Waxing Lyrical - The Story of Madame Tussaud
By Carolin Kopplin

The Rosemary Branch Theatre in Islington - winner of „Best
Theatre“ in the 2010 Fringe Report Awards - presents a solo
performance by Judith Paris about the life of Madame Tussaud.
Although her name graces one of the main tourist attractions in
London little is known about the life of Marie
Tussaud.
Aptly directed by Ninon Jerome, Judith Paris recounts the story of this remarkable woman who was arrested as a royalist during the horrors of the French revolution and barely escaped the guillotine. Marie Tussaud tells her younger son the story of her life before the opening of her new show. Now aged 72 she has been working hard since she was a child to become a gifted artist as well as a successful business woman. She describes how she was taught the art of waxwork by her uncle Philippe Curtius against the explicit wishes of her mother who saw her daughter in a more traditional role. Marie eventually married but left her husband and her younger son to tour the towns of Britain with her wax cabinet, fighting off competition against a background of fire, riot, shipwreck, and betrayal. Madame Tussaud became one of the greatest showpeople along with P.T. Barnum - which makes one wonder: How much of her story is really true?
Judith Paris, who has also written the play, gives a beautiful performance as the admirable Marie Tussaud.
9 – 14 February 2010, Tue – Sat 7.30 pm, Sun 3 pm
Tickets: £ 12 / £ 10 (concessions)
BOX OFFICE: 020 7704 6665
The Rosemary Branch, 2 Shepperton Road, London N1 3DT


