'', with his co-star
Rossitto as Angeleno In late 1923, Eck and his brother attended a performance of
stage magic at a local church by John McAslan. When McAslan asked for volunteers for his act, 12-year-old Eck bounded onto the stage on his hands to the surprise of the magician. McAslan convinced Eck to join the sideshow with him as manager; Eck agreed, but only if his brother was also employed. Robert was charged by his mother with looking after his brother. His parents signed a one-year contract, which Eck attested the magician later changed to a ten-year contract by adding a zero. In 1924, Eck left McAslan and signed on with a carny named Captain John Sheesley. Eck got along quite well with
Tod Browning and was often at his side while on set. Eck would later say that "Browning wanted me to stay as close to him as possible. He told me whenever I have an empty seat or chair, you are to sit alongside me while we shoot." Although he sometimes tried to socialize, he didn't feel comfortable mingling with his castmates, whom he described as a "happy, noisy crowd" and "childish, silly and in a world all their own." At one point he complained that they had gone "Hollywood" because of the film, "wear[ing] sunglasses and acting funny." When Pete Robinson had difficulty lying on a blanket in one scene, Eck commented that if he had legs, he would have lain on a
fakir's bed of nails.
Olga Baclanova would reminisce fondly of her costar (whom she described as "handsome"), "When we finished the picture, he came and gave me a present. He had made a circus ring made from matches. He said he had made it in my honor." Eck claimed that Browning wished to do a follow-up picture with him and Robert where he would play a
mad scientist's creation. However, Browning's career was irretrievably hurt by
Freaks, and he no longer had the clout with studios to do many of the projects he wished to do. Eck was also disappointed by how much of his part had been trimmed from the film in the nearly thirty minutes that were cut by censors. After
Freaks, Eck was featured as a bird creature or "Gooney Bird" in three
Tarzan movies:
Tarzan the Ape Man (1932),
Tarzan Escapes (1936) and ''
Tarzan's Secret Treasure'' (1941). The creation of Eck's bird costume for the
Tarzan films, footage of which was filmed during the production of
Freaks in 1931, used a full body cast of him. When the Eckhardt home was facing foreclosure due to the oncoming
Great Depression, Eck performed for the
Ripley's Believe It or Not! Odditorium at the
1933 Chicago World's Fair. It was there that Eck was billed as "the Most Remarkable Man Alive". ==Famous illusion==