Tiny Kline Explained

Tiny Kline (born Helén Deutsch,[1] June 21, 1891 - July 5, 1964)[2] was a Hungarian-born[3] circus performer. She performed with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey and as Tinker Bell at Disneyland. Kline's most well-known act was the "slide for life," a variation of traditional iron jaw performance in which she slid down a wire from tall buildings or other structures by her teeth.

Early life and career

In 1905, Kline immigrated to the United States with a dance troupe.[3] New York port records indicate that she was born in Magyar, Hungary and was 15 years old when she arrived.[4] She lived at the Clara de Hirsch home for immigrant girls.[5] She started as a burlesque dancer and performed in clubs and music halls. Kline made headlines in 1912 when a Pittsburgh Press article titled "Witnesses forget and dancer gets off with costs," detailed a misdemeanor charge against the performer following "an alleged ultra-risqué performance in a singing hall in Bloomfield" earlier that year. The article stated that Kline was arrested for dancing in "what the authorities declared [sic] was too scanty attire." The witnesses could not corroborate the charges and Kline was allowed to go after paying her court fees.[6]

Marriage to Otto Kline

In 1914, Kline moved on to perform in the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus as Tiny Duchée.[7] There, she met and later married rodeo trick rider Otto Kreinbrink (stage name Otto Kline). In April 1915 he fractured his skull during a performance at Madison Square Garden and died of injuries.[8] After her husband's death, she began to use the name Tiny Kline. In 1917, on the second anniversary of Otto's death, Kline performed in the Roman standing race at the same venue, stating "we circus people have to learn to hide our sorrows under many bright colors. Otto has been dead two years, but I haven't found anything in life to take his place. That is why I wanted to learn to ride. I thought it might take me back to where he is."[9]

Iron Jaw

Circus Queen and Tinker Bell: The Memoir of Tiny Kline, edited by professor Janet M. Davis, details Kline's beginnings with iron jaw after the performer "incurred the wrath of her sometimes friend Lillian Leitzel" who was angry when Kline performed on the rings in 1919. Kline began years of training for iron jaw performance and eventually perfected her "slide for life" act, in which she would slide down a wire, typically from tall buildings or structure, by her teeth.[10] One of her most notable slides for life occurred in 1932 when Kline slid from the top of the Hotel Edison to the roof of the Prospect Theatre in New York City's famed Times Square, a distance of more than 200 yards at a height of 27 stories.[11] Footage of the entire slide is available, and includes Kline saying "At last, I found a safe way to cross Times Square. I'm saying hello to Broadway!"[12] Kline was arrested after the spectacle and charged with disorderly conduct.[13] The slide for life became Kline's signature act.

Later life and death

In 1961, Walt Disney began a search for a flying Tinker Bell to wow crowds at Disneyland. Kline was hired to glide down a wire connecting the Matterhorn to Sleeping Beauty's Castle. She retired from playing Tinker Bell in 1964. Kline was scheduled to return as Tinker Bell that same year, but she died from stomach cancer before coming out of retirement.[14]

At the time of her death Kline left the bulk of her estate to the Clara de Hirsch Home for Working Girls. She is buried in Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, Los Angeles, California. Her simple gravestone says "Tiny Helen Kline. Our Tinker Bell."[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kline, Tiny. (2008). Circus Queen and Tinker Bell: The Memoir of Tiny Kline. Edited by Janet M. Davis. University of Illinois Press.
  2. http://death-records.mooseroots.com/l/209795376/Tiny-H-Kline Tiny H. Kline - Death Record
  3. http://www.mouseplanet.com/8189/Tinker_Bell_Tales Tinker Bell bio
  4. Web site: 1905. New York, U.S., Arriving Passenger and Crew Lists (Including Castle Garden and Ellis Island) (1857-1957). National Archives.
  5. Book: Zemeckis, Leslie. Behind The Burly Q. 2013. Skyhorse. Delaware. 978-1-62087-691-6.
  6. News: 5 September 1912. Witnesses Forget and Dancer Gets Off with Costs. The Pittsburgh Press.
  7. Ladley, Diane A. Haunted Naperville. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2009. 87.
  8. News: 22 April 1915. Fall Kills Circus Rider. Rutland Daily Herald.
  9. News: 22 April 1917. Husband's Death Made 'Tiny' Kline a Fearless Rider. New York Tribune.
  10. Norris. Aíne. 2021. The Tenacious Women of Iron Jaw. Bandwagon: The Journal of the Circus Historical Society. 65. 3 . 28–49.
  11. Norris. Aíne. 2021. The Tenacious Women of Iron Jaw. Bandwagon: The Journal of the Circus Historical Society. 65. 3 . 28–49.
  12. Original Footage, YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CDNO2ugEBCo

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CDNO2ugEBCo.

  13. News: 22 October 1932. Stunt to Get Job Brings Arrest. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
  14. http://www.pepitoandjoanne.com/Blog/Entries/1917/11/1_Pepito_the_Clown_Mentioned_in_Tiny_Klines_Memoir_(1917)_files/1964%20Tiny%20Kline%20Obituary%20Cropped.pdf Disneyland Tinkerbell Fought Pain, Death Alone
  15. Web site: Find A Grave: Tiny Kline. .