She often posed with her pets. In this and the following two postcards, she has a parrot on her shoulder. |
In her portraits she was posed in fashionable gowns, walking her dog or reading the newspaper. She also obtained permission to cross-dress - compulsory, at the time, for a woman dressing as a man - and she then posed in male attire, with a cigar and a glass of beer.
She was, perhaps unsurprisingly, very proud of her beard and very careful with it. Her barber visited three time a week to wash it with a special shampoo and claimed that, "she took care of that beard, she washed it, she clucked over, she brushed it every day", and when he trimmed it, she would watch him "like a hawk."
Now something of a celebrity, she began touring, apparently attracting great crowds in Paris and London. During World War I, she worked as a volunteer nurse. Possibly because of the same medical condition or hormonal imbalance that resulted in her ability to grow a beard, she wasn’t able to conceive children of her own. So after thirty years of marriage, the couple adopted a five-year-old war orphan, Fernande. (Depending on the source, she may instead have lost her parents to the Spanish Influenza epidemic.) In the aftermath of the war, the couple opened a haberdashery in Plombières, Joseph now being too ill to run the café.
Widowed in 1928, she reopened the café in Thaon-les-Vosges, she and her daughter even performing in cabaret shows there. And the establishment was still very popular, with customers visiting from all over France and Great Britain. She died of a heart attack at the age of seventy-four. In the 1970s a museum dedicated to her opened in Thaon-les-Vosges.
As she had wished, her tombstone reads:
Ici gît Clémentine Delait, la Femme à Barbe
(Here lies Clémentine Delait, the Bearded Woman)
Darling S,
ReplyDeleteWe are lost for words..... a strange event even for these strange times and this strange subject.
We can but wonder where you find such intriguing facts and photographs but today's selection are truly captivating.
One cannot help but think that Madame Delait cannot have enjoyed an easy life. She undoubtedly was successful in business and must have attracted a crowd of onlookers as well as local trade. It would appear that she was proud of her looks, which is a mercy, but there is a sadness in this quirk of nature which placed her in a male/female no-man's land and unable to have children.
Still, there are lessons for us all. Dare to be different....a motto we try to live by.
Hello J-and-L,
DeleteIt can certainly be a challenge to be "different" in this world, then as now. But the way I look at it, starting out the way she did, laboring in the fields, having to shave - and having to try to hide the fact - from an early age, it must have been some great relief to let that all go, and then to enjoy what appears to have been a rather nice lifestyle - because - of her oddity. I also get the sense that she was that very outgoing type who liked the attention, maybe a bit of a fighter, driven to succeed, the type who wouldn't let any sort of negativity or mockery deter her. At any rate, she seems to have had a good life. I do hope that was the case....