Pages

04 July 2008

Schlitze (1901 – 1971) carnie, film actor.

Simon Metz was born in the Yucatan, Mexico (although alternate accounts say that she was born in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1882, or in the Bronx, New York in 1901). Both she and her sister, Athelia, were microcephalic, or ‘pinheads’.

As an adult she had no more than two ounces of brain. She was exhibited by P.T. Barnum as Maggie, the last of the Aztecs, based on a supposed Mayan tradition of binding the heads of their elite to achieve a cone shape. She was named Schlitze during a carnival in St Louis based on the beer company. After Athelia died, she was managed by showman George Surtees. The name on her California Death Certificate says Schiltze Surtees.

For most of her career Schiltze dressed and was exhibited as a girl supposedly because she was not toilet trained. She was the best known of the pinhead performers, and Norma Shearer and other Hollywood stars made a fuss of her. She did a few magic tricks, and danced a little.


She appeared as a female pinhead in the movie Freaks, 1931, where the clown compliments her on her new dress. She played an animal hybrid in Island of Lost Souls, 1932, a vasectomy patient in Tomorrow’s Children, 1934, and Princess Betsy, the Bird Woman in Meet Boston Blackie, 1941.

When Surtees died in the late 1950s, his daughter placed Schlitze in a home, but she was rescued by the Canadian promoter, Sam Alexander, who took her back on the road.

She was the inspiration for Bill Griffith’s cartoon, Zippy the Pinhead.
She died of pneumonia at age 70.

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous3/8/08 11:57

    Why do you make reference throughout the article that Schlitze is a she? He dressed as a woman, but was a man.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It is difficult to apply 21st-century pronominal conventions to previous centuries. There is a lot that the sources do not say about Schlitze's gender identity, or lack of. I certainly do not see any evidence of a male gender identity. She dressed as female consistently off-stage, which is more than say Sylvia Rivera did - to choose a strong example. She was treated as a woman, or perhaps as a girl. Why do you say that she was a man? Because she had a penis? Is that really your position?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous19/8/08 17:12

    Everything I've ever read says Simon was a man. The dress was to make diaper changing easier.

    ReplyDelete
  4. If you prefer the denials and rationalizations of the conventionally cisgendered, why do you even bother to read this blog?

    ReplyDelete

Comments that constitute non-relevant advertisements will be declined, as will those attempting to be rude. Comments from 'unknown' and anonymous will also be declined. Repeat: Comments from "unknown" will be declined, as will anonymous comments. If you don't have a Google id, I suggest that you type in a name or a pseudonym.