Las Vegas Review-Journal

The politics of waxing: Snap a selfie while you still can

- By Dayna Evans New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — Madame Tussauds opened its New York City outpost at 42nd Street and Eighth Avenue after the pornograph­y theaters were shut down but shortly before the Sept. 11 attacks. One of 24 Madame Tussauds branches around the world, it has an admission fee of $37 — $12 more than MOMA or themet—thatyoucan­getdown to $29 if you buy tickets online in advance.

As emphasized by docents in the elevator ride to its top floor, it also has two bars. “Electric Lemonade” sells for $9.95 and margaritas for $10, and drinks can be carried throughout the attraction, unlike at some of those other expensive New York institutio­ns.

There are no rules for how visitors interact with the celebrity replicas at Tussauds. Even touching the figures’ hair, which studio artists in London painstakin­gly implant into heads strand by strand, is allowed. (The hair on President Donald Trump’s head? A mix of human and yak. His eyebrows: squirrel.)

“Who’s that?” one child asked his father, pointing at Bruce Willis.“you may be able to follow the celebritie­s and get up close with them on Instagram and stuff like that,” said Christine Haughney, the regional head of marketing for Merlin Entertainm­ents, the parent company of Madame Tussauds. “But here, you can actually get your photo taken with them.”

What was striking recently were the black-and-white Time’s Up pins fastened to the glittering ballgown of A-list replicas like Susan Sarandon and Anne Hathaway, and to the more casual attire of — who knows why — Justin Timberlake and Ed Sheeran. Representi­ng the recent movement by women in Hollywood to end harassment and inequality in all industries, the Time’s Up pins speak for wax figures who, one hopes, can’t actually speak for themselves.

This slight costume change is the result of what Haughney said was the secret sauce fueling Tussauds’ 300-year survival. “We always keep our fingers on the pulse and make sure that we’re staying up-to-date,” she said.

A survivor of the French Revolution and a protégée of the physician and waxworks hobbyist Philippe Curtius, Marie Tussaud, born Anna Maria Grosholtz, brought a traveling roadshow of wax figures she had created through England between 1802 and 1835, after which she set up a permanent exhibition in London. (Notable characters including Benjamin Franklin and Voltaire sat for her back in the day.)

Madame Tussauds thrived in London throughout the 20th century, featuring an occasional­ly rotating cast of wax figures, including the royal family (central and extended), as well as an extensive Chamber of Horrors, where Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels were on display.

Hitler’s waxwork, a short distance from Mahatma Gandhi, was doused in red paint in 1933 by three men and one woman, who also hung a sign from the figure that read, “Hitler the Mass Murderer.” In 2008, at the just-opened Berlin outpost of Madame Tussauds, Hitler was beheaded by the second visitor to ever step foot in the museum.

Controvers­y about identity and politics visits Tussauds regularly. Though the dawn of the selfie era proved to be a boon for the brand, social media has also introduced its share of problems. (“Social sharing” is encouraged by docents; the preferred hashtag is “#famousfun.”)

Last year, a wax figure of Beyoncé was taken off the floor temporaril­y after an outcry that she had been whitewashe­d, in both the literal and figurative senses. “We did a couple small outfit changes and we were able to fix the lighting,” Haughney said of the incident.

After unveiling the rapper Nicki Minaj’s wax figure in 2015 at its Las Vegas location in the Venetian, in which she posed on her hands and knees in a revealing outfit, guests immediatel­y began posing for obscene photograph­s with the waxwork, forcing Madame Tussauds to release a statement that confirmed it would bring in more security and redesign the set.

In a time where the public has a more complicate­d relationsh­ip with celebrity than ever, and more male stars are outed for their indiscreti­ons, what does the future hold for a brand so dependent on famous people as Madame Tussauds? Vloggers, reality stars and even Grumpy Cat — whose figure is terrifying­ly animatroni­c — have their own waxworks at the attraction­s now.

“If there’s a massive celeb and it’s big news worldwide, that’s someone we’d probably need to look at and do,” Haughney said.

“Waxworks have this simultaneo­us lifelikene­ss and deathliken­ess,” Michelle Bloom, a professor of comparativ­e literature and French at University of California, Riverside and the author of “Waxworks: A Cultural Obsession” (2003), said in a phone interview. “But a wax figure can pass for a living person at the same time that it’s very corpselike. I think we’re drawn to both, really.”

In Bloom’s book, she explores the cultural phenomenon of waxworks through art, film and literature.

“Their lifelikene­ss and yet — they’re not real! — means that we can do what we want with the figures,” she said. “A lot of Hollywood horror films and works of literature get to this perversene­ss. There is usually a male character who is enamored of or obsessed with the wax figure of a woman. It’s the ‘ideal woman’ who doesn’t talk and is literally malleable. He can control her. He can project his fantasy onto her.”

Haughney said that who gets into the attraction and who gets booted, who the guests prefer and who goes out of fashion, is determined only by visitors’ preference­s. “The most important thing is that we know what our promise is to our brand, as well as to the celebritie­s,” she said, adding that Mother Teresa — “who was just so in demand with guests” — was one of a small number of luminaries to decline to be waxed. “We would never do anything to jeopardize that. We’re very apolitical.”

Bloom was skeptical. “There are a lot of organizati­ons that say they’re apolitical,” she said. “Depicting Beyoncé as whitewashe­d, that’s political. Where you choose to position a figure, or not including a figure, that’s all quite political.”

It’s tradition at Madame Tussauds for sitting presidents to be featured — Trump, who has himself been accused of sexual assault by multiple women, is protected behind red velvet rope, and by a Tussauds staff member. Visitors are permitted to be photograph­ed with him only under a staff member’s supervisio­n. “There’s an opportunit­y for visceral on-site interactio­n,” Bloom said, “whether you want it or not.”

For the people who spent a Friday night in New York at a wax museum that provides a near uniform experience to two dozen other cities — like going to Mcdonald’s in Rome — it’s really not that serious.

On the way out of the Times Square attraction, into the cold, real-life version of New York that these tourists had, maybe, come to see, I asked Sherene Church, who was in town with her sister from Atlanta, if she felt that her visit represente­d a classicall­y New York experience.

“Oh, absolutely,” she said. “Everything about it was good.”

 ??  ?? The Romeo Santos figure greets visitors in the lobby of Madame Tussauds in New York. There are 24 Madame Tussauds worldwide, including one at the Venetian in Las Vegas.
The Romeo Santos figure greets visitors in the lobby of Madame Tussauds in New York. There are 24 Madame Tussauds worldwide, including one at the Venetian in Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? A visitor walks by a figure of Kim Kardashian in Madame Tussauds in New York.
A visitor walks by a figure of Kim Kardashian in Madame Tussauds in New York.
 ??  ?? A visitor, right, takes a close look at the figure of former President Barack Obama with an employee at Madame Tussauds in New York.
A visitor, right, takes a close look at the figure of former President Barack Obama with an employee at Madame Tussauds in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States