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Julia Pastrana

Julia Pastrana (August 1834 – 25 March 1860) was a performer and singer during the 19th century who had hypertrichosis. Pastrana, an indigenous woman from Mexico, was born in 1834, somewhere in the state of Sinaloa.[1] She was born with a genetic condition, hypertrichosis terminalis (or generalized hypertrichosis lanuginosa[2]); her face and body were covered with straight black hair. Her ears and nose were unusually large, and her teeth were irregular. The latter condition was caused by a rare disease, undiagnosed in her lifetime, gingival hyperplasia, which thickened her lips and gums.[2]

Julia Pastrana
Lithograph of Julia Pastrana by V. Katzler circa 1860
BornAugust 1834
Died25 March 1860 (age 25)
Other namesBear Woman, The Apewoman, The Nondescript
Height4 ft 5 in (1.35 m)
Spouse
Theodore Lent
(m. 1855)
Children1 son

Life and career

Multiple versions of Pastrana's early life exist. Literature produced by those who managed the freak shows she appeared in described her as belonging to a Native American tribe called "Root Diggers" whose members were similar to apes and lived in caves. In this version, it is said that a woman identified only as Mrs. Espinosa was kidnapped by the tribe and held in a cave and took Pastrana with her when she was able to escape. In another version, which is based on the words of indigenous villagers in Ocoroni, Mexico, Pastrana was a local girl whom they referred to as "wolf woman." In this version, Pastrana lived with her mother until her mother passed away, after which, her uncle sold her to the circus.[3] Both accounts claim that, at some point, she lived in the home of Pedro Sanchez, the then-governor of Sinaloa, and left the home in 1854.[4][5]

According to Ireneo Paz, Francisco Sepúlveda, a customs official in Mazatlán, purchased Pastrana and brought her to the United States.[6] At first, Pastrana performed under the management of J.W. Beach, but in 1854, she eloped with Theodore Lent, marrying him in Baltimore, Maryland.[7] Lent took over her management, and they toured throughout the US and Europe. Pastrana was advertised as a hybrid between an animal and a human and worked in sideshows and freak shows under the stage names the "Baboon Lady",[8] the "Dog-faced Woman", the "Hairy Woman", the "Ape-faced Woman",[9] the "Ape Woman", the "Bear Woman", and "The Nondescript". During her performances, she demonstrated her intelligence and talent: singing, dancing, and interacting with the audience.[10]

During a tour in Moscow, Pastrana gave birth to a son, with features similar to her own.[11] The child survived only three days, and Pastrana died of postpartum complications five days later.

Medical examinations

 
Julia Pastrana, "the nondescript", advertised for an exhibition of the famous bearded Lady.

During her life, Pastrana's management arranged to have her examined by doctors and scientists, using their evaluations in advertisements to attract a larger audience. One doctor, Alexander B. Mott, M.D., certified that she was specifically the result of the mating of a human and an "Orang hutan".[12] Another, Dr. S. Brainerd of Cleveland, declared that she was of a "distinct species".[13] Francis Buckland stated that she was "only a deformed Mexican Indian woman".[13] Samuel Kneeland, Jr., a comparative anatomist of the Boston Society of Natural History, declared that she was human and of Indian descent.[14]

Charles Darwin discussed her case after her death, describing her as follows: "Julia Pastrana, a Spanish dancer, was a remarkably fine woman, but she had a thick masculine beard and a hairy forehead; she was photographed, and her stuffed skin was exhibited as a show; but what concerns us is, that she had in both the upper and lower jaw an irregular double set of teeth, one row being placed within the other, of which Dr. Purland took a cast. From the redundancy of the teeth her mouth projected, and her face had a gorilla-like appearance".[15]

After death

 
Julia Pastrana, image from a 1900 book, showing her preserved remains

After Pastrana's death, Lent sold her body and their son's body to Professor Sukolov of Moscow University who permanently preserved them. Her body was taxidermically preserved.[16] The process was a blend of taxidermy techniques and embalming chemicals.[17] Although generically referred to as a "mummy" by some authors, her preserved body was technically not a mummy because it was not mummified. Her body was "stuffed",[18] as noted by renowned naturalist and taxidermist Charles Darwin. After the bodies were preserved by Sukolov, Lent re-purchased them from him and began exhibiting them throughout Europe.[11] Lent later found another woman with similar features, married her and changed her name from Marie Bartel to Zenora Pastrana, becoming wealthy from her exhibition.

For over a hundred years, the bodies of Pastrana and her son were displayed around the world in museums, circuses and amusement parks. They appeared in Norway in 1921 and toured the US as late as 1972. Later that year, a tour of Sweden drew considerable public opposition, leading to the bodies being withdrawn from public view.[11] Vandals broke into the storage facility in August 1976 and damaged the baby's body. The remains were consumed by mice. Julia's preserved body was stolen in 1979, but stored at the Oslo Forensic Institute after the body was reported to police but not identified. It was identified in 1990 and for many years rested in a sealed coffin at the Department of Anatomy, Oslo University. In 1994, the Norway Senate recommended burying her remains, but the Minister of Sciences decided to keep them, so scientists could perform research. A special permit was required to gain access to her remains.[1]

On 2 August 2012, it was reported in Aftenposten that Pastrana would finally be buried in Mexico at an unspecified date.[19] In February 2013, with the help of Sinaloa state governor Mario López Valdez, New York-based visual artist Laura Anderson Barbata, Norwegian authorities, and others, the body was turned over to the government of Sinaloa and her burial was planned.[2] Hundreds of people attended her Catholic funeral, and her remains were buried in a cemetery in Sinaloa de Leyva, a town near her birthplace.[20] Filmmaker Eva Aridjis filmed the burial for her feature documentary "Chuy, The Wolf Man", a portrait of a modern-day Mexican family with congenital hypertrichosis.

Theatre

A musical Pastrana by Australian writers Allan McFadden and Peter Northwood was performed by Melbourne's Church Theatre in 1989.[21][22] The production was nominated for five Melbourne Green Room Awards.

A play based on Pastrana's life, The True History of the Tragic Life and Triumphant Death of Julia Pastrana, the Ugliest Woman in the World (1998) was written by Shaun Prendergast. A 2003 Texas production of the play staged by Kathleen Anderson Culebro, sister of Laura Anderson Barbata, led to the campaign by Anderson Barbata to repatriate Pastrana's remains from Norway to Mexico.[2]

Film

Marco Ferreri's film The Ape Woman (1964) is based on Pastrana's life story.

On 14 October 2013 the in-development movie "Velvet" was announced, based on the life and experiences of Julia Pastrana, and from an original screenplay by Celso García and Francisco Payó González. "Velvet" is directed by Celso García and is an international production with the support of various personalities behind and in front of the camera. The announcement appeared in an article published in Mexican newspaper "Mural", member of the editorial group Reforma.[citation needed]

Music

The Ass Ponys wrote and recorded the song Julia Pastrana about her life on their 1993 album Grim.

The musical supergroup Apparatjik released a single titled "Julia" on March 20, 2020, accompanied by a lyric video.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Lerma Garay, Antonio. Érase una vez en Mazatlán. Comisión para la Celebración del Bicentenario de la Independencia y Centenario de la Revolución. Culiacán. 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d Wilson, Charles (February 11, 2013). "An Artist Finds a Dignified Ending for an Ugly Story". New York Times. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  3. ^ Stelloh, Tim. "Behold! The Heartbreaking, Hair-Raising Tale Of Freak Show Star Julia Pastrana, Mexico's Monkey Woman". BuzzFeed. Retrieved 2018-02-23.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-05-31. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  5. ^ Lenz, Lyz. "The Life and Death of Julia Pastrana, Bearded Woman on Parade". Pictorial. Retrieved 2018-02-23.
  6. ^ Ireneo Paz, Algunas Compañas, p. 239
  7. ^ The Sun: Nov. 10, 1855; ProQuest Historical Newspapers: Baltimore Sun, The (1837–1987) p. 1
  8. ^ Charlston, JL (16 June 2019). "Julia Pastrana: The 'circus freak' on show even in death". News.com.au. News.com.au. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  9. ^ Miles, A. (February 1979). "Julia Pastrana:The Bearded Lady". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 67 (2): 160–164. doi:10.1177/003591577406700229. PMC 1645262. PMID 4595237.
  10. ^ Garland-Thomson 2017, p. 36.
  11. ^ a b c Garland-Thomson 2017, p. 37.
  12. ^ Bondeson, Jan (1997). "The strange story of Julia Pastrana". A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities. I.B.Tauris. p. 219. ISBN 1860642284.
  13. ^ a b Buckland, F.T. (1865). Curiosities of Natural History, Vol. 2. London: Bentley. pp. 44–51.
  14. ^ Born Different, p. 81
  15. ^ Darwin, Charles, The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Vol. II. John Murray, London, 1868. p. 328
  16. ^ Pauline Wakeham (2008). Taxidermic Signs: Reconstructing Aboriginality. U of Minnesota Press. pp. 212–. ISBN 978-0-8166-5054-5.
  17. ^ Lovejoy, Bess. "Julia Pastrana: A "Monster to the Whole World"". Publicdomainreview.org. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
  18. ^ Van Wyhe, John (2002). "The Variation of Plants and Animals Under Domestication". Darwinonline.org.uk. Retrieved 27 December 2019. Her [Julia Pastrana] stuffed skin was exhibited as a show
  19. ^ "Hun ble vist frem som "apekvinne". Nå skal Julia Pastrana endelig begraves". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). 2 August 2012.
  20. ^ Stargardter, Gabriel (13 Feb 2013). "'Ugliest woman in the world' buried 150 years after end of tragic life". msn.news. Reuters. Retrieved 26 Feb 2013.
  21. ^ "AusStage". www.ausstage.edu.au. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
  22. ^ Radic, Leonard (4 August 1989). "Roll up, roll up, and see the bearded lady". The Age. Retrieved 10 July 2015.

References

  • Bartra, Roger. "El trágico viaje de una mujer salvaje mexicana al mundo civilizado". Istor 64 (2016): 179-198. México.
  • Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie (January 2017). "Julia Pastrana, the 'extraordinary lady'". Alter. 11 (1): 35–49. doi:10.1016/j.alter.2016.12.001.
  • Gylseth, Christopher Hals; Lars O. Toverud (2003). Julia Pastrana: The Tragic Story of the Victorian Ape Woman. Sutton. ISBN 978-0-7509-3312-4. OCLC 52829869.
  • Miles, A.E.W. (February 1974). "Julia Pastrana: The Bearded Lady". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 67 (2): 160–164. doi:10.1177/003591577406700229. PMC 1645262. PMID 4595237.

External links

  • Julia Pastrana Online

julia, pastrana, august, 1834, march, 1860, performer, singer, during, 19th, century, hypertrichosis, pastrana, indigenous, woman, from, mexico, born, 1834, somewhere, state, sinaloa, born, with, genetic, condition, hypertrichosis, terminalis, generalized, hyp. Julia Pastrana August 1834 25 March 1860 was a performer and singer during the 19th century who had hypertrichosis Pastrana an indigenous woman from Mexico was born in 1834 somewhere in the state of Sinaloa 1 She was born with a genetic condition hypertrichosis terminalis or generalized hypertrichosis lanuginosa 2 her face and body were covered with straight black hair Her ears and nose were unusually large and her teeth were irregular The latter condition was caused by a rare disease undiagnosed in her lifetime gingival hyperplasia which thickened her lips and gums 2 Julia PastranaLithograph of Julia Pastrana by V Katzler circa 1860BornAugust 1834Sinaloa MexicoDied25 March 1860 age 25 Moscow Russian EmpireOther namesBear Woman The Apewoman The NondescriptHeight4 ft 5 in 1 35 m SpouseTheodore Lent m 1855 wbr Children1 son Contents 1 Life and career 2 Medical examinations 3 After death 4 Theatre 5 Film 6 Music 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksLife and career EditMultiple versions of Pastrana s early life exist Literature produced by those who managed the freak shows she appeared in described her as belonging to a Native American tribe called Root Diggers whose members were similar to apes and lived in caves In this version it is said that a woman identified only as Mrs Espinosa was kidnapped by the tribe and held in a cave and took Pastrana with her when she was able to escape In another version which is based on the words of indigenous villagers in Ocoroni Mexico Pastrana was a local girl whom they referred to as wolf woman In this version Pastrana lived with her mother until her mother passed away after which her uncle sold her to the circus 3 Both accounts claim that at some point she lived in the home of Pedro Sanchez the then governor of Sinaloa and left the home in 1854 4 5 According to Ireneo Paz Francisco Sepulveda a customs official in Mazatlan purchased Pastrana and brought her to the United States 6 At first Pastrana performed under the management of J W Beach but in 1854 she eloped with Theodore Lent marrying him in Baltimore Maryland 7 Lent took over her management and they toured throughout the US and Europe Pastrana was advertised as a hybrid between an animal and a human and worked in sideshows and freak shows under the stage names the Baboon Lady 8 the Dog faced Woman the Hairy Woman the Ape faced Woman 9 the Ape Woman the Bear Woman and The Nondescript During her performances she demonstrated her intelligence and talent singing dancing and interacting with the audience 10 During a tour in Moscow Pastrana gave birth to a son with features similar to her own 11 The child survived only three days and Pastrana died of postpartum complications five days later Medical examinations Edit Julia Pastrana the nondescript advertised for an exhibition of the famous bearded Lady During her life Pastrana s management arranged to have her examined by doctors and scientists using their evaluations in advertisements to attract a larger audience One doctor Alexander B Mott M D certified that she was specifically the result of the mating of a human and an Orang hutan 12 Another Dr S Brainerd of Cleveland declared that she was of a distinct species 13 Francis Buckland stated that she was only a deformed Mexican Indian woman 13 Samuel Kneeland Jr a comparative anatomist of the Boston Society of Natural History declared that she was human and of Indian descent 14 Charles Darwin discussed her case after her death describing her as follows Julia Pastrana a Spanish dancer was a remarkably fine woman but she had a thick masculine beard and a hairy forehead she was photographed and her stuffed skin was exhibited as a show but what concerns us is that she had in both the upper and lower jaw an irregular double set of teeth one row being placed within the other of which Dr Purland took a cast From the redundancy of the teeth her mouth projected and her face had a gorilla like appearance 15 After death Edit Julia Pastrana image from a 1900 book showing her preserved remains After Pastrana s death Lent sold her body and their son s body to Professor Sukolov of Moscow University who permanently preserved them Her body was taxidermically preserved 16 The process was a blend of taxidermy techniques and embalming chemicals 17 Although generically referred to as a mummy by some authors her preserved body was technically not a mummy because it was not mummified Her body was stuffed 18 as noted by renowned naturalist and taxidermist Charles Darwin After the bodies were preserved by Sukolov Lent re purchased them from him and began exhibiting them throughout Europe 11 Lent later found another woman with similar features married her and changed her name from Marie Bartel to Zenora Pastrana becoming wealthy from her exhibition For over a hundred years the bodies of Pastrana and her son were displayed around the world in museums circuses and amusement parks They appeared in Norway in 1921 and toured the US as late as 1972 Later that year a tour of Sweden drew considerable public opposition leading to the bodies being withdrawn from public view 11 Vandals broke into the storage facility in August 1976 and damaged the baby s body The remains were consumed by mice Julia s preserved body was stolen in 1979 but stored at the Oslo Forensic Institute after the body was reported to police but not identified It was identified in 1990 and for many years rested in a sealed coffin at the Department of Anatomy Oslo University In 1994 the Norway Senate recommended burying her remains but the Minister of Sciences decided to keep them so scientists could perform research A special permit was required to gain access to her remains 1 On 2 August 2012 it was reported in Aftenposten that Pastrana would finally be buried in Mexico at an unspecified date 19 In February 2013 with the help of Sinaloa state governor Mario Lopez Valdez New York based visual artist Laura Anderson Barbata Norwegian authorities and others the body was turned over to the government of Sinaloa and her burial was planned 2 Hundreds of people attended her Catholic funeral and her remains were buried in a cemetery in Sinaloa de Leyva a town near her birthplace 20 Filmmaker Eva Aridjis filmed the burial for her feature documentary Chuy The Wolf Man a portrait of a modern day Mexican family with congenital hypertrichosis Theatre EditA musical Pastrana by Australian writers Allan McFadden and Peter Northwood was performed by Melbourne s Church Theatre in 1989 21 22 The production was nominated for five Melbourne Green Room Awards A play based on Pastrana s life The True History of the Tragic Life and Triumphant Death of Julia Pastrana the Ugliest Woman in the World 1998 was written by Shaun Prendergast A 2003 Texas production of the play staged by Kathleen Anderson Culebro sister of Laura Anderson Barbata led to the campaign by Anderson Barbata to repatriate Pastrana s remains from Norway to Mexico 2 Film EditMarco Ferreri s film The Ape Woman 1964 is based on Pastrana s life story On 14 October 2013 the in development movie Velvet was announced based on the life and experiences of Julia Pastrana and from an original screenplay by Celso Garcia and Francisco Payo Gonzalez Velvet is directed by Celso Garcia and is an international production with the support of various personalities behind and in front of the camera The announcement appeared in an article published in Mexican newspaper Mural member of the editorial group Reforma citation needed Music EditThe Ass Ponys wrote and recorded the song Julia Pastrana about her life on their 1993 album Grim The musical supergroup Apparatjik released a single titled Julia on March 20 2020 accompanied by a lyric video See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julia Pastrana Bearded lady Alice Elizabeth Doherty The Minnesota Woolly Girl Annie Jones The Bearded Woman Krao Farini The Missing Link Ferriman Gallwey score Negro of Banyoles example of a taxidermied human Repatriation of human remains Sarah Baartman Human ZooNotes Edit a b Lerma Garay Antonio Erase una vez en Mazatlan Comision para la Celebracion del Bicentenario de la Independencia y Centenario de la Revolucion Culiacan 2010 a b c d Wilson Charles February 11 2013 An Artist Finds a Dignified Ending for an Ugly Story New York Times Retrieved February 11 2013 Stelloh Tim Behold The Heartbreaking Hair Raising Tale Of Freak Show Star Julia Pastrana Mexico s Monkey Woman BuzzFeed Retrieved 2018 02 23 Julia Pastrana Chronology Archived from the original on 2015 05 31 Retrieved 2016 08 11 Lenz Lyz The Life and Death of Julia Pastrana Bearded Woman on Parade Pictorial Retrieved 2018 02 23 Ireneo Paz Algunas Companas p 239 The Sun Nov 10 1855 ProQuest Historical Newspapers Baltimore Sun The 1837 1987 p 1 Charlston JL 16 June 2019 Julia Pastrana The circus freak on show even in death News com au News com au Retrieved 28 December 2019 Miles A February 1979 Julia Pastrana The Bearded Lady Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 67 2 160 164 doi 10 1177 003591577406700229 PMC 1645262 PMID 4595237 Garland Thomson 2017 p 36 a b c Garland Thomson 2017 p 37 Bondeson Jan 1997 The strange story of Julia Pastrana A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities I B Tauris p 219 ISBN 1860642284 a b Buckland F T 1865 Curiosities of Natural History Vol 2 London Bentley pp 44 51 Born Different p 81 Darwin Charles The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication Vol II John Murray London 1868 p 328 Pauline Wakeham 2008 Taxidermic Signs Reconstructing Aboriginality U of Minnesota Press pp 212 ISBN 978 0 8166 5054 5 Lovejoy Bess Julia Pastrana A Monster to the Whole World Publicdomainreview org Retrieved 27 December 2019 Van Wyhe John 2002 The Variation of Plants and Animals Under Domestication Darwinonline org uk Retrieved 27 December 2019 Her Julia Pastrana stuffed skin was exhibited as a show Hun ble vist frem som apekvinne Na skal Julia Pastrana endelig begraves Aftenposten in Norwegian 2 August 2012 Stargardter Gabriel 13 Feb 2013 Ugliest woman in the world buried 150 years after end of tragic life msn news Reuters Retrieved 26 Feb 2013 AusStage www ausstage edu au Retrieved 20 October 2017 Radic Leonard 4 August 1989 Roll up roll up and see the bearded lady The Age Retrieved 10 July 2015 References EditBartra Roger El tragico viaje de una mujer salvaje mexicana al mundo civilizado Istor 64 2016 179 198 Mexico Garland Thomson Rosemarie January 2017 Julia Pastrana the extraordinary lady Alter 11 1 35 49 doi 10 1016 j alter 2016 12 001 Gylseth Christopher Hals Lars O Toverud 2003 Julia Pastrana The Tragic Story of the Victorian Ape Woman Sutton ISBN 978 0 7509 3312 4 OCLC 52829869 Miles A E W February 1974 Julia Pastrana The Bearded Lady Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 67 2 160 164 doi 10 1177 003591577406700229 PMC 1645262 PMID 4595237 External links EditJulia Pastrana Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julia Pastrana amp oldid 1151421906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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