Peter Robinson (sideshow artist)
Peter Robinson | |
---|---|
Born | Chicopee, Massachusetts, United States | April 8, 1873
Died | ? United States |
Other names | The Living Skeleton |
Occupation(s) | Sideshow performer, film actor |
Spouse | Baby Bunny Smith (married 1916- until his death) |
Peter Robinson (born April 8, 1873; credited professionally as The Living Skeleton or as The Cigarette Fiend, and The Thin Man) was an American theater and sideshow art performer, perhaps best known for his only film appearance in the Tod Browning cult film Freaks, with a lengthy career in the carnival circus circuit at Coney Island and with Ringling Bros. He also appeared briefly in Broadway.
He worked as a carnival sideshow entertainer, weighing in at 58 pounds (26 kg). He had a career in that genre in the vein of circus thin man Isaac W. Sprague and Artie Atherton. He was married to fellow sideshow entertainer Baby Bunny Smith, a 467-pound (212 kg), circus fat lady. He married her numerous times for promotional purposes.
He was also purported to be an expert harmonica player.
Early life
[edit]Robinson was born in Chicopee, Massachusetts, on April 8, 1873. He was the son of Abraham Robinson, a native of Vermont, and Canadian Victoria Hebert. In later records he used April 6 as his birthday and gave Springfield, Massachusetts as his place of birth, but the birth registry gives the former date and location. His parents were born in the United States, but were of Canadian ancestry. He said that he had a normal childhood and appearance until his early teens, when his weight began to drop precipitously.[citation needed]