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Quiz about Johnny Eck King of the Freaks
Quiz about Johnny Eck King of the Freaks

Johnny Eck, King of the Freaks Quiz


Johnny Eck was one of the most popular human oddities of the heyday of the sideshow. Learn more, or test what you already know.

A multiple-choice quiz by ubermom. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
ubermom
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
200,346
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
503
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Johnny Eck was born on August 27, 1911, in the hometown of Babe Ruth and Edgar Allen Poe. What city can brag of Johnny as one of its native sons? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. What was Johnny Eck known as on the sideshow circuit? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Johnny Eck only traveled alone once in his life -- when he went to Hollywood to be in "Freaks". Who did he travel with on the sideshow circuit? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Johnny Eck attended public school in his home town, and had a fairly ordinary life until he attended a church event with his family and came to the attention of John McAslan. Who was McAslan? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Johnny Eck got his picture in the paper for climbing the stairs to the top of the Washington Monument.


Question 6 of 10
6. Johnny Eck traveled with showman Rajah Raboid's "Miracles of 1937" tour. Raboid had a mixed act that started with hypnotism. What role did Johnny play in the show? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. While Johnny Eck was in Hollywood filming "Freaks", he was filmed for an uncredited appearance in two other movies starring a former Olympic swimming star. Who was the title character of these films?

Answer: (One Word)
Question 8 of 10
8. Johnny Eck lost his livelihood when social and political pressures ran the sideshows out of favor. But Johnny, ever the one to find a niche in the world, found a new way of making a living, a way distinct and possibly unique to his hometown. What did he do? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Johnny Eck had a childhood dream that he couldn't ever realize. But he still managed to approximate it after his sideshow career was over, amusing himself and delighting children. What was Johnny's dream? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. All good things must come to an end, and so did the remarkable life of Johnny Eck. How did he die? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Johnny Eck was born on August 27, 1911, in the hometown of Babe Ruth and Edgar Allen Poe. What city can brag of Johnny as one of its native sons?

Answer: Baltimore

Johnny was born and died in the same red-brick row house in the Highlandtown section of Baltimore. He changed his name from Eckhardt to the more theatrical Eck when he began performing in sideshows.
2. What was Johnny Eck known as on the sideshow circuit?

Answer: The Half Boy

Johnny was born with an underdeveloped pelvis and legs, which left him looking as if he'd been lopped off at the waist. One woman who moved into Johnny's neighborhood as a child said she told him he'd been run over by a train!
3. Johnny Eck only traveled alone once in his life -- when he went to Hollywood to be in "Freaks". Who did he travel with on the sideshow circuit?

Answer: His brother

Johnny's twin brother, Robert Alexander Eckhardt, traveled with Johnny and appeared with him to highlight Johnny's unusual body.
4. Johnny Eck attended public school in his home town, and had a fairly ordinary life until he attended a church event with his family and came to the attention of John McAslan. Who was McAslan?

Answer: A magician

According to Johnny's autobiography, McAslan was doing a magic show at the church, and asked for a volunteer from the audience. Johnny padded up and knocked McAslan's socks off. The magician managed to finish the show, then approached Johnny's mother about a carnival career for her son.
5. Johnny Eck got his picture in the paper for climbing the stairs to the top of the Washington Monument.

Answer: True

Johnny made his climb, on his hands, in 1937. A photo shows him standing in the foreground, pointing at the monument. Way to go, Johnny! Another photo shows photographers lying on their stomachs in the grass to get the shot of Johnny, who was (depending on your source) either 18 or 22 inches tall.
6. Johnny Eck traveled with showman Rajah Raboid's "Miracles of 1937" tour. Raboid had a mixed act that started with hypnotism. What role did Johnny play in the show?

Answer: He was part of the sawing-a-person-in-half illusion.

Raboid's sawing illusion used Johnny and his twin brother Robert, and relied upon their similar faces and voices to fool the audience. The physically normal Robert would be recruited from the audience, then switched for the truncated Johnny and a small-statured man who served as the legs of the illusion.

This trick is famous among magicians, who lament that Raboid never had a performance filmed.
7. While Johnny Eck was in Hollywood filming "Freaks", he was filmed for an uncredited appearance in two other movies starring a former Olympic swimming star. Who was the title character of these films?

Answer: Tarzan

Johnny was fitted with a bird costume, and the resulting footage was used in "Tarzan the Ape Man" (1932), "Tarzan Escapes" (1936), and "Tarzan's Secret Treasure" (1941), starring Johnny Weissmuller.
8. Johnny Eck lost his livelihood when social and political pressures ran the sideshows out of favor. But Johnny, ever the one to find a niche in the world, found a new way of making a living, a way distinct and possibly unique to his hometown. What did he do?

Answer: He painted pictures on window screens.

Johnny had always been interested in art. He learned screen painting from William Oktavec, a grocer and artist who is credited with inventing the art form in 1913 as a way to decorate screen windows and doors while giving residents greater privacy. From the outside, passers-by see only the painting.

But from the inside, the painted screen functions as a normal window screen, allowing those in the home to look out.
9. Johnny Eck had a childhood dream that he couldn't ever realize. But he still managed to approximate it after his sideshow career was over, amusing himself and delighting children. What was Johnny's dream?

Answer: He wanted to be a railroad engineer.

As a child, Johnny would spend hours by the railroad tracks, watching the trains go by. In those days, being a railroad engineer was a glamor job, much like being an airline pilot today. Johnny bought a miniature railroad set which he took to fairs to give rides to children. He wasn't an engineer on a real railroad, so he bought his own railroad on his own scale!
10. All good things must come to an end, and so did the remarkable life of Johnny Eck. How did he die?

Answer: He went peacefully in his sleep, at home in bed.

Johnny lay down for a nap after dinner, in the Baltimore row house where he was born, on January 5, 1991. When his brother Robert checked on him, he was dead. Johnny was 79 years old.
Source: Author ubermom

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