John Massis Explained

Birth Date:4 June 1940
Birth Place:Bruges, Belgium
Death Place:Ghent, Belgium
Occupation:Strongman, Teeth-acrobat
Birth Name:Wilfried Morbée

John Massis (4 June 1940  - 12 July 1988) was a Flemish strongman and teeth-acrobat. His real name was Wilfried Morbée.[1]

Massis specialized in bending iron with his teeth. He also performed stunts where he lifted cars, pulled trains and stopped motorbikes and even helicopters and hot air balloons with his teeth. This resulted in several entries in the Guinness World Records book. He even stopped 4 small sport planes of lifting off in 4 different directions.[2]

Career

Massis was pretty strong even as a young man, as he started performing these feats regularly at the age of 17, under the pseudonym “Mocules the strongman”. Only 3 years later, he managed to pull a car with four passengers for 100 yards. In 1963 John Massis became a professional circus artist and spent the next years performing around Europe until 1972. Around 1963, Wilfried Morbée took the name John Massis to reflect the name of the American boxer John Cosmeyer and popular Italian movie character Maciste who depicted as a Hercules-like figure.

In 1967, John Massis set the first Guinness record when he pulled a 15-ton train 50 feet long using his teeth. Two years later he broke another record in a similar manner, when he kept a 36-ton airplane with 200 horsepower off the ground. In 1969, he held a 200-horsepower plane at 2100 revs in Tokyo and a 700-horsepower plane at 1800 revs in 1972 at Grimbergen. Massis decided to quit his job at the circus to find a better paying job. He then worked as a bouncer in a Ghent club at night and as a gas boiler inspector during the day.[3]

The man continued to tour solo during the rest of the decade, performing formidable stunts worldwide. In Ghent he was the first man to move a 121-ton locomotive, in Paris he lifted 233 kg 15 cm off the ground with his teeth, and in Hollywood he kept a helicopter on the ground with his teeth.[4]

In the United States, Massis was guest in the David Frost Show (1974) and the Joe Franklin Show (1978).[5] In 1980, he started pirate radio "Radio Superstar" and also recorded the song John Massis de krachtpatser. In 1987 he recorded Zet er je tanden in, with Willy Sommers.[6]

In 1983 he also funded a political party called Positief Radicalen in Dutch or Positive Radicals.

He had a few roles too, in the Flemish film The Leeuw Van Vlaanderen (1984) and in the TV series De Opkopers, Hotel Américain and Merlina.[7]

But during the 1980s, Massis' popularity in general began to wane. In his home country Belgium, his predictable stunts no longer received the attention as before, although they remained impressive. He struggled with personal problems and -in retrospect- he also suffered from diabetes, which severely reduced his condition.[8] After he was called during a live talk show on national TV in response to an anonymous advertisement in the newspaper in which he was looking for a female partner, he fell into a depression.[9]

Death

Because of his unknown and therefore untreated diabetes condition, Massis was found by the local police in a delirium. He was admitted to a psychiatric hospital. With waning media interest and diabetes undermining his condition, he committed suicide at the age of 48 officially on the 12th of July 1988.[10] To make a statement he actually committed suicide on 11 July which is the day of the Flemish Community. He was found only the day after by his sisters Godelieve and Erna Morbée.[11]

Honours

He was an inspiration for the cartoonist Pirana in the 80's to draw the celebrity comic "Het Land Zonder Tanden" (1986).[12] They were also close personal friends. He also made an appearance in the Kiekeboe-album De spray-historie (1988) with the cartoon character "John Massif", and he had also a cameo in the comic book series De Rode Ridder.

In 1999, the band Noordkaap referred to John Massis by naming their album Massis.[13]

In 2004, Johan Heldenbergh performed in a play based on Massis' life: Massis, the Musical.[14]

In 2005, Massis became number 172 on the list of the most famous Belgian ever in history.

A biography, Stalen Kaken (Steel Jaws) by Bavo Dhooge was published in 2005.[15]

A tournament, the John Massis Cup, was organized for the first time in Gentbrugge, Belgium in 2023.[16]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 11 June 2008 . John Massis . https://web.archive.org/web/20110430002631/http://www.massis.be/index-1.htm . 2011-04-30 . nl.
  2. Web site: 11 October 2019 . VOLK – Judith over Massis: "Ik zal u altijd missen, mijn Beerke . persblog.be . nl.
  3. Web site: 12 December 2013 . Legendary Strength - John Massis . legendarystrength.com . en.
  4. Web site: 17 May 2022 . Johan Heldenbergh over John Massis: "hij hield een vliegtuig tegen met zijn gebit" . radio1.be . nl.
  5. Web site: 10 September 2024 . John Massis Records . https://web.archive.org/web/20110430101659/http://www.massis.be/records.htm . 2011-04-30 .
  6. Web site: 14 September 2024 . John Massis / Wilfried Morbée 12-07-1988 . vlaamsevinyl.be . nl.
  7. Web site: 14 September 2024 . John Massis - Biography . imdb.com .
  8. Web site: 23 August 2023 . Het gebeente van John Massis zal toch niet verdwijnen in een anonieme knekelput? . demorgen.be . nl.
  9. Web site: 22 March 2005 . Krachtpatser John Massis krijgt eindelijk biografie . hbvl.be . nl.
  10. Web site: 12 July 2023 . John Massis (1940-1988) . ronnydeschepper.com . nl.
  11. Web site: 12 July 2013 . Superman met week hart . . nl.
  12. Web site: 1 December 2022 . John Massis - Het Land Zonder Tanden . stripweb.be . nl.
  13. Web site: 17 May 2024 . Noordkaap - Massis (1999) . musicmeter.nl . nl.
  14. Web site: 1 May 2009 . Massis, the Musical - Johan Heldenbergh (2002) . boekmeter.nl . nl.
  15. Web site: 14 September 2024 . Stalen Kaken . bavodhooge.com . nl.
  16. Web site: 7 August 2023 . Buurtcomité 'Gentbrugge Leeft' wil graf John Massis behouden . . nl.