It is rare if, in a hot touristy spot that I would pass up the opportunity to visit a wax museum.

Founded in 1835, just months before the fall of the Alamo in Texas, French wax sculptor Marie Tussaud in London spawned similar museums in major cities around the world.
During the French Revolution, she was arrested with Joséphine de Beauharnais, the future wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, and sent to La Force Prison.

According to her own memoir, the fresh chopped-off heads of the French nobility were sent straight to Tussaud and she, along with others, created lifelike waxworks from them.
In fact, she sat at the execution site “with the bloody heads on her knees, taking the impressions of their features.”
Her museum was called Madame Tussaud’s & Sons as she taught her offspring, Joseph and François the art.
Today there are 23 Madame Tussaud’s locations all around the world, from Dubai to Singapore to Las Vegas to Nashville to Hollywood to Sydney. According to the museum, 10 million people visit each year.

Some of the best wax museums in the US, besides Tussaud’s, include Hollywood Wax Museum in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, National Presidential Wax Museum in Keystone, South Dakota, Potter’s Wax Museum in St. Augustine, Florida and Rock Legends Wax Museum in Niagara Falls, New York.







Best Wax Figures







Worst Wax Figures








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CINDY LEAL MASSEY, TEXAS AUTHOR






Love this; wax museums are so cool. You’re right about those President ones, really bad.
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You’re right, some are good and others are awful!
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Reminds me of that old nursery rhyme line: “And when she was good she was very very good and when she was bad she was horrid.”
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You just opened up cobwebs in my brain. Haha 😄
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Some of those are past creepy. Reminds me of Vincent Price and his famous movie, in 3D of course.
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Loved the beginning when he was using that paddle ball attached with rubber band.
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Good to see you had the same taste in movies as me. I loved 3D in the 50s and wore my darn glasses all the time.
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Same here. I even bought those cheesy X-ray glasses from a comic book ad.
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Yeah, we wore ours until they fell apart, wanted to see everything in 3D, and we did. My son has a vast collection of old comics from the 50s and those ads, even then, were almost criminal. Kids will buy anything.
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