Medicine shows were traveling horse and wagon
teams which peddled "miracle cure" medications and other products
between various entertainment acts.
Their precise origins unknown, medicine
shows were common in the 19th century United States
(though they continued up to World War II). They are most commonly
associated with "miracle elixirs" (referred to as
snake oil), which, it was claimed, had the ability
to cure any disease, smooth wrinkles, remove stains, prolong life
or cure any number of common ailments. Entertainment often included
a
freak show, a
flea circus,
musical
act,
magic trick, jokes, or
storytelling.
History
Origins
While showmen pitching miraculous cures have been around since
classical times, the advent of mixed performance and medicine sales
in western culture originated during the
Dark
Ages of Europe after circuses and theatres were banned and
performers had only the marketplace or patrons for support.
Medicine shows flourished in the late 1800s, particularly in the
midwestern United States and the rural South. They had their origin
in the patent medicine vendors who set up booths at local fairs in
Colonial America. As early as 1773 laws were being passed against
their excesses.
Final hurrah
The last
of these traveling shows was the Hadacol Caravan,
sponsored by Louisiana
State Senator Dudley
J. LeBlanc and his
LeBlanc Corporation, makers of the dubious
patent medicine/
vitamin
tonic "
Hadacol", known for both its
alleged curative powers and its high alcohol content. The stage
show, which ran throughout the
Deep South
in the 1940s with great publicity, featured a number of notable
music acts and
Hollywood
celebrities, and was used to promote Hadacol (which was sold
heavily during
intermission and after
the show). Admission to the show was paid in
boxtops of the vitamin tonic, sold in stores
throughout the southern United States. The Caravan came to a sudden
halt in 1951, when the Hadacol enterprise fell apart in a scandal.
The swan
song for medicine shows came in the summer of 1972 when the two man
show of Chief Thundercloud (pitchman Leo Kahdot, a Potawatomi from Oklahoma
[140999]) and Peg Leg Sam (harmonicist/singer/comedian
Arthur Jackson) played at a carnival in Pittsboro, NC. It
was the last show of the year for them; sadly, Kahdot/Thundercloud
died that winter.
[141000]
Use in popular culture
Several modern musical acts have named themselves after this
old-time phenomenon, including
Old Crow Medicine Show,
Dr. West's Medicine Show
and Junk Band,
Dr.
Hook & The Medicine Show, and
MV
& EE Medicine Show. It also lent its name to
The Dream Syndicate's album
Medicine Show, to
Big Audio Dynamite's song "Medicine
Show," and
The Band's "W.S. Walcott
Medicine Show".
Science fiction author
Orson Scott Card titled his online sci-fi
journal "The
Intergalactic
Medicine Show".
British comedy trio
The Goodies
performed a scene as part of "The Goodies Travelling Medicine Show"
in an episode of their series entitled
Hospital For Hire.
The scene included a plant from the audience (Tim) being pulled
from the audience to 'prove' that the mystery elixir cured all
ailments.
Notes
- Anderson, Ann (2000) Snake Oil, Hustlers and Hambones: The
American Medicine Show McFarland, Jefferson, NC, p. 1, ISBN
0-7864-0800-6
- Young, James Harvey (1961) "Chapter 12: Medicine Show" The Toadstool
Millionaires: A social history of patent medicines in America
before Federal regulation Princeton University Press,
Princeton, N.J., OCLC 405144
- Connecticut passed an anti-mountebank law against those who
ensnared people into buying "unwholesome and oftentimes dangerous
drugs." Wright, Richardson Little (1927) Hawkers & Walkers
of Early America J.B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia, pp.
199-200, OCLC 1348701; reprinted by Arno Press in 1976, ISBN
0-405-08057-3