Queens of the Air: Remarkable Female Aerialists Who Rewrote the Rules

Amy Stewart, a PhD student with the School of English, introduces some of the 19th century female aerialists and explores how they broke down barriers and rewrote the rules when it came to gender stereotypes and sexist beliefs.

Photograph of a female aerialist
Off

By the 19th century, the circus was one of the most popular forms of entertainment in both Europe and the United States. At a circus in the 1800s, you might expect to find equine performances as well as clowns, contortionists, and aerialists: individuals who performed daring stunts in the air using equipment such as rings, ropes and the flying trapeze. 

The circus provided a unique landscape within which women could demonstrate their physical skills and be seen as equals with men, coinciding with an increase of women involved in both paid labour and activism in wider culture. 鈥淚t is not the case that the coming of the circus created the female performer鈥, argues Steve Ward in his book, Sawdust Sisterhood. 鈥淲hat it did create, however, was the opportunity for women to express themselves creatively through a more legitimised medium.鈥 

In this way, the circus also represented a financial opportunity for women, allowing them to earn money through their skill and, in a select few cases, become celebrities and household names. In fact, women were often the highest paid performers in the 1800s, 鈥渋n part鈥, writes Peta Tait, 鈥渂ecause they accentuated ideas of danger in a society where women were thought weaker and therefore inherently more at risk of falling.鈥 Whatever the reason for the rise in their success, with their physical strength and virtuosity, female circus performers helped challenge attitudes to women鈥檚 bodies at the time. 

Here are just a few female aerialists who broke down barriers and rewrote the rules when it came to gender stereotypes and sexist beliefs.  

Leona Dare (1855 - 1922)

Leona Dare (real name Susan Adeline Stuart/Stewart) was an American aerialist, most famous for her bold stunts performed on a trapeze hanging from a hot air balloon. She performed in the United States, as well as throughout Europe, touring England, France, Spain and more under the moniker 鈥楶ride of Madrid鈥 and 鈥楺ueen of the Antilles鈥. 

One of the aspects of her act that made it so remarkable was the 鈥榠ron jaw鈥 鈥 dangling by her feet from the trapeze, she would hold up her partner using only her teeth. The sight of a strong woman holding the weight of a man rallied against the image of women as weak or docile. The showcasing of women as fit and active also challenged the notion that physical exercise was harmful for women, and posed a direct contradiction to the 鈥榬est cure鈥 popularised by physician Silas Weir Mitchell (and scrutinised in Charlotte Perkins Gilman鈥檚 short story, 鈥楾he Yellow Wallpaper鈥, in 1892). 鈥淛ust as women鈥檚 public activism contradicted prevailing notions about separate spheres,鈥 argues Janet M. Davis, 鈥渨omen鈥檚 athleticism at the turn of the century confounded the standard of the neurasthenic, asexual woman.鈥 

Miss Lala (1858 - after 1919)

Miss Lala (real name Anna Olga Albertina Brown) was a mixed-race aerialist performing near the end of the 19th century. She appeared in the circus from the age of nine and was known for her performances on the flying trapeze, as well as her iron jaw and cannonball acts.

Miss Lala鈥檚 strength and virtuosity is immortalised by French impressionist painter Edgar Degas鈥 Miss Lala at the Cirque Fernando (1879). In the painting, Miss Lala is seen suspended from her teeth, being hoisted toward the ceiling. Degas, who enjoyed many such popular entertainments, likely captured the sketches for his oil painting on the spot. Miss Lala at The Cirque Fernando was the only painting by Degas to feature a person of colour and remains one of the most recognisable portraits of a female circus performer in existence. 

Lillian Leitzel (1892-1931)

Nicknamed the 鈥楺ueen of the Air鈥, Lillian Leitzel (real name Leopoldina Alitza Pelikan) is one of the best-known female circus performers in history. Standing at just four feet and nine inches, her diminutive stature belied her physical strength, which allowed her to perform her signature act on the roman rings. Fifty feet above the ground and without a net, she would propel herself up and around the ring with just one arm, a move known as the 鈥榦ne-armed plange鈥. Each one would dislocate her shoulder, and she would often perform one hundred rotations during the course of her act.

Leitzel鈥檚 extraordinary star power ensured she gained celebrity status, something uncommon amongst female performers at the time. At the peak of her career, her weekly earnings were said to be 鈥渕ore than the average American鈥檚 yearly salary鈥. She also broke the stereotype of women as meek and agreeable 鈥 she was famous for her ferocious temper, and was said to fire her faithful maid up to four times a day. 

Antoinette Concello (1910-1984)

Antoinette Concello was a Canadian aerialist and part of a husband-and-wife trapeze group called the 鈥楩lying Concellos鈥. She is best known for completing what鈥檚 widely considered to be the most difficult trick on the flying trapeze: the triple somersault. To complete this trick, the flyer would need to rotate three times in the air before grabbing the hands of the catcher on the opposite trapeze. 

Some sources claim Concello as the first to accomplish the triple somersault, others attribute it to the lesser-known aerialist, Lena Jordan. Either way, Concello鈥檚 consistent achievement of the trick saw her become one of the most accomplished female flyers of all time, challenging the notion that women鈥檚 bodies were not capable of the same feats as men鈥檚. 

Leona Dare, Lillian Leitzel, Miss Lala and Antoinette Concello are just some of the women who have blazed a trail for women in the circus arts. Today, women continue to excel in the field, challenging limiting preconceptions about women鈥檚 bodies and gender roles. 


References:

Davis, Janet M. 鈥淩espectable Female Nudity鈥, The Routledge Circus Studies Reader, edited by Peta Tait and Katie Lavers. Routledge, 2016, pp. 173-197.

Tait, Peta. 鈥淩isk, Danger and Paradoxes in Circus鈥, The Routledge Circus Studies Reader, edited by Peta Tait and Katie Lavers. Routledge, 2016, pp.528-545.

Ward, Steve. Sawdust Sisterhood: How Circus Empowered Women. Fonthill, 2016.

Centres of excellence

The University's cross-faculty research centres harness our interdisciplinary expertise to solve the world's most pressing challenges.