Berta Beeson

Berta Beeson (1899–1969) was the stage name of Herbert "Slats" Beeson, a cross-dressing circus performer known as "The Julian Eltinge of the Wire."[1]

Berta Beeson
Two nearly-identical circus posters, Beeson (left) and Millman (right).
Born
Herbert Beeson

(1899-02-02)February 2, 1899
Died(1969-09-07)September 7, 1969
OccupationTightrope walker
EmployerRingling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus
Sells Floto Circus
Spouse(s)Margaret Beeson

Early life

According to several anecdotes, he learned to dance upon the wire by imitating the routine of a young girl in the circus. Upon her sudden injury, he stepped in to take her place; in one version, the young woman for whom he inadvertently understudied became his wife.[2] As a teenage grocery clerk in Summitville, Indiana, Beeson moonlighted at the local vaudeville house.[2]

Circus career

In 1917, the Sells Floto Circus billed him as "Mademoiselle Beeson, Marvelous High Wire Venus." During his performance in the center ring, the side rings were clear.[3] In 1925, following Bird Millman’s retirement from circus life, the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus featured Beeson as "The Mad-Cap Whirlwind of the Mid-Air".[4] He retired from performance in 1936, but later reemerged as an advance man, traveling ahead of the show to make necessary arrangements.

Personal life

Beeson died in California at the age of 70, survived by his wife Margaret.

gollark: You'll need a cooler new thing, and even our memetics team have so far failed at this.
gollark: Anyway, your attempts to displace apioforms with a near-identical thing *will not work*.
gollark: (I checked the records)
gollark: Well, not any more, no.
gollark: Incorrect.

References

  1. IRVING SPIEGEL (May 3, 1954). "EX-STAR OF CIRCUS ADVANCE MAN NOW; Veteran of Tight Wire Travels Ahead on Road to Pick Site and Pave Way for Show". The New York Times.
  2. Bismarck Tribune 18 July 1929, p. 6.
  3. Stoddard, Helen. Rings of Desire: Circus History and Representation, Manchester University Press, 2000, p. 42.
  4. Billboard, 04 November 1925.
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