Portrayed by Hollywood hotshot Hugh Jackman, The Greatest Showman takes certain creative liberties, that would make the great charlatan himself brim with pride.

The movie itself stays fairly distant to the actual details of its biographical subject’s life. That doesn’t mean, however, that it doesn’t make subtle nods to Barnum’s exploits and schemes.

The Oddities We Don’t See

Barnum was a busy young man went through a surfeit of careers, many of which are referenced by marquee signs piled in his apartment as Jackman returns home after losing his job as a clerk. He ran a newspaper, a general store, realty company, and helped popularize a lottery.

It was Connecticut’s ban on the lottery that cut off Barnum’s income—not a storm in the South China Sea—leading him to move to New York City. There, Barnum became a showman. While the film celebrates the odd different and diverse by uplifting them in the spotlight, the truth of Barnum’s first “exhibit” carries little of that kind of modern sentiment.

Joice Heth

He bought and displayed a blind and paralyzed salve named Joice Heth. Barnum’s show claimed she was 160 years old and had served as George Washington’s own nursemaid. When Heth died years later at about 80 years old, Barnum turned her dead body into an exhibit, charging people to watch her autopsied by doctors.

Barnum eventually opened Barnum’s American Museum, the same one featured in the film, filling it with all manner of human oddities. Among them are many nods to real people who were featured by the real Barnum.

joice heth

Annie Jones

Front and center in The Greatest Showman is the bearded lady. Jackman finds her by chance, entranced by her uniqueness and beautiful singing. The real-life Barnum met his bearded lady when she was just one year old, and included her in his show for 36 years. The singing does have its roots in reality, however, as she was well known for her gracious manners and affinity for singing in later life.

bearded lady

Tom Thumb

Similarly, General Tomb Thumb was found by Barnum when he was just four years old. Born Charles Stratton, Tom Thumb’s act proved one of Barnum’s most popular. By five years old, Tom Thumb would smoke cigars and drink wine for people’s amusement, and it was actually the little General that got Barnum invited to perform for Queen Victoria and Abraham Lincoln.

Chang and Eng

While much of Barnum’s early career is hard to describe as philanthropic, or racially progressive, he would eventually make a turn after the Civil War, and support abolition. Some of his performers would not. The famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng Bunker, appear acrobatically in the background of a few dance numbers, but after they left the Barnum show, they returned home to run a plantation with slaves.

chang and eng bunker

The Swedish Nightingale

Jenny Lind was indeed a stunning singer, who toured under the Barnum banner, but when she severed ties with Barnum, neither one lost any money. Both netted hundreds of thousands of dollars from her tour.

jenny lind

The Dog-Boy

Known as Jo-Jo the Dog-Faced Boy in the circus, Fedor Jeftichew suffered from hypertrichosis. Barnum invented a whole story about how Jo-Jo had been caught in a cave by hunters, and would even have him bark on stage for crowds.

dog boy

Captain Constentenus

The bearded man tattooed from head to foot had a real backstory even more interesting than the one Barnum made up for him. Barnum told people he was descended from a Greek noble, captured and tattooed by rebels. He was really born in Greece but was a pirate and sea trader for his early adult life. He spoke 8 languages when he went to Burma as part of a French expedition to find gold. He was captured and punished by tattooing for three months. He escaped his captors but was covered everywhere but the soles of his feet in ink. Eventually, he joined Barnum, making a small fortune before retiring in Greece.

constentenus

James Hugh Murphy

Billed as the Irish Giant by Barnum in the movie, James Hugh Murphy was actually from Ireland, and using the same moniker used by the giant, Charles Byrne in the 1700s. Murphy wasn’t the only Giant Barnum displayed. When the men who found the Cardiff Giant refused to sell the specimen to his museum, Barnum had a copy commissioned and saved himself the trouble.

hugh murphy

Hoaxes

Barnum’s daughters in The Greatest Showman may have wanted his museum to have less stuffed oddities, but the real Barnum delivered the mermaid they asked for in his own style. The Fiji Mermaid is perhaps Barnum’s most famous forgery. A monkey torso sewn onto a fish, Barnum invited all manners of scientists and naturalists to inspect the artifact, daring them to call it a forgery.

fiji mermaid

Robert Ripley would famously expose hoaxes in his Odditoriums.

The Fire

Jackman’s performance ends with fire. What once stood as a bastion of protection for curiosity is destroyed—much like Barnum’s marriage in the movie—when a gang of racists and bigots start a fight.

The origins of the real fire are much more mysterious. A Confederate group had tried to burn the museum before, but rumors and speculation point everywhere from insurance fraud to an orchestrated publicity stunt. Every person managed to escape alive, and many animals were rescued as well. Some animals managed to jump through windows and escape but were shot by police as they rampaged. The two whales kept in tanks inside were perhaps the most unlucky, boiled alive by the flames. Barnum lost all of his artifacts, including the Fiji mermaid—an event that pushed him toward partnering with the Bailey Circus.

barnum fire

Movie Magic

Along with the Barnum, tricks comes a whole host of Hollywood movie magic. It’s ironic to see CGI lions and elephants in Barnum’s circus on the big screen when the Greatest Show on Earth circus ended their use last year and was disbanded itself just a few months ago. Instead, we get horses painted to look like zebras. The movie keeps the audience from lingering on the actors as well, depriving us of the spectacle Barnum thrived on providing. This Barnum deceives us by hiding the true showman, flaws and all.

Source: Barnum Continues to Hoodwink Audiences in The Greatest Showman