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The Lady who Grew a Famously Huge Beard Because of a Bet

Kristin Thomas

Clémentine Clattaux Delait, born on March 5, 1865, in Chaumousey, France, became one of the most famous bearded ladies of the late 19th and 20th century in Europe.

While her fame and story faded over the decades following her death, Delait was rediscovered when a second-hand collector purchased her private memoirs at a garage sale in 2005. Delait’s 50-page memoir included fascinating photographs, press cuttings, and detailed accounts of her life as her popularity grew.

Clémentine Delait in 1923. Photo by Scherr CC BY 4.0
Clémentine Delait in 1923. Photo by Scherr CC BY 4.0

 

 

Madame Delait. Photo by Wellcome Images CC BY 4.0
Madame Delait. Photo by Wellcome Images CC BY 4.0

Delait married a local baker in 1885 and opened up a café and bakery in Taon-Les-Vosges, located in northeastern France. Delait, who shaved her face every day, had never considered growing her beard out. In her memoir, she described the time she went to a carnival in Nancy and left unimpressed with the bearded lady she visited. After returning to work at the café, and knowing she could grow a better beard, she made a bet with a customer that would change her life — and image — forever.

“The success was immediate…they were all crazy about me,” Delait stated in her memoir.

Feeling inspired by the rising attention to her new look, Delait renamed her café as “Café de la Femme Barbe” (Café of the Bearded Woman). Along with the name change, Delait and her husband began selling souvenirs, picture postcards, and signed photographs of Delait sporting her beard.

By this time, people and the press from all over Europe were regularly visiting Delait’s café to meet her. Invitations were pouring in, begging Delait to take part in overseas exhibits and carnivals. Although she was flattered, Delait took too much pride in her café to leave and was too devoted to her husband, especially when he became weak in health.

Madame Delait, the bearded lady of Plombières. Photo by Scherr CC BY 4.0
Madame Delait, the bearded lady of Plombières. Photo by Scherr CC BY 4.0

 

Madame Delait, the bearded lady of Plombières. Photo by Scherr CC BY 4.0
Madame Delait, the bearded lady of Plombières. Photo by Scherr CC BY 4.0

 

Madame Delait. Photo by Wellcome Images CC BY 4.0
Madame Delait. Photo by Wellcome Images CC BY 4.0

In her memoirs, she stated “It never entered my head that I could be nothing more than a female curiosity exhibited.” She went on to write “I was much more and much better than that.”

As time passed and with the success of her café, Delait pursued other hobbies and interests. During the Great War she worked as a volunteer nurse, regularly took part in outdoor cycling, and was a dog lover.

Possibly the same medical condition or hormonal imbalance that resulted in her ability to grow a beard, Delait wasn’t able to conceive children of her own. After 30 years of marriage, Delait and her husband adopted a 5-year-old girl who lost her parents to a Spanish flu.

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When Delait’s husband passed away in 1928, she finally accepted invitations to travel abroad. She spent her remaining years enjoying a quiet life of leisure and died in 1939. “Here lies Clementine Delait, the bearded lady” is carved as an epitaph on her tombstone as she requested. Delait’s memoir closes by her saying “My modest life was without reproach. I was held in esteem by all my compatriots.”

Kristin Thomas

Kristin Thomas is a freelance journalist currently residing in the port city of A Coruña, Spain. She studied Communications in California and has a keen interest in pre-1970s pop culture, history of occultism, and the obscure.