" smoking a pipe with an extended mouthpiece for her lips during a show in a New York circus in 1930. Her lips were stretched by the insertion of
disks of incrementally increasing size. The exhibition of human oddities has a long history: ;1630s:
Lazarus Colloredo, and his conjoined twin brother, Joannes Baptista, who was attached at Lazarus' sternum, toured Europe. ;1704–1718: Peter the Great collected many types of oddities and founded his cabinet of curiosities called
Kunstkammer in what is now St. Petersburg, Russia. He collected the specimens to help educate the people of Russia because he felt that it was the mark of a great civilization. His collection grew to include both animal and human examples such as an eight-legged deer and a three-legged baby. ;1738: The exhibition of a creature who "was taken in a wook at Guinea; 'tis a female about four feet high in every part like a woman excepting her head which nearly resembles the ape." ;1810–1815:
Sarah Baartman (aka "Hottentot Venus"), a
Khoekhoe woman, was exhibited in Europe. ;1829–1870:The original "
Siamese twins",
Chang and Eng Bunker were conjoined twin brothers who started performing in 1829. They stopped performing in 1870 due to Chang having a stroke. ;1842–1883: In 1842 Charles Sherwood Stratton was presented on the freak show platform as "
General Tom Thumb". Charles had
hypopituitary dwarfism; he stopped performing in 1883 due to a stroke that led to his death. ;1849–1867: In 1849
Maximo and Bartola started performing in freak shows as "The Last of the Ancient Aztecs of Mexico". Both performers had
microcephaly and stopped performing in 1867 after they were married to each other. ;1912–1935:
Daisy and Violet Hilton were conjoined twin sisters who started performing at the age of four in 1912. They grew in popularity during the 1920s to the 1930s performing dance routines and playing instruments. They stopped performing in 1935 due to financial troubles. Two stars of the film were Daisy and Violet Hilton: conjoined sisters who had been raised being exhibited in freak shows. ;1960:
Albert-Alberta Karas (two siblings, both
Intersex) exhibited with Bobby Reynolds on sideshow tour. ;1991:
Jim Rose Circus toured with the
Lollapalooza Festival in 1992 and was described as "a triumphant comeback of the freak show" by the LA Times. ;1992:
Grady Stiles ("Lobster Boy") was shot in his home in
Gibsonton, Florida. ;1996: Chicago shock-jock
Mancow Muller presented
Mancow's Freak Show at the United Center in the middle of 1996, to a crowd of 30,000. The show included
Kathy Stiles and her brother
Grady III as the
Lobster Twins. ;2000–2010: The Bros. Grim Sideshow first opened its tent at Milwaukee's
Great Circus Parade showgrounds in 2000. The owner Ken Harck described the production as the closest "authentic" show modeled on early 20th century sideshows. The troup later toured with
Ozzfest for multiple dates, including the years 2006 and 2007. Some of the performers included
The Enigma and his wife Katzen,
Jesus "Chuy" Aceves (also known as Chuy the wolfman),
Stalking Cat, and
Slymenstra Hymen formerly of
Gwar. ;2005: 999 Eyes Freakshow is founded, touting itself as the "last genuine traveling freakshow in the United States." 999 Eyes portrays freaks in a positive light, insisting that "what is different is beautiful." Freaks include
Black Scorpion. ;2000–present: Chayne Hultgren (The Space Cowboy) Chayne Hultgren, known professionally as The Space Cowboy, is an Australian performer and producer whose work continues the freakshow and sideshow tradition into the 21st century. He was one of the four founding members of The Happy Sideshow (2000), alongside Shep Huntly (host), Captain Frodo (the “Norwegian Rubber Man”), and Tiger Lil (the “Princess of Pain”). The troupe became a cult attraction at festivals in Australia and abroad, helping to renew public interest in contemporary freakshow performance. From there, Hultgren toured internationally with extreme stunts including sword swallowing, chainsaw juggling on a unicycle, blindfolded arrow catching, and a Tesla coil stunt in which he directs electricity through his body. He later created and produced several contemporary freakshows that toured Australia and the UK, including Mutant Barnyard, Sideshow Wonderland, The Royal Family of Strange People, and Deja Voodoo. These productions incorporated both natural-born and self-made “freaks,” featuring performers such as Mat Fraser (“Seal Boy”), Imaan (billed as the world’s shortest comedian), Jeremy Hallam (“Goliath,” the world’s smallest strongman”), Sarah Houbolt (described as a modern-day KooKoo the Bird Girl”), Jason Brott (“The Illustrated Penguin”), Garry Stretch (known for his unusually elastic skin), Erik Sprague (The Lizardman), Samppa Von Cyborg (body modification artist), Jyoti Amge (the world’s smallest living woman), and Susan Sykes (Busty Heart). Hultgren holds multiple Guinness World Records, including the record for the longest lightning bolt generated from the human body.[^1][^2] In later years he transitioned into a contemporary art career, producing augmented-reality paintings exhibited at major art fairs in Australia and New Zealand.[^3][^4] ;2007: Wayne Schoenfeld brought together several sideshow performers to
The L.A. Circus Congress of Freaks and Exotics, to photograph sideshow folks for
Cirque Du Soleil – Circus of the Sun. In attendance were Bill Quinn, the halfman; Percilla, the fat lady; Mighty Mike Murga the Mighty Dwarf;
Dieguito El Negrito, a wildman; Christopher Landry; fire-eaters; sword swallowers, and more. ==Modern freak shows==