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Who was the Edwardian actress with the 14-inch corseted wasp-waist? 😲 

Abby Cox
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Polaire was a world famous Edwardian actress known for many things - for being "The Ugliest Woman in the World", having a nose ring, and also for having "The Smallest Waist in the World". Yep - her waist was recorded as being a whopping 14 inches during performances and under 17 for her normal day to day life. By Victorian and Edwardian social standards, she was a freak, and yet, it's her photos that are shared time and time again on the internet whenever people talk about Victorian and Edwardian corset practices, tight-lacing, and wasp waists. We no longer know who she is, but we still see photos of her all the time.
It's my fascination with her, her history, her shenanigans (cause y'all she was weird and also incredibly problematic), and her waist that made me want to make this video. So I hope you'll enjoy learning a bit about this fascinating French actress with a weird history and a wasp-waist that the Kardashians could only dream of.
Thanks to ‪@NamiSparrow‬ for her feedback and contribution to the Nose Ring & Cultural Appropriation chapter of this video. ❤
Sources:
DURBACH, NADJA. “‘Skinless Wonders’: ‘Body Worlds’ and the Victorian Freak Show.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
69, no. 1 (2014): 38-67. www.jstor.org/stable/24631756.
Durbach, Nadja. Spectacle of Deformity : Freak Shows and Modern British Culture
. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009. Accessed April 29, 2023. ProQuest Ebook Central.
Buy it here: [amzn.to/3ADPw0Z](amzn.to/3ADPw0Z) (affiliate)
Stephen Fry’s Victorian Secrets (Chapter 2 is about Freak Shows specifically and features Nadja Durbach) (www.audible.com/pd/Stephen-Fr...)
Scrapbook. Corset. Compiled by Bennett 1/82 Gift by Berlingen, Kinsey Institute, Indiana University. Visited Feb. 15, 2023
Newspaper Articles via ProQuest Historical Newspapers
The Tatler, The Sketch, The Bystander, and other British Periodicals via ProQuest British Periodicals
Throwback Polaire website including Comic Sans and Papyrus font (10/10 nostalgia) [www.polaire-1900.com/](www.polaire-1900.com/)
Chapters:
00:00 - 06:42 - Polaire's Early Career
06:43 - 10:00 - Polaire's Antics (Funny)
10:01 - 12:18 - Problematic Polaire Pt 1
12:19 - 14:42 - Freak Shows
14:43 - 19:11 - The Ugliest Woman in the World
19:12 - 22:38 - Problematic Polaire Pt. 2
22:39 - 29:30 - The Smallest Waist in the World!
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19 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 404   
@AbbyCox
@AbbyCox Год назад
Should Nell Revelle become a reoccurring character on the channel? 👀 (Links to sources are in the description if you'd like to know more about Nadja Durbach's work and Polaire! ❤)
@JackyHeijmans
@JackyHeijmans Год назад
Chanteuses eccentrique means more or less eccentric singer. It has nothing to do with being a prostitute. She was strange, out of the ordinairy. 😊🤗
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 Год назад
Sure, why not!?
@catzkeet4860
@catzkeet4860 Год назад
​@@JackyHeijmansyes we know..... Its fairly self evident from the French. However, the literal meaning of a word, doesn't always tell you anything about the meanings attached to the word... Like "seamstress" or "working girl" The literal meaning of those words is pretty obvious, however they're also euphemisms for sex workers. The literal words themselves tell you nothing about the "meanings" assigned to them.
@cynhanrahan4012
@cynhanrahan4012 Год назад
I gave a thumbs up because I like your characters. I just didn't know they had names. Your fashion shifts, I'm totally used to.
@AbbyCox
@AbbyCox Год назад
@Jacky Heijmans I understood the direct translation, but the context in which they wrote about her in New York definitely inferred more than just an eccentric singer... 👀
@elenpena42564
@elenpena42564 Год назад
Polaire is the true "exception that confirms the rule", the fact that her tiny waist was shocking to people proves that having a waist that tiny was not normal at all
@julietfischer5056
@julietfischer5056 Год назад
The saying 'The exception proves the rule' is incorporates a now little-used definition of 'proof' that survives in the terms 'proving ground' and 'proving (oneself)/one's worth.' It means 'test.'
@MossyMozart
@MossyMozart Год назад
@@julietfischer5056 - A bit scrambled there.
@sianthesheep
@sianthesheep Год назад
You'd be AMAZING at Drunk Histories! What a fascinating woman - we think of this sort of Hello magazine media hysteria and celebrities' media manipulation as a modern thing but by intentionally drawing headlines through being bizarre and "freakish" she basically invented Edwardian click-bait!
@colleennikstenas4921
@colleennikstenas4921 Год назад
Was thinking DH vibes here.
@AbbyCox
@AbbyCox Год назад
The DH vibes are better in my sewing machine video tbh I had to cut a lot of funny stuff from the video to keep myself on track lol
@ChocoBananaCh
@ChocoBananaCh Год назад
​@@AbbyCoxplease do more these kinds of Drunk History videos!! i love them so much, especially when you release your inner chaos, in a good way of course, with your friends (like the one video with Chrissy and Nicole)
@itwasagoodideaatthetime7980
​@@AbbyCox The people at Drunk History *REALLY* should get you to make an episode. You're Drunk History takes are hilarious! 👍🤣👍
@buddhabro.9130
@buddhabro.9130 Год назад
oh wow, That would be awesome 🤣
@marthahawkinson-michau9611
@marthahawkinson-michau9611 Год назад
So let me get this straight? A young French girl has a naturally small waist and then tight-laces it down even smaller than it’s natural size? Ok… this same French girl grows up to become a famous actress. I’m with you. Later she uses her shockingly small corseted waist measurement to maintain her popularity? Oh, I get it now. That’s how she became the poster child for how tiny corsetry could make someone’s waist. It also explains why humanity collectively forgot what normal corseted proportions used to look like. Her notoriety for her tiny waist size definitely happened right before corsetting was abandoned almost entirely. I can totally see how her own publicity created something of a Mandela effect around corsets and corsetry.
@RychaardRyder
@RychaardRyder Год назад
corsetry wasnt abandoned at any point, one could argue they were around until the mid 50s, corsets only changed shape
@emryspaperart
@emryspaperart Год назад
@@RychaardRyder this lmao!!
@Laurabeck329
@Laurabeck329 Год назад
Corsets didn't die, they just became waist trainers
@naolucillerandom5280
@naolucillerandom5280 Год назад
​@@Laurabeck329 "Now we don't use uncomfortable garments to alter our shape!" Push up bras and elastic shapewear in the corner: 👀👀
@RivkahSong
@RivkahSong 9 месяцев назад
@@RychaardRyder They're still around now. The underwire and push up bra are basically the modern evolution of boned corsets and that's not even touching on "shapewear" like spanx that women use to shape and smooth our bodies for the fashionable silhouette even now.
@kanon4146
@kanon4146 Год назад
One of the most striking things to me about the "ugliest woman in the world" photograph is how her styling and makeup look so much more 20s than I would expect! She literally looks like she's from a different aesthetic era than she actually was. Fascinating.
@NouriaDiallo
@NouriaDiallo Год назад
I think part of it is that stage makeup, meant to accentuate the features so that the expressions of the actors are seen from the back seats, made its way to the screen (many early actors came from pantomime). The look of stars on the screen then made its way to the streets, after cinema had become popular...
@karowolkenschaufler7659
@karowolkenschaufler7659 Год назад
especially with that one picture I thought that jane birkin could have played her. she looked great!
@nonnon-et-non8601
@nonnon-et-non8601 6 месяцев назад
She gaves kind of Helena Bonham Carter vibe doesn't she ? I think she looked cool !
@sonjaimmonen6610
@sonjaimmonen6610 Год назад
It's like if people in 2110 looked at Kim K's Paper magazine cover and thought everyone in the 2010's had huge round butts. Like yeah, it was a trend and butts were emphasized, but Kim K is still the exception.
@UniquelyPenny
@UniquelyPenny Год назад
As someone with a facial difference my view of the freak shows is skewed. The fact that this was the ONLY way for those with disabilities or facial differences to be able to support themselves takes away their agency and consent. To say they had a choice would be an illusion. It set in motion the barriers we still experience today. The gross oversimplification of Merrick did not do to address the complexity of why he did it and how he was mistreated even in death. I know no harm was meant just thought I’d add some of my own lived experiences and insight.
@rebeccagale2095
@rebeccagale2095 Год назад
This is a really good point. Thank you for sharing.
@annaselbdritt7916
@annaselbdritt7916 Год назад
Very important perspective!! It seems very ‘girlboss feminism’ (idk if there’s a better word) to highlight monetisation as liberation.
@amorekay
@amorekay Год назад
Agree with all of this. Also the unquestioned pov of freak shows being positive because it “allowed [them] to not be burdens to their families/anyone” when we as disabled people are often framed as burdens by an ableist society (and not all of us can work and earn money!) was jarring to me. Clearly not intentional, but reminded me of how often that perspective is still the prevailing one!
@zoeyc5851
@zoeyc5851 Год назад
Even if they were adults, they could've been forced into these freak shows by their guardians. Lots of freak show performers were mistreated, but was not talked about or swept under the rug.
@emryspaperart
@emryspaperart Год назад
huge agree with all of the inputs here. the fact that they went in knowing what to expect doesn't mean it wasn't expoitative as hell lmao
@alishahunt
@alishahunt Год назад
Abby: "...& nothing left to lose because she was basically 30 at this point" Me: "Um...ouch. But same."
@AbbyCox
@AbbyCox Год назад
My 30s have been a lot more eventful than my 20s 😂
@alishahunt
@alishahunt Год назад
@@AbbyCox Mine have too, but I think its because I had the same mentality. I've been living in a truthfully "Enh, why not?" mindset🤣
@shevaunhandley1543
@shevaunhandley1543 Год назад
I loved my 30s
@alishahunt
@alishahunt Год назад
@@shevaunhandley1543 from what I understand from my friends who’ve turned 30, it’s leaps and bounds better than the 20s. Considering it’s only my first year in this shining new era, I can confirm this first year has been better than most of my 20s. There’s so much more stability here! It’s refreshing🤣
@thewife7776
@thewife7776 Год назад
That’s your training period! Wait till your 40’s - best years of my 55.
@nancyreid8729
@nancyreid8729 Год назад
You sounded suspiciously like Miss Piggy while doing the lost pig scene; admittedly, in our cultural head-space, it’s tough to do a falsetto French accent without channeling Miss Piggy. I loved it.
@user-el2nh5uo1w
@user-el2nh5uo1w Год назад
I came here to say the same. I’m glad I wasn’t the only person who thought that.
@rayanne6764
@rayanne6764 Год назад
I love how many old photos from back then are "photoshopped" to have no acne, freckles, and tiny waists. It's no different than today at all! So I don't feel bad when I see perfect people in photos from then or now because they are most likely fake.
@marikotrue3488
@marikotrue3488 Год назад
I never heard of Polaire, but recognized those waist images. Beyond irony that modern day has made her the poster child of the "dangers" and pain of corsets with her literally using that unusual physical aspect as shock value in her own era. The "slavery" situation reminded me of certain social media influencers whose actions are directly designed to produce more clicks by negative attention towards an outrageous situation. Nothing is new, whether imaging filters or shock value news.
@ravenskye4893
@ravenskye4893 Год назад
when i was slim i could tightlace to 16inches, my relaxed waist was 24in. if she was naturally small waisted and tightlaced since puberty i can see how she preformed while laced so tight. It also looks like she was fairly tall (google is saying 5'5 but shes as tall as her male co-stars so i assume that number might be off by an inch or two to make her seem more delicate) which can make it easier to lace so small, more room for organs and fat to squish around in a longer torso.
@kieleyevatt2232
@kieleyevatt2232 Год назад
An 8 inch reduction is INCREDIBLE. Was that a functional tightness or was it the absolute limit where you could hardly breathe?
@margodphd
@margodphd Год назад
I'm over 6 feet and can easily lace down to 16 inches even when my weight fluctuates, but the way my ribcage is shaped I look like I'm cut in half 😂 Not the best look...
@IW3527
@IW3527 11 месяцев назад
​@@kieleyevatt2232at my thinnest I messed around with a corset and could tightlace myself to 16" when my natural waist was around 25". Pretty sure the only reason it was possible is because I have a short torso and extremely hypermobile ribs, I could still breathe but only upwards through my lungs instead of outwards using my diaphragm. There's a lot that factors into a reduction like that some of which is being on the fringes of typical human anatomy.
@ivym7661
@ivym7661 Год назад
I need a movie about this woman and I need Helena Bonham Carter to play her. She's got that glam goth look plus the wild hair. I don't care that she's not thirty. This video was soooo entertaining, I really appreciate the serotonin and adrenaline boost, especially when I can also learn stuff.
@MossyMozart
@MossyMozart Год назад
@Ivy M - Great suggestion.
@maureenwilliford8985
@maureenwilliford8985 Год назад
So, she was a Drama Queen for the sake of publicity, like that NEVER happens these days (she said sarcastically). As usual, a very informative, interesting, and amusing presentation. I love it.
@NouriaDiallo
@NouriaDiallo Год назад
She was also dramatic in her private life, if Colette is to be believed.
@julijakeit
@julijakeit Год назад
indeed, she seemed to thrive on drama, especially seen in her acting clip, always trying to look and act differently. and that got her famous and well-paid in times where working women had nearly 0 options to earn good money.
@kimberlyskokan3444
@kimberlyskokan3444 Год назад
She was a master of Victorian and Edwardian ’clickbait.’ Abby, you did a great job with all parts of assembling and presenting the information. Thank you.
@kathyjohnson2043
@kathyjohnson2043 Год назад
Besides the 'tiny waist' trope of the era, there was the battle-axe matron, normally depicted as having a chest measurement bigger than a bodybuilder.
@NamiSparrow
@NamiSparrow Год назад
The absolute Dramedy of this video is 11/10 chefs kiss cuz not only is it super informative it’s just entertaining as HECK. Great job with not shying away from the reasons Polaire is problematic, and thanks so much for including my thoughts about cultural appropriation in this video ❤❤❤ Your balance of “here’s all this info!” with entertaining shenanigans to keep people invested is AMAZING! 🎉
@CraftyLoops
@CraftyLoops Год назад
My Grandmother got married in and around 1950 and she constantly boasts about her 18" waist on her wedding day, lol. Fabulous video. Lee xx
@Ashthegrey
@Ashthegrey Год назад
In one of my favorite podcasts, the host will read over old articles from papers and the authors would ALWAYS describe a woman's appearance in detail before talking about the story she was involved with.
@Maesolmese
@Maesolmese Год назад
Ooo I'm curious to know what podcast!
@Ashthegrey
@Ashthegrey Год назад
@@Maesolmese its called The Dollop. Its an American history podcast hosted by two comedians and a good example of this is the Otto in the attic episode where a woman was on trial for literal murder and the press wrote paragraphs about how she looked in court before getting to the trial.
@linpollitt8950
@linpollitt8950 Год назад
When Ruth Ellis was on trial for shooting her lover in the early 50s the press were more concerned with her looks than her crime. She was 27, blonde, attractive and beautifully dressed in black two piece suit with a pencil skirt and stiletto heels. She ran a hostess bar and was a glamour model, which added to her mystique. She admitted to killing her lover (IMO he asked for it..he'd punched her in the stomach causing her to miscarry their baby) and was the last woman to be hanged in Britain.
@raraavis7782
@raraavis7782 Год назад
​@@Ashthegrey Cool, thanks for sharing. I'm always looking for podcasts, that are both entertaining and informative.
@MossyMozart
@MossyMozart Год назад
@@linpollitt8950 - STILL not up to her to murder someone.
@mintjaan
@mintjaan Год назад
The Public Domain review had a number of articles on the history of Freak shows, one article particle was about the phenomenon of "Caucasian women" as in Women from the Caucasus region. They often had the teased out hair, but it was absolutely a gimmick to take advantage of the fact that most people didn't understand (and still don't understand today) cultures outside of their own.
@annaselbdritt7916
@annaselbdritt7916 Год назад
You’re thinking of the ‘Circassian Beauty’ right?
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. Год назад
Abby’s Range of characters and the costumes >>>>>>>>>> I see a great drag king.
@darkiee69
@darkiee69 Год назад
She could've said she had a 10 centimeter waist and no one would be the wiser since people in the US didn't know metric.
@daxxydog5777
@daxxydog5777 Год назад
Nope. Not a one!😂 If Ben Franklin had gotten his way, we’d have been on the metric system from the beginning. It would have made the math much easier if he had!
@darkiee69
@darkiee69 Год назад
@@daxxydog5777 Or if a pirate hadn't stolen the meter stick and weights that was on its way to DC to prove just how superior the metric system was.
@adaddinsane
@adaddinsane Год назад
Because no one could possibly have done a conversion.
@darkiee69
@darkiee69 Год назад
@@adaddinsane They didn't have smartphones back then..
@user-gn8fn7un3s
@user-gn8fn7un3s Год назад
This was so interesting! Thank you for covering such an interesting character and thank you for including her problematic side. As an aside, my mother had a 15 inch waist. My father would say he could circle her waist with his hands. When I got married she was upset that she had gained an inch and was now 16 inches, (she was 70). Alas, I didn't inherit her waist.
@CharlesStearman
@CharlesStearman Год назад
I read somewhere that the woman who measured Polaire's waist as 14" when she arrived in New York admitted some years later that she had used a fake elastic tape measure.
@jackieknits61
@jackieknits61 Год назад
A friend of mine had a 15 inch waist. But that was because of surgery done as a child to save her life. It made it necessary to get custom made clothing for most of her life.
@itwasagoodideaatthetime7980
ROTFLMAO! 🤣 This was *SO* worth waiting for! I love how you absolutely roast modern interpretations of historical fashion. I adore the Drunk History takes you do. Please keep doing them they're fantastic!
@florindalucero3236
@florindalucero3236 Год назад
Re the servant, gross and maybe... a kink? idk, there's something in the way they are looking at each other in that one photo... kink knows no color lines, so maybe some sort of relationship? And who knows, maybe by thrusting it out there in a way that would distract, maybe having a relationship right under everyone's noses? Not by any means justifying, but throwing it out there as a possibility? I guess I'd rather think that than believe that someone could be so fame hungry. Either way, ew.
@daxxydog5777
@daxxydog5777 Год назад
I was thinking the same thing. Maybe he was her “boy toy” and she was figuring out a way to take him with her everywhere. She certainly couldn’t just go places with him back in those days. At least he had the contract that didn’t allow her to just abandon him in a foreign country. I hope he got paid well and ended up happy somewhere in the world.
@ravenskye4893
@ravenskye4893 Год назад
also of note: the French were some of the first in Europe to ban slavery. Polaire would have grown up in a country where black French citizens were afforded far more rights then black Americans of the day, if it was a romantic arrangement it may have been a way to allow the man to become a French citizen (permanent employment)
@jennifermoriarty2188
@jennifermoriarty2188 Год назад
Was thinking bdsm also
@Ro-bv4hk
@Ro-bv4hk Год назад
I do agree that the Victorian “freak shows” were less explorative than we as modern people think, Julia Pastrana( please excuse my poor spelling, dyslexia and autocorrect don’t mix) is one example of pretty horrific exploitation . Ask A Mortician did a video on her years ago and its a good video to watch after this one. She was exploited by her “manager”/husband and even her son was exploited by the man as well. Even after death, her body was exhibited without her consent and treated as an oddity. I genuinely love your videos and love seeing your take on this topic.
@astreaward6651
@astreaward6651 Год назад
Thanks for filling in the blanks about where we all "know" this woman from! It's interesting and sad to see that some things really don't change as far as the lengths people will go to get attention. I know you absolutely did not have any ill intent when you mentioned Julia Pastrana as having exhibited herself, but she didn't do that to herself. That was done to her. Her story is so incredibly sad. Ask A Mortician has a great video about her.
@daalelli
@daalelli 11 месяцев назад
Thank you! I couldn't remember where I had seen her.
@annabeinglazy5580
@annabeinglazy5580 Год назад
Phew, i am incredibly torn about that characterisation of "Freakshow" because.... While those points might be valid to a certain extent (Like making actual Money and Not being destitute), it is SUCH an oversimplification of the Times? Especially claiming that "Freak" wasnt derogatory? We are talking about a society that got so into science that they tried to figure out which Skull shape gives away criminals. Body and Looks were heavily associated with your Moral character. Being outside of the norm would Always be associated with your character also being an Aberration from the Norm. Implying that freakshows somehow sidestepped that tendency is... A Stretch. Then lets Talk about the fact that it would be one of the few professions actually Open to "Freaks". It cant really be upheld as a means of Independence when you dont actually have an alternative. I appreciate trying to Not See freakshows as completely black and White. But that short characterisation sounded Like it was trying a Bit too hard to make them look better than they were
@AbbyCox
@AbbyCox Год назад
All I can suggest is reading Nadja Durbach’s research - this is not my area of expertise so I am just using the best secondary source I can find. I’m sure she digs into the issues you point out
@robertabiallas6923
@robertabiallas6923 Год назад
Great video, Abby! I love how you mention how Freak Shows had a different connotation in Victorian/Edwardian times and performers made decent livings at it. There’s a series of books you might enjoy by Theodora Goss called ‘The Extraordinary Adventures of the Athena Club.’ Victorian Freak Shows in Europe play a large role in the first and second volumes of the trilogy. Getting back to your video, I also found it sort of funny how Shocking the idea of a nose ring was on a woman back then. Can you imagine the reaction if Polaire was whisked away in a Time Machine and deposited in 2023? Wow! Thanks again for the video!
@GamerXenith
@GamerXenith Год назад
Your skits fit the video so well and make it way more interesting by breaking up the history facts with, "Watch Abby try not to laugh hysterically while re-enacting dramatic scenes." 😂
@kirstenpaff8946
@kirstenpaff8946 Год назад
This lady reminds me of Lady Gaga when she was in her meat dress phase.
@belligerentkitten
@belligerentkitten Год назад
Slavery may have been abolished in the US, but it wasn't enforced. There were people still held in literal slavery, illegally, until the 2nd World War. There were also schemes to imprison black people unfairly to profit from their labour which are more well known - but there were still literal slaves that just were never released, and no one cared. So it's not out of the question that she might have bought a slave rather than a servant. Though of course I don't know if that is what happened here or not.
@agcons
@agcons Год назад
Somebody stole the diamond collar then pitched le petit cochon overboard, hoping that the natural assumption of people far less suspicious than I would be that the collar was still on the pig. You read it here first.
@SignalHillHiker
@SignalHillHiker Год назад
I love the note that we won’t get into the details about how she got the role of Claudine, cut to two separate costumes to act it out hahaha. 10/10!
@theresaanndiaz3179
@theresaanndiaz3179 Год назад
OMG! That was absolutely fascinating! Thank you! Your dramatic recreation of Mimi going over the rails was hysterical, I totally enjoyed it.
@MossyMozart
@MossyMozart Год назад
@Theresa Ann Diaz - I cried for Julia Pastrana and for Mimi. >_
@linpollitt8950
@linpollitt8950 Год назад
This was fascinating, Abby. I remember Polaire from seeing the movie Colette a few years ago. You showed a tiny clip from it in the video. She played Colette's fictional character Claudine on stage and started a fashion for frizzy, bobbed hair and shorter skirts. I think she was strikingly beautiful.
@anniestrooo
@anniestrooo Год назад
I’ve become obsessed with this new twist on your videos! The chaos you’ve brought (especially in the sewing machine vid) is so fun!
@BenSwagnerd
@BenSwagnerd Год назад
I love your diy "stock footage." Way better in my opinion than when its clearly actual stock footage.
@Christian-is-thriving
@Christian-is-thriving Год назад
She was 19th century clickbait. Good for her.
@lndcruz721
@lndcruz721 Год назад
absolutely enjoyed this video! and the reenactments were so fun! its interesting just how manufactured her whole persona was and the obsession with her waist. that said, it was obviously very effective, as even today her image shows up, though not in the way it would have been seen in her time
@notsoseriousmoonlight
@notsoseriousmoonlight Год назад
When young, I could tighten down to an 18" waist, and once considered entering the World's Tiniest Waist Competition, which I think is still a thing, but there were just tinier waists out there. Anyway, a 14" waist is attainable if you are naturally small in the waist to begin with.
@curlysammm6387
@curlysammm6387 Год назад
Side note- we should probably not be surprised that less than 10 minutes in to Queen Charlotte a bridgerton story there is dramatic talk of being killed by a corset. My eyes doth roll to the back of my head.
@mza2195
@mza2195 Год назад
You’ve no idea how happy it makes me to see my notification pop up with a video from you. It’s been really rough lately and I know I get to enjoy myself for a while! Thanks a bunch for that.
@cissnajs
@cissnajs Год назад
this is amazing. i truly enjoy your way of presenting history. please do more! also, lets just summarize: a french woman, born in algeria, becomes famous for being crazy, having a tiny waist and being algerian. also, sidenote, was photoshopping everything. She continues being known basically only for her photoshopped pics and people think that was the norm. Did i miss anything? Oh can't forget that she thought it was funny (maybe good marketing??) to make jokes about slavery and suicide. yeah... sounds about right. seems like very little has changed.
@naturalcambion3747
@naturalcambion3747 Год назад
Abby over here laughing at this poor crazy ladies dead pig. 😤
@brooke_reiverrose2949
@brooke_reiverrose2949 Год назад
Animal cruelty is a hardcore trigger for me. Frankly I’m disgusted and not a little disappointed. Then goes on to mention a lot of things that are triggers for some people. No warning, nothing.
@Bunnidove
@Bunnidove Год назад
​@Brooke_ReiverRose I understand. I can deal with the joke but she should have also said that it was distasteful. Pigs are so smart.
@ohthemoo
@ohthemoo Год назад
I love your content to pieces! As a 30 something woman, I am also always super excited to see what you’re wearing because I def have dress envy 😅 That berry linen dress tho…and the floral dress, too - love! Plus your hair in this video is styled so cool. Abby Cox - you are seriously style goals, ma’am.
@Becky_Theroux_Gockel
@Becky_Theroux_Gockel Год назад
I absolutely loved this. It was so informative and funny. You were just what I needed to brighten up the end of today. Thank you
@moxiebombshell
@moxiebombshell Год назад
22:35 Love Nami's commentary, and love that you included it. Of course all your excellent antics were perfect, but I love how you always tie in the cultural context and state of global affairs. Love it. Thank you!
@Apo0
@Apo0 Год назад
I loved the voice over part!
@gemrich1586
@gemrich1586 Год назад
This is by far your most hilarious video yet! Please do more like it. I had a blast learning about this crazy woman! 😂
@margarethall1625
@margarethall1625 Год назад
Loved the info and the melodramatic interpretation. I love your videos. You make me laugh and learn at the same time.
@annbrookens945
@annbrookens945 Год назад
This was so interesting, Abby! I hope the people who need this information watch the video!
@OpheliaDegenerate
@OpheliaDegenerate Год назад
I LOVE this vid, i totally hope you make more of these for old celebrities and stuff!
@mamashoes0507
@mamashoes0507 Год назад
I love these history videos! They are about the fascinating stories I would otherwise never hear. Of course your delivery is so creative and fun and I really appreciate the effort it takes to make these.
@Adrienne557
@Adrienne557 Год назад
I love your historic videos. I want more! I learn something new each time. Bravo!
@pippaseaspirit4415
@pippaseaspirit4415 Год назад
Fascinating story; thank you!
@leam2017
@leam2017 Год назад
Such a good video!!! I've learnt so much and it feels GOOD!!! Thank you for your work, cannot wait for a new video! xx from France ;)
@ZaydaFleming
@ZaydaFleming Год назад
Loved this!
@morsatra42
@morsatra42 Год назад
Thank you for making this. This was fascinating.
@farangarris2598
@farangarris2598 Год назад
Love all the dramatics. You are so good at it. Really like the historical accounts. Its so funny and good thank you Abby.
@My_mid-victorian_crisis
@My_mid-victorian_crisis Год назад
Terrific video!! I want to reiterate @Katie Moundry's comment about the "Drunk History" style sketches; you are a funny woman. As a Barnum, I would like to say thank you. So many people dismiss the positive side of Side Shows. Yes, now we see them as horrid and exploitive, and yes, by today's ideology, they were; however, they were meaningful employment for many people who otherwise could not find employment. Today we have social, employment, and educational programs to help people. These programs were simply not available in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The charitable organizations that were available were often more exploitive, and the Side Shows provided an opportunity to support oneself on one's own terms.
@lloydnsarahsheffer3802
@lloydnsarahsheffer3802 Год назад
I love all the costumes. And the (over) acting. They really bring the story to larger than life
@carlyblack42
@carlyblack42 Год назад
😂😂😂 That reenactment was pure Drunk History, and I loved it so much! Thank you for sharing her story and giving it context.
@josmycherelus5070
@josmycherelus5070 6 месяцев назад
Thank you so much. I found your video about Polaire while I was doing some research about her. According to chatgpt, Polaire was the first person recorded wearing nose ring. You did a good job. Thanks again.
@bluelagoon1980
@bluelagoon1980 2 месяца назад
People have worn nose rings far longer than that. I read a book from the 1870s that mentioned it.
@jeannegreeneyes1319
@jeannegreeneyes1319 Год назад
That was a great review of Polaire - Ive seen her in images, but did not know her story.
@CottageTales
@CottageTales Год назад
Another one you had fun with ^^ I love these historical pieces from you, you really make them come to life :)
@yadlajoie7757
@yadlajoie7757 Год назад
Loved this video, you are brilliant. And as a french, you are doing great! Please continue interpreting its fab
@alejandramoreno6625
@alejandramoreno6625 Год назад
I'm loving this video format!
@selfishjeans
@selfishjeans Год назад
Thank you for the pep talk for self-doubt and that IS holds me back!
@velvetseas
@velvetseas Год назад
Really enjoyed this! Entertaining and really interesting :)
@karowolkenschaufler7659
@karowolkenschaufler7659 Год назад
I love this kind of video. I just love it. some good story from history, somehow fashion or textile related and told by abby with brilliant little self played scenes in it for illustration. and all in front of a seriously satisfying aesthetic background.
@FabeFangs
@FabeFangs Год назад
❤ed this! Never knew who Polaire was but have seen her time and again.
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. Год назад
This is the earliest I’ve been in the new upload schedule. Hope you’re doing well and a shoutout to you and channel for being such fun!
@maegc9876
@maegc9876 Год назад
I really enjoy your videos. Hearing you speak French from time to time is the cherry on top 😁
@user60521123
@user60521123 Год назад
I love that you still have some of your Xmas lights up outside. I still have a miniature Xmas tree on a counter in my living room. I never would have Xmas stuff out past the first week of Jan, but since Rona, I think we’ve all gotten a little lazier about that stuff.
@hadassahm3016
@hadassahm3016 Год назад
I like seeing what new thing you're clipping your mic to for the ad reads 😂
@amymariko
@amymariko 9 месяцев назад
I love how your videos have become fun reenactments :D. Love your videos! Always fascinating content and important history relevant to today!
@maryhamric
@maryhamric Год назад
This is such a FABULOUS video!!! Your hair, the comedy, the social commentary, the outro. *chef's kiss*
@whimsicalmusedesign
@whimsicalmusedesign Год назад
This was so interesting!! I would love to learn more about other famous fashionable ladies of history!❤
@sandrab5477
@sandrab5477 Год назад
Well, now I need to find Polaire's memoirs! I never heard about her before so thank you for your research work. And your reenactment of Polaire made me laugh so hard but I am sorry because I really didn't understood while you spoke French 😂
@erindoss269
@erindoss269 Год назад
I love this video! You are making me want to write a rhetorical analysis of her promotion tactics. She is so interesting!
@eleanorlaurent2303
@eleanorlaurent2303 Год назад
I enjoyed this video very much!
@sueellenturscak8196
@sueellenturscak8196 Год назад
You did an amazingly beautiful job on this video, Abby!
@JeacoMeiyin
@JeacoMeiyin Год назад
A-class video. I laughed and learned, and it all flowed effortlessly. Thank you for teaching me something :)
@TheNetymags
@TheNetymags Год назад
Loved loved loved this video! I really appreciate all of the work you do on your videos! Thank you❤
@mery_vc
@mery_vc Год назад
Thank you❤
@kerriemckinstry-jett8625
@kerriemckinstry-jett8625 Год назад
Your new studio is genuinely perfect for videos like this. 😊
@CH-oy5mt
@CH-oy5mt Год назад
The drunk history esque bits are amazing. LOL!
@christyharrington-brown4519
Excellent acting from both you and your dog!
@sarab8796
@sarab8796 Год назад
We need more Abby’s history!
@tiffanytomasino335
@tiffanytomasino335 Год назад
Thank you for sharing 😂
@laurallewien2165
@laurallewien2165 Год назад
Puts me in mind of the actress Vera Ellen (White Christmas), she had a tiny waist too....
@robinbirb
@robinbirb Год назад
Holy smokes, your ad-break dress is gorgeous!!!
@jesskratz1510
@jesskratz1510 Год назад
Yeah the addition of ACOSF was absolutely brilliant but you know that, I just want to applaud because it made me legit giggle. So thank you, I needed that!
@ushere5791
@ushere5791 Год назад
thank you!! xoxoxoxoxoxo
@memorizedvisions
@memorizedvisions Год назад
Poor Mimi :((
@katiehettinger7857
@katiehettinger7857 Год назад
My grandmother was a Victorian and her waist was small enough when she married my grandfather could enclose her corseted waist with his hands. At twenty, she was 5 feet tall and weighed less than a hundred pounds. 😉
@FantasticalFolliesCostuming
Loved the bonus Nami bit 🧡🤩
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