Sword-swallower once ran museum called Freakatorium
Johnny Fox, a sword-swallowing magician who presented his quirky art form to enthusiastic audiences around the world, has died.
The 64-year-old had been battling cancer and died Sunday at a home in Maryland, according to close friend Barbara Calvert. He died peacefully, with a smile, while surrounded by loved ones who gave him a standing ovation, she said.
Jules Smith, the president of the Maryland Renaissance Festival, said Fox — though ailing — completed a nine-weekend run there in October.
His haunts included New York, where he ran an oddityfilled Manhattan museum called Freakatorium for 5 1/2 years. The items on display included a shrunken head, a twoheaded turtle and clothing from circus performer Tom Thumb, Smith said.
“He even had a glass eye from Sammy Davis Jr.,” she said.
Fox also performed at Coney Island’s freak show.
“He was one of the finest examples of a sideshow virtuoso as well as being a celebrity within our own culture,” Patrick Wall, general manager of the non-profit arts organization Coney Island USA, told the New York Daily News. “We lost one of the best. … He had a dynamic stage presence and just a complete love and commitment to what he did.”
Fox was born in Minnesota on a Friday the 13th and raised in Hartford, Connecticut. He got his professional start in St. Petersburg, Florida, according to Smith, who was a friend for 38 years.
“He was very proficient at magic, but people started stealing his bits,” said Smith. Fox figured it would be harder to steal a sword-swallowing act.
“He started with uncooked spaghetti — swallowing, holding the end, pulling it back out,” said Smith.
Then “he did a string and a key like Harry Houdini, someone he admired greatly, until he could regulate his gag reflex.”
Then came the swords. There were admittedly a few mishaps, but within eight months he’d mastered it.
Working before a live audience or on TV, Fox made it his mission to introduce families to his world of “circuses, carnivals, sideshows, and the life of people involved in them,” said Smith.