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Posts Tagged ‘People from England’

HORACE RIDLER (1892–1969) Tattooed Sideshow Performer

In Biography, History, People, Sideshow Performers, Tattoos, Trivia, Uncategorized on April 26, 2010 at 6:26 PM

Horace Ridler as The Great Omi

Horace Ridler was dealt a life of privilege, but he didn’t want to play that hand.  Instead, he created a persona that was the total antithesis of his background. 

Ridler was born in Surrey, England to a wealthy family.  Growing up, he enjoyed all the privileges of education and travel such a life affords.  At the outbreak of World War I, he heeded the bugle call and served in the British Army, attaining the rank of major. 

In 1922, Ridler left military service and needed a job. This is where his life parted ways with the conventional.  After being a member of the rank and file, he wanted something that would let him stand out a little bit. The most promising prospect for him was the business of show.  He started getting pictorial tattoos and displayed his body art at small sideshows. Unfortunately, this didn’t turn out to be as profitable as he had hoped. 

Ridler decided that in order to earn more, he’d have to give the audience more.  In 1927 he started working with famed tattoo artist George Burchett who helped Ridler design a custom, whole-body look.  After 150 hours under the needle, Ridler was sporting full-body, zebra-like stripes that even covered his other tattoos.  

Through the physical transformation, Ridler created a character: The Great Omi.  He toured England and France but felt that the tattoos alone weren’t interesting enough to sustain audiences.  He amped up his look by piercing and stretching his ears with large-gauge jewelry, piercing his septum, and filing his teeth to a sharp point. 

To add entertainment value, Ridler created an elaborate explanation for his tattoos saying he was captured and tortured by natives in New Guinea.  His wife Gladys, who changed her name to Omette, got in on the act by describing Omi’s African ordeal as she introduced him. 

Ridler’s fame as Omi crossed the pond, and in 1939 The Great Omi appeared in the sideshow at the World’s Fair in Queens, New York.  When the fair closed, Robert Ripley hired him as the headliner in the Ripley’s Odditorium Theater.  During Ridler’s six month run, he appeared over 1,600 times, often doing ten shows a day.  

The Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus hired Ridler as Omi the Zebra Man for one season.  Success led to a solo act, and in 1941 and 1942 he toured Australia and New Zealand, worked the “World Fair Freaks” show in Vancouver, Canada, and appeared with some other traveling shows before heading back to England.  To keep things interesting, Omi and Omette wore increasingly outrageous costumes. Omi added nail polish and lipstick to complete his look, and he started giving autographs as the “Barbaric Beauty.” 

World War II brought out the patriotic in Ridler, and he tried to re-enlist in the British Army.  He was rejected, however, because his appearance was considered inappropriate for a soldier.  Back in England he served his country by giving free performances to soldiers and charity organizations and using his fame to sell war bonds.  

Ridler and his wife ultimately retired in Sussex, England, and he died in 1969.  Despite his appearance, he told a reporter he always believed that, “underneath it all, I’m just an ordinary man.” 

QUESTION:  Do you do anything to change your appearance (makeup, hair color, etc.)?  If you were to get a tattoo, what design would you choose? 

                                  ©2010 Debbie Foulkes All Rights Reserved 

Sources: 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace_Ridler 

http://thehumanmarvels.com/?p=17 

http://www.missioncreep.com/mundie/gallery/gallery22.htm 

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://c3.ac-images.myspacecdn.com/images02/105/m_7c8c46c2225c4ff188adfa1730d1edc6.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.myspace.com/thegreatomi&usg=__hXhK28uPSjbzz2B7e3F0E5BmEds=&h=211&w=170&sz=9&hl=en&start=13&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=XrHiITrEsvQ1oM:&tbnh=106&tbnw=85&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dphotos%2BThe%2BGreat%2BOmi%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DX%26rlz%3D1G1GGLQ_ENUS311%26tbs%3Disch:1

MARY KINGSLEY (1862-1900) African Explorer

In adventure, Africa, Biography, Explorers, Feminists, fish, History, People, People from England, Trivia, Uncategorized, women on April 6, 2010 at 10:11 AM

Mary Kingsley

Mary Kingsley was conceived out of wedlock, her parents marrying only four days before her birth.  She kept this fact a secret, but perhaps it, and a lack of religious education, imbued in her the impulse to defy the expectations of a Victorian woman.  

During her childhood in England, Kingsley was mostly left to her own devices.  Her mother was sickly, and her father was a doctor who spent most of his time traveling abroad.  True to the double standard of the time, younger brother Charley was educated at Cambridge, and Kingsley was not given any opportunity to go to school except for some lessons in German to help her father translate scientific texts. She took it upon herself to read volumes of books in her father’s library, especially those about science and foreign lands.  The tales from her father’s adventures piqued her curiosity and gave her a window to a life she would dream about. 

Kingsley played the role of dutiful daughter for 30 years.  As her mother’s health declined, Kingsley’s household duties included nurse.  Dr. Kingsley contracted rheumatic fever on a trip and also became bedridden. 

In early 1892 both parents died within three months.  There are no indications that she had any suitors, so Kingsley was resigned to live with her brother, a total flake.

In 1982, Kingsley took a brief trip to the Canary Islands, and it left her wanting more.  She was searching for a purpose and decided to travel to West Africa to follow up on some of her father’s projects.  When Charley went to Asia in 1983, Kingsley seized the opportunity.

She sought the counsel of friends and experts before leaving, all of whom cautioned her not to go. Ignoring their advice, in August 1893, Kingsley arrived in Angola. Despite the hot climate, she wore the skirts, blouses, high buttoned shoes and hats she wore at home, feeling that even in Africa she couldn’t justify dressing in an undignified manner.  As a white spinster, Kingsley was an anomaly in Africa.  The only other western women there were wives of missionaries.

She did have a mission.  Some doctors and scientists who advised her to stay home suggested that if she were to go anyway, she could help them by collecting specimens of fish and plants, which she did.

In December 1893 Kingsley returned to England and began preparing for her next African expedition.  One year later she again found herself in the villages and jungles of West Africa.  Kingsley fearlessly explored areas that no white person had ever been to before.  She rowed a canoe up the Ogowe River in Gabon and was the first woman to climb Mount Cameroon, with a summit of 13,700 feet.

Her encounters with animals were often hair-raising, and she had a healthy respect for their natural abilities. “Whenever I have come across an awful animal in the forest and I know it has seen me I take Jerome’s advice, and instead of relying on the power of the human eye rely upon that of the human leg, and effect a masterly retreat in the face of the enemy.”  She declared the leopard, “the most lovely animal I have ever seen.”1

In dealing with the native people, the explorer had a very non-judgmental approach.  She knew that travelers, especially female, were oddities to the Africans, so she became a textile trader selling cloth for rubber and ivory.  Integrating into the societies instead of just observing and documenting endeared her to the natives more readily.  She described her interactions with the Fang (Fan), a cannibalistic tribe, saying, “A certain sort of friendship soon arose between the Fan and me. We each recognized that we belonged to that same section of the human race with whom it is better to drink than to fight.”1  

She had a very high regard for the indigenous life of the natives.  It surprised Kingsley that she became fond of them.  She wrote, “I confess I like the African on the whole, a thing I never expected to do… I went to the Coast with the idea that he was a degraded, savage, cruel brute; but that is a trifling error you soon get rid of when you know him.”1

When Kingsley returned to England in November 1895, she told her stories to curious journalists and captivated audiences, but not everyone agreed with her acceptance of the native lifestyle.  She understood how tribal life functioned, and her support of that way of life contradicted the aims of the Church of England and British colonization.  She upset the Church by defending the practices of the aboriginal Africans and criticizing the missionaries’ efforts to change them. 

Kingsley settled into her brother’s home and wrote Travels in West Africa, a detailed, candid account of her experiences.  The book was a best seller and led to a very busy schedule on the lecture circuit.  Always trying to enlighten as well as entertain, one lecture she gave to the staff and students at a London medical school was called “African Therapeutics from a Witch Doctor’s Point of View.”  Her stories were so popular that she wrote another book, West African Studies, in quick succession that included all the anecdotes she left out of the first one.

Kingsley’s legacy was not only sociological.  Of all the plants and fish specimens she brought back, three fish species were previously unknown and named after her.  In 1899, the intrepid adventurer went back to Africa, this time looking to collect fresh-water fish from the Orange River in South Africa.  When she arrived in Cape Town, the Boer War was going strong.  The best way for Kingsley to become involved was to nurse Boer prisoners at a camp in Simon’s Town.  Typhoid infiltrated the camp, and Kingsley became infected.  On June 3, 1900, she succumbed to typhoid and, at her insistence, was buried at sea.

QUESTION:  Where would you like to explore, and what do you think it would be like? 

                                ©2010 Debbie Foulkes All Rights Reserved

   Sources:

 1Kingsley, Mary, Travels in West Africahttp://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/k/kingsley/mary/west/west.html

 http://www.royalafricansociety.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=169&Itemid=165

 http://www.billgreenwell.com/lost_lives/index.php?key_id=583

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Kingsley

 http://africanhistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa011002a.htm http://africanhistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa011002a.htm