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Leo Singer
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Leopold von Singer (May 3, 1877 – March 5, 1951) was an Austrian-born American manager of an entertainment troupe called Singer's Midgets, that were a popular vaudeville group in the first half of the twentieth century. He was responsible for casting many performers in the iconic 1939 film The Wizard of Oz.
Singer was born to a prominent family in Vienna, Austria. He was reportedly inspired to form Singer's Midgets in 1912 or 1913, after he and his daughter Trudy were entertained by a troupe of "midgets" (dwarfs) at the Vienna Prater.
The Singer Midgets
[edit]Leopold Singer and his wife Walberga recruited midgets (later called "little people") for his own troupe, The Singer Midgets, and began building the Liliputstadt, a "midget city" at the "Venice in Vienna" amusement park, where they could perform.[1] Singer mainly sought out little people with proportionately-sized body parts – generally called "midgets", thus the name of the troupe – so that they could move and dance with ease.[2]
The Liliputstadt was a major success, Singer began to tour with his performers throughout Europe and, in the process, recruited new members. After World War I broke out, the troupe traveled to the United States, and remained there for the remainder of the act's existence. They performed in vaudeville theaters.[3] Because he was Austrian, the Bureau of Investigation (later the FBI) investigated Singer during World War I. In the end, the agents agreed with Singer’s claim that the accusations against him were based on “professional jealousy.”[4] During the 1930s, some of Singer's Midgets began appearing in films, such as Tarzan the Ape Man (1932), They Gave Him a Gun (1937), Block-Heads (1938), and The Terror of Tiny Town, a 1938 Western with an all-dwarf cast. Also in 1938, Singer signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to provide 124 actors and stand-ins to play Munchkins in The Wizard of Oz (1939). Some of the members of his troupe formed a portion of the group, and he traveled throughout the United States to recruit others.[5]
Singer was a somewhat controversial figure in his day. The actor Billy Curtis once noted that Singer "had a reputation for cheating his midgets."[6] During the filming of The Wizard of Oz, Singer reportedly kept half of his performers' weekly pay. Nevertheless, his troupe members often spoke positively of him. Nita Krebs said that he "always treated his people fine," and Grace Williams said, "He had private tutors to give them an education. He treated them fine and gave them beautiful hotel suites."[6] Fern Formica recalled, "He was like a father. He was a good man."[7] A number of Singer's Midgets affectionately referred to their manager as "Papa."[8]
The Singer Midgets disbanded in the mid-1940s, with many members either returning home to their native Europe or professionally joining the Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Circus tours.[9][10]
Death
[edit]Singer retired to New York City in the mid 1940s. He died there on March 5, 1951 at the age of 73.[11]
References
[edit]Notes
- ^ Cox, 32-33.
- ^ Cox, 7-8.
- ^ Cox, 34.
- ^ "Lollipop Guild in League with the Germans? FOLD3". Archived from the original on 2017-01-16. Retrieved 2015-05-30.
- ^ Cox, 13-14.
- ^ a b Harmetz, pp.193-194
- ^ Cox, 15.
- ^ Herzog, Buck. "Singer's Midget Troupe Given Pre-Show Party". Milwaukee Sentinel (December 12, 1940) p.24.
- ^ "Sideshow World, Sideshow Performers from around the world, Freak, Central,". www.sideshowworld.com.
- ^ Unknown[permanent dead link]
- ^ Cox, 35.
Bibliography
- Cox, Stephen. The Munchkins of Oz. Cumberland House Publishing, 2002.
- Harmetz, Aljean. The Making of the Wizard of Oz. Hyperion, 1998.
External links
[edit]Leo Singer
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Birth and Origins
Leopold von Singer, known professionally as Leo Singer, was born on May 3, 1877, in Vienna, Austria.[4][1] As a Viennese native, he grew up in the cultural milieu of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, where his early exposure to entertainment forms laid the groundwork for his later career as an impresario.[2] Little is documented about his family background or immediate upbringing, though records indicate he had a daughter named Trudy by the early 1910s, suggesting established personal ties amid his emerging professional interests.[5] Singer's Austrian origins influenced the composition of his troupe, drawing initially from European performers before expanding transatlantic operations.[6]Entry into Entertainment
Leopold von Singer, known professionally as Leo Singer, was born on May 3, 1877, in Vienna, Austria, to a prominent family.[1] As a normal-sized individual with an entrepreneurial bent, he entered the entertainment industry as an impresario prior to World War I, capitalizing on Europe's demand for novelty acts in vaudeville and amusement parks.[7] Singer's initial foray into show business involved assembling a troupe of proportionally small-statured performers, whom he termed "midgets" to distinguish them from those with disproportionate dwarfism. In 1912 or 1913, he formed Singer's Midgets after being inspired by a group of such performers that entertained him and his daughter Trudy at the Vienna Prater amusement complex.[1] He recruited members, many from Eastern Europe, and established a signature act featuring singing, dancing, and comedic skits, which debuted in Viennese venues before expanding internationally.[2] This venture marked Singer's transition from private enterprise to public entertainment management, where he constructed attractions like the Liliputstadt ("Little People City") within the "Venice in Vienna" amusement setup to showcase the troupe's Lilliputian-themed performances.[1] By emphasizing disciplined group dynamics and family-friendly appeal, Singer positioned the act as a staple of early 20th-century European and later American vaudeville circuits, laying the foundation for decades of touring success.[7]Formation and Management of Singer's Midgets
Origins of the Troupe
Leopold von Singer, an Austrian impresario born on May 3, 1877, established the entertainment troupe known as Singer's Midgets in Vienna in 1912 or 1913.[1] [5] The formation was prompted by Singer's observation of a group of little people performers entertaining audiences at the Prater amusement park, an experience he shared with his daughter Trudy, which inspired him to assemble his own ensemble of proportionally developed individuals of short stature.[1] [8] The original troupe drew primarily from Austrian and Hungarian recruits, emphasizing performers who exhibited balanced proportions rather than the disproportionate features associated with achondroplasia.[7] Singer, a full-sized showman, managed the group as a vaudeville act, focusing on their novelty and skills in music, dance, and comedy.[9] To enhance their appeal, he constructed Liliputstadt, a miniature "midget city" attraction within the "Venice in Vienna" amusement park, where troupe members resided and performed, simulating everyday activities on a scaled-down set.[1] This setup allowed the troupe to tour Europe initially, gaining popularity through exhibitions that highlighted the performers' talents and the spectacle of their diminutive scale.[10] The origins reflected Singer's entrepreneurial vision in exploiting public fascination with human anomalies, though framed through organized entertainment rather than mere freak shows.[11]Recruitment and Composition
Leo Singer, born in Vienna, Austria, began assembling his troupe of performing little people there in 1912 by scouting and recruiting individuals with proportionate dwarfism, distinguishing them from those with disproportionate features.[12] Alongside his wife, Walberga, he actively sought out such performers across Europe to build the group, initially drawing from local talent in Austria and Hungary.[4] This recruitment process involved personal outreach and contracts, enabling Singer to form a cohesive vaudeville-style ensemble rather than relying solely on existing groups.[1] The troupe's composition centered on approximately 20 members on average, comprising adult performers capable of stage acts including music, comedy sketches, and synchronized routines, though few possessed strong singing abilities despite the name "Singer's Midgets."[2] Members were predominantly of Central European origin, with a focus on Austrian and Hungarian nationals who shared linguistic and cultural affinities, facilitating coordinated performances.[4] Singer emphasized proportionate builds for aesthetic uniformity in acts, prioritizing visual appeal and synchronization over diverse physical types. As the troupe toured Europe post-formation, Singer continued recruitment during stops, expanding the roster with new little people encountered en route while maintaining a core group for stability.[14] This ongoing process ensured a rotating yet skilled composition suited to demanding vaudeville schedules, with contracts binding performers to Singer's management for tours and exhibitions like the Liliputstadt "midget city" attraction in Vienna.[1] The group's homogeneity in stature—typically under 4 feet tall—and performance training allowed for elaborate productions, though accounts note variability in individual talents beyond basic ensemble roles.[2]Performances and Career Highlights
Vaudeville and Stage Tours
Singer's Midgets entered the American vaudeville scene with a debut at Hammerstein's Theatre in New York on November 9, 1914, presenting a 23-minute Lilliputian act featuring 17 midgets alongside acrobatics, pony riding, a miniature Sandow routine, and an elephant act, concluding with a choral rendition of "Tipperary."[15] The full entourage numbered 33, including 20 midgets, two elephants, and seven ponies, emphasizing novelty and visual spectacle that appealed to audiences through street promotions and elaborate staging.[15] This engagement on the United Booking Office circuit marked their transition from European performances to U.S. stages, where they were positioned as a high-draw closing act.[15] Leo Singer promptly negotiated a lucrative 30-week contract with the Loew circuit at $1,000 weekly plus $250 for transportation, commencing November 16, 1914, at Loew's 7th Avenue Theatre in New York, with bookings handled by Frank Bohm.[15] Subsequent Loew house appearances, including the National Theatre and Bijou, featured singing numbers delivered in German-accented English, such as Irish songs and "Ye Olde Time Hallowe’en" in Colonial attire, often setting attendance records and balancing bills with their versatile, self-contained productions.[15] Midway through the year, the troupe was loaned to the Shuberts for a four-week run at the New York Hippodrome, with options for extension, before resuming Loew obligations.[15][16] The troupe's vaudeville tours expanded across major circuits like Orpheum, Keith's, and Sullivan-Considine, reaching theaters in cities including Boston, Providence, St. Louis, and Chester, Pennsylvania, from the mid-1910s onward.[17][18] By the 1920s, performances incorporated expanded elements such as prancing ponies, midget elephants, hunting dogs, and carloads of electrical scenery, as advertised in a 1922 St. Paul engagement highlighting "tiny men and women."[19] Revues like "So This Is Lilliput!" at the Albee Theatre exemplified their musical comedy format, blending chorus lines, instrumentation, and animal acts for audiences in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, and Hawaii.[20] These stage tours, averaging 20 performers, sustained popularity through the vaudeville peak, though the format waned with the rise of talking films in the late 1920s.[2][4]Film and Media Appearances
Singer's Midgets, managed by Leo Singer, appeared in the 1921 silent comedy film Skirts, directed by Hampton Del Ruth for Fox Film Corporation, where the troupe performed as themselves in comedic sequences involving spectacle and hippodromic elements.[21][22] In 1935, the troupe starred in the short film Wee Men, directed by Joseph Henabery, depicting a dystopian setting in "tiny town" with performers including Flora Seaman and Lucille Sears alongside the group.[23][24] Several members of Singer's Midgets also participated in the 1938 all-dwarf Western The Terror of Tiny Town, produced by Jed Buell as the only feature-length musical Western with an exclusively little-people cast, featuring Billy Curtis and others from the troupe in roles terrorizing and defending the miniature town.[25][5]Involvement in The Wizard of Oz
In 1938, Leo Singer, as manager of the vaudeville troupe Singer's Midgets, signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to supply 124 performers to portray Munchkins and provide stand-ins in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz.[26][27] These individuals, primarily adults of short stature ranging from 2 feet 3 inches to 4 feet 8 inches tall, formed the core of the Munchkin cast, appearing in scenes depicting the inhabitants of Munchkinland.[26] Many originated from Europe, including Bavaria, and lacked fluency in English, necessitating dubbing for their musical numbers despite the troupe's nominal emphasis on singing.[6] Singer received $100 per week for recruitment efforts, which increased to $200 during principal filming, while individual troupe members were compensated at $50 per week initially, rising to $100 during production.[6] His troupe, originally formed in Europe around 1912–1913 and numbering up to 30 at its peak before shrinking to about 18 by 1938, had prior experience in vaudeville acts involving singing, dancing, wrestling, and acrobatics, which aligned with the film's requirements for choreographed sequences like the "Munchkinland" musical numbers.[1] Although Singer's group supplied the majority, additional short-statured performers from other sources, such as Leo G. Carroll's troupe, supplemented the cast to reach over 120 total Munchkin actors.[28] The involvement marked a career highlight for Singer's Midgets, transitioning their stage expertise to cinema, though logistical challenges arose, including housing the performers in a Los Angeles hotel dubbed the "Munchkin Hotel" and managing interpersonal dynamics on set.[28] Singer's role extended to oversight during filming, ensuring his troupe's participation amid the production's demanding schedule from late 1938 into 1939.[1] Post-release, the film's enduring success elevated the visibility of Singer's performers, several of whom, like those in the Lollipop Guild, became iconic, though the troupe disbanded in the mid-1940s after Singer's retirement.[27]Business Practices and Troupe Operations
Management Style
Leo Singer employed an authoritative and centralized management approach for Singer's Midgets, personally handling recruitment, booking vaudeville tours across the United States and Europe, and logistical arrangements such as travel and accommodations for the troupe's roughly 20 members.[29] Performers, often proportionally dwarfed individuals sourced internationally—predominantly from Europe—were integrated into long-term contracts that bound them to the troupe, with Singer enforcing terms rigorously to ensure performance discipline and financial viability.[2] This structure provided steady employment in an era of limited opportunities for little people, enabling the group to sustain operations from the 1910s through the 1940s, including high-profile engagements like their 1939 contribution to The Wizard of Oz, where Singer negotiated collective deals but reportedly attempted to cap individual payouts beyond contracted rates.[30] Recruitment tactics under Singer included agents scouting and securing young performers, sometimes as children; for instance, actor Karl Slover joined the troupe at age nine after being recruited in Czechoslovakia.[29] While this model facilitated the troupe's cohesion and international composition—drawing from countries like Austria, Germany, and Eastern Europe—it reflected a paternalistic oversight where Singer controlled performers' professional lives, including training in singing, dancing, and novelty acts tailored to audience expectations of diminutive entertainers.[30] Critics among performers highlighted Singer's financial practices as exploitative; little person actor Billy Curtis, who worked in similar vaudeville circuits, stated that Singer "had a reputation for cheating his midgets," pointing to discrepancies in pay distribution and contract enforcement that favored the manager's cut.[31] During the Wizard of Oz production, Singer's insistence on honoring prior troupe agreements limited some members' earnings despite the film's prestige, underscoring a management style prioritizing collective bargaining and troupe loyalty over individual negotiation.[5] Such accounts suggest a pragmatic but controlling ethos, where operational success came at the expense of performer autonomy, though empirical evidence of the troupe's longevity indicates many tolerated or accepted the arrangement amid scarce alternatives.[32]Financial Aspects
Leo Singer operated Singer's Midgets as a for-profit enterprise, functioning primarily as the troupe's impresario and agent who controlled bookings, travel, and compensation distribution. Under his management, performers' earnings from vaudeville tours, stage appearances, and film contracts were routed through Singer, who retained approximately 50 percent as his commission.[29][33][34] This structure ensured Singer's financial stake in the troupe's success while limiting performers' net income, with reports indicating occasional underpayments when oversight was lax.[29] The troupe generated revenue through high-profile vaudeville engagements, where Singer's Midgets were billed as one of the era's premium acts, often featuring 20 to 30 performers in synchronized routines.[35] Bookings commanded top rates for the circuit, contributing to steady income amid the competitive entertainment landscape of the 1910s through 1930s, though exact weekly grosses for the act remain undocumented in primary records. Singer offset operational costs—including recruitment from Europe, where he sometimes negotiated directly with families of prospective performers—by leveraging the troupe's novelty appeal.[36] A pivotal financial milestone occurred with the 1938 contract for The Wizard of Oz, signed on October 1, whereby Singer agreed to supply MGM with approximately 125 little people for the Munchkin roles. His compensation covered cross-country travel expenses and a personal fee of $100 per week, while performers received $50 to $100 weekly—half of which Singer deducted per his standard cut—over a six-month shoot involving 12- to 14-hour days.[37][6][36] No residuals were provided, underscoring the one-time nature of such deals under Singer's oversight.[29] This arrangement highlighted the troupe's value as a ready pool of talent, bolstering Singer's negotiating power despite the performers' constrained earnings.Later Career and Retirement
Post-War Activities
Following the conclusion of World War II in 1945, the Singer Midgets troupe experienced a period of contraction, with performances limited by the postwar decline in vaudeville circuits and shifting entertainment preferences toward film and television. The group, which had relied on extensive tours and stage shows prewar, conducted fewer engagements as economic pressures and performer attrition mounted.[12] By the mid- to late 1940s, Singer's Midgets fully disbanded, marking the end of over three decades of operations under Leo Singer's management. Many performers dispersed, with a significant number returning to Europe amid postwar reconstruction or joining larger American circuses, including Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, which offered more stable touring opportunities.[1][12][38] Singer himself oversaw this dissolution without launching new ventures, focusing instead on administrative wind-down of contracts and performer placements, though no records indicate innovative adaptations or revivals during this phase. The troupe's closure reflected broader industry trends, where specialized novelty acts struggled against mainstream competition.[12]Retirement to New York
Following the mid-1940s dissolution of Singer's Midgets amid declining vaudeville opportunities and post-World War II disruptions to international touring, Leo Singer retired from active management of the troupe.[7] He relocated to New York City during that decade, establishing residence there as he stepped away from the entertainment industry.[5] This move concluded Singer's decades-long career as an impresario, during which he had assembled and directed performers primarily recruited from Europe.[11] Limited public records detail his personal life in retirement, though archival references confirm his settlement in the city prior to his passing.[5]Death
Circumstances and Aftermath
Singer died on March 5, 1951, in New York City at the age of 73.[39][40] He had relocated there for retirement in the mid-1940s after the troupe's vaudeville tours diminished due to shifting entertainment trends post-World War II.[5] No specific cause of death was reported in available records, consistent with the private nature of many such obituaries from the era. Following Singer's death, Singer's Midgets did not reform under new management, as the troupe's operations were intrinsically tied to his direction and the declining demand for such specialized vaudeville acts in the early 1950s television era.[12] Individual performers from the group pursued sporadic independent work or retired, but the collective enterprise ended without notable legal disputes or public commemorations tied directly to his passing.[41]Legacy and Reception
Contributions to Entertainment
Leo Singer organized the Singer's Midgets troupe in Vienna around 1912 or 1913, recruiting performers with proportionate dwarfism for vaudeville acts that toured Europe and later the United States.[1] The group performed novelty routines emphasizing their diminutive stature, gaining popularity in early 20th-century variety shows and carnivals, where they showcased synchronized movements, comedic skits, and exhibitions of daily life scaled to their size.[2] By 1915, promotional posters advertised their appearances, highlighting Singer's role in curating a professional ensemble that differentiated "midgets" from disproportionate dwarfs through emphasis on aesthetic uniformity.[42] The troupe expanded into film in the 1920s, appearing in the silent short Skirts (1921), where they portrayed miniature versions of chorus girls in a satirical context.[43] This marked an early crossover from stage to screen, demonstrating the viability of little people as ensemble actors in comedic and fantastical narratives. In 1935, members featured in the Vitaphone short Wee Men, further embedding the act in Hollywood's burgeoning sound era with routines involving props and dialogue tailored to their scale.[43][24] These appearances helped normalize the inclusion of little person performers in motion pictures, influencing casting practices for character roles requiring height disparity. Singer's most enduring contribution came through contracting 124 troupe members for MGM's The Wizard of Oz (1939), where they formed the core of the Munchkin population in the film's Munchkinland sequence.[8] Their on-screen presence, including flowerpot hats and coordinated dances like the "Lullaby League" and "Lollipop Guild," popularized the visual and performative spectacle of little people in mainstream fantasy cinema, with the sequence enduring as a cultural touchstone despite post-production voice dubbing for many singers.[6] This role elevated the troupe's visibility, providing a template for ensemble depictions of whimsical communities in subsequent films and stage adaptations.Criticisms and Ethical Debates
Singer's management of his troupe has drawn retrospective criticism for financial exploitation, particularly the practice of retaining 50% of performers' earnings, which left little people with limited bargaining power and significantly reduced their take-home pay.[29][44] For instance, during the 1939 production of The Wizard of Oz, where Singer supplied 124 performers from his group to MGM, individuals like Karl Slover reported earning $50 per week for 12-14 hour days over six months, a sum dwarfed by the $150 weekly salary of the dog portraying Toto or the $2,500 paid to actor Bert Lahr for half that duration, with no residuals provided to the Munchkin actors.[29] Survivor Jerry Maren, another troupe member, noted that Singer pocketed half of recruitment fees, such as $100 per performer supplied to studios, exacerbating income disparities in an era when alternative employment for those with dwarfism was scarce.[44] Ethical debates surrounding Singer's operations center on the inherent tensions in early 20th-century sideshow entertainment, where troupes like Singer's Midgets profited from public fascination with physical differences while performers faced unequal contracts and dependency on managers for opportunities. Critics, including retrospective analyses by film historians, argue that such models perpetuated objectification by billing participants primarily for their stature rather than skills, potentially reinforcing stigma despite providing livelihoods amid limited societal integration for people with dwarfism.[32] However, some performers, like Slover, acknowledged the arrangements as relatively favorable given the context, stating, "We were lucky we got what we did get," suggesting a pragmatic acceptance amid few viable alternatives, though this does not negate the power imbalance inherent in Singer's cut-throat oversight, which reportedly softened only under his wife's influence.[29] No verified accounts of physical abuse or lawsuits emerged from the period, but the financial structure underscores broader concerns about consent and dignity in disability-based spectacles.[45]References
- https://quillandqwerty.[wordpress.com](/page/WordPress.com)/tag/leo-singer/
