Leona Dare (1854/55 – May 23/24, 1922
[''New York Times'', May 25, 1922.]) was an American
trapeze artist and aerial
acrobat, billed often as the "Queen of the Antilles" or the "Pride of Madrid".
[''New York Times'', June 9, 1879.] She was famous for her stunts on trapezes suspended from ascending
balloons.
Leona Dare's real name was Susan Adeline Stuart
or Stewart.
Her teachers in acrobatics were the Hall brothers, Thomas and Stewart Hall, who were sometimes billed as the "Brothers Dare". In 1871, she married Thomas Hall
[''New York Times'', November 26, 1880][Tait, p. 159, claims the Hall brothers were named Thomas and George, and that there were conflicting newspaper reports about whom of the two she married.] in New Orleans
or in New York City
(sources disagree). The same year, she debuted as an artist at Nixon's Amphitheatre in
New York City;
[Slout, p. 70.] a year later, she was with the
circus of
Joel E. Warner. Her specialty was the "
iron jaw" act, in which she held onto her supporting apparatus with nothing but the strength of her bite, or in which she herself held other artists or their supports with her mouth only. In August 1872, she performed in
Indianapolis
Indianapolis (), colloquially known as Indy, is the state capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Indiana and the seat of Marion County. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the consolidated population of Indianapolis and Marion ...
[Crouch, p. 478.] for the first time suspended under a hot-air balloon, lifting her husband and partner off the ground, holding him by his waistband only with her teeth.
[Tait, p. 45.]
Subsequently, she toured through Europe. Her performances at the foremost locations in Europe, including the ''
Folies Bergère'' in
Paris, made her rather famous in Europe. In 1875, she left her husband,
though she later claimed he had abandoned her.
An accident in the late 1870s forced her to put her career on hold for several years. In June 1880, while still recovering, she married Ernest Theodore Grunebaum in London, a well-off son of a family from Vienna.
Back in
Chicago later that year, it was discovered that she was still married to Hall, yet she managed to get a divorce from Hall (''in absentia'') on November 15 and remarried Grunebaum in Chicago on November 17, 1880.
Later in the early 1880s, she appeared again on European stages. In 1884, she had accident during a performance in
Valencia in Spain, where she let drop her partner, who died of his injuries.
[''New York Times'', November 23, 1884.][''The Entr'acte'', December 13, 1884.]
In 1888, Leona Dare teamed up with Swiss balloonist
Eduard Spelterini. He would take her, suspended under the basket of his balloon, to great heights (some sources speak of 5,000 feet), while she performed her acrobatics. Their ascents in June and July 1888 at the Crystal Palace in
London made them world-famous, and together they toured through Europe until Moscow. In October 1889, they were at Bucharest, apparently their last performance together.
[Capus, p. 44, claims they parted at Moscow and Spelterini "appeared alone in November 1889 in Bucharest". According to Buiu, their first ascent at Bucharest was on October 8 and their last ascent together from Cismigiu gardens was on October 22, while Spelterini's scientific ascent in Bucharest was on November 8. After 1889, no references of them performing together have been found, and Spelterini subsequently turned southwards going to Egypt.]
In 1890, Leona Dare was again in Paris. During another balloon show, she let go of the trapeze when the balloon drifted away, and broke her leg.
[Tait, p. 46.] Around 1894/95, she appears to have stopped performing altogether.
[Tait, p. 159, footnote 24.] After her retirement, she lived at
Oakwood, Staten Island. She died at
Spokane, Washington at the age of 67.
References
Sources
*
Leona Dare's Trapeze', ''New York Times,'' June 9, 1879; from the ''London News'', May 29, 1879.
*
The Romance in a Trapeze Performer's Life', ''New York Times,'' November 26, 1880; from the ''Chicago Tribune,'' November 17, 1880.
*
An Acrobat's Nervousness', ''New York Times,'' November 23, 1884.
*
Leona Dare, Acrobat, Dead', ''New York Times,'' May 25, 1922.
*
', ''The Entr'acte'', London, December 13, 1884.
*Buiu, I. V.:
Contributions to the history of aeronautics in Romania, English abstract', Ph.D. thesis, 2007.
*Capus, A.:
Geschenke des Himmels, p. 36-50 in ''Das Magazin 38/2007''. In German.
*Crouch, T. D.: ''The Eagle Aloft: Two Centuries of the Balloon in America'', Smithsonian Institution Press, 1983. .
*
*Slout, W. L.: ''Olympians of the Sawdust Circle: A Biographical Dictionary of the Nineteenth Century American Circus'', Clipper Studies in the Theatre, No. 18; Borgo Press, 1997. .
*Tait, P.: ''Circus Bodies: Cultural Identity in Aerial Performance'', p. 45-48 and p. 159, notes 23 and 24. Routledge Chapman & Hall, 2005. .
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dare, Leona
1922 deaths
1850s births
Acrobats
American circus performers
Trapeze artists