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The story of a woman whose work inspired one of London's greatest
attractions. Born in Strasbourg, the young Marie Tussaud learned
her skills from her mother's employer, Philippe Curtius. In 1780
she became tutor to King Louis XVI's sister and for eight years
prior to the Revolution lived at the court in Versailles. In Paris
throughout the Revolution, she was often in extreme danger.
Incredibly, she was forced to make death masks from the decapitated
heads of her friends who fell to the guillotine. In 1802, she
opened her first exhibition at the Lyceum theatre in London. With
modelled figures such as Napoleon and Josephine and other notables
from the Revolution, her exhibition was very popular. She also had
the guillotine blade that severed Marie Antoinette's head. For the
next 26 years Madame Tussaud toured England and Scotland with her
Waxwork Exhibition, until she established her base in Baker Street
in 1835. She had always had a separate room, for the most gruesome
of the models, which in 1846 Punch dubbed The Chamber of Horrors.
The name stuck. She died in 1850 and in 1884, Tussaud's grandsons
moved the exhibition to Marylebone Road, where it remains.
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