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At-Home Humbugs: Freaks and Fakes in the Nineteenth-Century Parlor Museum

Publication ,  Journal Article
D'Alessandro, M
Published in: Theatre Survey
January 2022

In April 1885, a journalist rushed to Madison Square Garden for a special reception highlighting Jo-Jo, the Dog-Faced Boy. A feature of P. T. Barnum's traveling show, Jo-Jo was confounding scientists who had requested a stand-alone inspection of the mysterious attraction. Accordingly, the reporter provided an anthropological description of the boy: “He stands about five feet high. . . . His whole body is covered by a very thick growth of long, tow colored hair . . . and the peculiar formation of his head [is] very suggestive of the Russian dachshund.” At first, Jo-Jo appeared docile, but as the scientists prodded him more and more, he started “snarling, showing his three canine teeth” and asked his guardian if he could bite the inspectors. Jo-Jo was decidedly not a dog-boy, or not exactly. He was, in fact, a Russian teenager suffering from hypertrichosis, a condition causing excessive hair growth all over the body, including nearly every surface area of the face. Barnum had signed him to perform a year earlier, and the boy made quite an auspicious debut. However, Jo-Jo was simply the latest in a long line of supposed hybrid species and exotic curiosities that Barnum had been displaying since midcentury. The famed showman built his name in part by presenting human creation itself as a continual spectrum. Barnum's attractions ranged from live tigers and giraffes to enigmatic simian performers to wax statues of America's degraded lower classes. As much of a draw as he became, even Jo-Jo had to share a bill with Tattooed Hindoo Dwarfs, Hungarian Gypsies, Buddhist Priests, as well as a menagerie of animals including baby elephants, kangaroos, lions, and twenty-foot-long “great sinewy serpents.” But Jo-Jo's specific appeal was tied to his inexplicability. Even given the closer inspection of the dog-faced boy, “none of the physicians present would hazard an opinion as to his ancestry.”

Duke Scholars

Published In

Theatre Survey

DOI

EISSN

1475-4533

ISSN

0040-5574

Publication Date

January 2022

Volume

63

Issue

1

Start / End Page

3 / 33

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Related Subject Headings

  • Drama & Theater
  • 1904 Performing Arts and Creative Writing
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
D’Alessandro, M. (2022). At-Home Humbugs: Freaks and Fakes in the Nineteenth-Century Parlor Museum. Theatre Survey, 63(1), 3–33. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0040557421000557
D’Alessandro, Michael. “At-Home Humbugs: Freaks and Fakes in the Nineteenth-Century Parlor Museum.” Theatre Survey 63, no. 1 (January 2022): 3–33. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0040557421000557.
D’Alessandro M. At-Home Humbugs: Freaks and Fakes in the Nineteenth-Century Parlor Museum. Theatre Survey. 2022 Jan;63(1):3–33.
D’Alessandro, Michael. “At-Home Humbugs: Freaks and Fakes in the Nineteenth-Century Parlor Museum.” Theatre Survey, vol. 63, no. 1, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Jan. 2022, pp. 3–33. Crossref, doi:10.1017/s0040557421000557.
D’Alessandro M. At-Home Humbugs: Freaks and Fakes in the Nineteenth-Century Parlor Museum. Theatre Survey. Cambridge University Press (CUP); 2022 Jan;63(1):3–33.
Journal cover image

Published In

Theatre Survey

DOI

EISSN

1475-4533

ISSN

0040-5574

Publication Date

January 2022

Volume

63

Issue

1

Start / End Page

3 / 33

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Related Subject Headings

  • Drama & Theater
  • 1904 Performing Arts and Creative Writing