity, 96–7; English memorabilia, 115; as Philippe Egalité, 130–1; in dress of sans-culottes, 133–4

Orléans, Duc d' (father of Philippe Egalité), 82

Oxford: MT in, 226, 232, 256

Oxford Magazine
, 48

 

Palais-Royal, Paris (
later
Palais-Egalité), 26, 82–3, 85, 86–7; 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, 162–3; backlash against Marat, 164–5; Cabinet of Professor Bertrand, 173;
see also
Salon de Cire (Palais-Royal)

Pall Mall Gazette
: obituary of MT, 310

Palloy, Pierre-François, 114–15, 152

Panklibanon ironworks, 258

panoramas, 114, 245, 262–3

Panthéon: as secular hall of fame, 123; Mirabeau as first admission, 123; Voltaire in, 128

Paris: vs Versailles, 12–13, 35, 37, 70, 90, 94; consumerism, 14–15; fairs, 26; skewed priorities, 37–8, 46; as capital of hedonism, 39; filth in, 45–6; 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, 11–12; change, 25, 176–7; public, 25; Astley, 40; royal, 40, 49, 256–7; Nicolet, 44; MT's patrons in England, 228, 228–9, 256–7, 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, 187–8

Père Duchesne, La
(newspaper), 151

Perrier brothers, 46

Peterloo Massacre, 215

phantasmagorias, 42; Philipstal, 145, 195–6; waning of interest in, 196;
see also
magic-lantern

Philipstal, Paul de: arrest in Paris, 145–6; professional partnership with MT, 175–6, 200; and MT's arrival in London, 188–9; Lyceum extravaganza, 190–1; private performances in London, 191–2; animated models, 192–3; character, 192, 194; interest in celebrity, 192; legal disputes, 192; treatment of MT in London, 197, 200; and MT's Edinburgh success, 201–2; in Edinburgh, 204–5; closing of Edinburgh exhibition, 205; MT on, 205–6, 208; in Dublin, 206, 207; paid off by MT, 207

‘philosophical toys', 41

photography: silhouettes as precursor of, 222, 294–5; 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, 90–1, 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, 20–1, 30; waxworks and democratization, 24, 172; rise of popular entertainment, 30, 35; aristocratic interest in, 31–2, 40; state control, 32, 35; at Palais-Royal, 86, 87; MT and, 235;
see also
culture

Portsmouth: MT in, 226, 227–8

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, 225–6, 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, 73–4, 171–2;
see also
food, Paris; restaurant(s)

public exhibitions: England, admission of public, 280, 281–2

public interest, 2; as criterion for choice of wax models, 21, 29–30, 79, 275–6; in British royal family, 274

public taste: change in, 276;
see also
fashion(s)

publicity
see
advertising

Punch
, 4, 291–3, 298, 303, 323; on Crystal Palace, 316; on Great Exhibition, 317

puppet shows, 41

 

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

‘recreation', 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), 19–20, 49; mock murder, 101–2

Richardson's Rock Band,
290
, 291

riots
see
social unrest

rituals: royal family of France, 72, 73–4,
79
, 80; French Revolution, 127–8;
see also
festivals

rival wax exhibitions: Curtius's Grand Cabinet of Curiosities, 169–70; Cabinet of

Professor Bertrand, 172–3; Mrs Salmon's waxworks, 180,
183
, 184

roads: improvement in England, 217–18

Robespierre, Maximilien: death head, 10, 159–60; MT on, 117–18, 134, 146; dress, 134; Curtius and, 145–6; 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, 57–8, 85, 88; and secularisation, 13;
The Social Contract
, 13; influence, 21–3;
La Nouvelle Hélöise
, 22; appearance, 38; as Curtius's guest, 51; MT on, 52, 65–6; MT's wax model, 57, 94; appeals from his mistress to Madame Elizabeth for money, 65–6; boom in Rousseau busts, 165

Royal Academy (British), 188

Royal College of Surgeons: Hunterian Museum, 307

royal family of Britain, 242; waxworks, 185–6, 237, 242; scandal, 244–5; 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, 276–7; ‘House of Brunswick at one view' exhibition, 285; changing view of monarchy, 304–5; as entertainment, 305;
see also
coronations

royal family of France: wax tableaux, 28,
79
, 80, 89, 234; MT on, 61–4, 66, 67, 69–70; unapproachability, 72; royal-watching as spectator sport, 73–4; attempts to modernize monarchy, 76; Curtius's wax models of, 78, 88–9, 144; waning of deference, 78–9, 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, 61–4, 242; change in perception of, 77, 78

Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris, 14–15, 37, 77; guillotine, 156;
see also
Bertin, Rose

rural entertainments: decline in England, 216, 219, 316

Rush, James Blomfield: execution, 303; wax model, 304

 

Sade, Marquis de (Louis Sade), 109, 147

St Paul's Cathedral, 281, 283

Salon de Cire (Palais-Royal), 26, 86–7,
86
; Paris almanac references, 29; royal family as centrepiece, 78; pseudo-educational style, 86–7; closed by Curtius, 95, 96, 101; handed over to creditor by François, 213; tableaux
see
wax tableaux

sans-culottes, 134–5; dress, 132–4; waxworks as entertainment, 135, 163; and
fédérés
, 136

Sanson, Charles-Henri, 132, 141; guillotine blade,
132

Sarti, Signor, 319

scandals: MT as beneficiary, 242–5

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, 13–15

Seine, river, 46

self-improvement, Victorian, 275

Senac de Meilhan, Gabriel, 305

sentimentality and sensitivity, 22

shifting allegiances, France, 124–5, 164

showmanship: MT's inheritance from Curtius, 162

Sieyès, Abbé: wax model, 94; on nobility and clergy, 98

silhouette portraits: Joseph Tussaud's, 222, 294–5,
295

sittings, for wax models, 56–7, 80–1

Smallpage, Rebecca
see
Tussaud, Rebecca (
née
Smallpage; MT's daughter-in-law) Smith, Richard (surgeon), 240

Smithfield cattle show: MT's exploitation of, 269–70, 274–5

snobbery, 275; and MT, 311–12

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, 254–6,
254
social unrest, Paris: food, 50; anti-Establishment feeling, 85–6; demonstration over Necker's dismissal, 102–3, 105–7; destruction of feudal symbols, 125–6; 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 ‘Tom Thumb', 288–9

street performers, Paris, 43–4

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, 304–5

Swiss Guards: dress, 75; Tuileries massacre, 136–7;
see also
military

 

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

Other books

The Price of Failure by Jeffrey Ashford
Brando by Hawkins, J.D.
Hat Trick! by Brett Lee
Thrill Ride by Julie Ann Walker