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The Curse of the Crying Boy
Posted on Tuesday, July 29, 2008 (CDT) by Thoth
Ancient curses invoked by tomb-raiders have remained a popular theme in fiction and folklore for centuries. However, belief in cursed objects is not confined to legends surrounding Egyptian relics, or to the stories of MR James. In the modern world, there are many who believe they have personally experienced uncanny phenomena as a result of contact with a cursed artefact.
Portraits or human likenesses, whether carved or painted, are frequently the focus of this type of legend. In recent years, stories of bad luck and misfortune have grown up around certain artefacts that are presumed to have had ritual or magical functions, some of which are apparently quite recent in origin.
In folk belief, the notion that a picture falling from a wall is an omen of impending death – particularly if it is a portrait – remains one of the most widespread modern superstitions. Similarly, eerie portraits whose eyes “seem to follow you wherever you go” have become a staple scene-setter in numerous horror flicks. Folklore is not static, but active and dynamic – especially when it invokes latent beliefs rooted in older superstitions.
And so we
find that fear and anxiety continue to surround an eerie portrait that
has, quite literally, blazed a trail across the British Isles and
around the world in the space of two decades.
The Coming of the Curse
‘The Curse of the Crying
Boy’ appeared out of the blue one morning in 1985. The Sun, at that
time the most popular tabloid newspaper in the English-speaking world,
published on page 13 of its 4 September edition a story headlined:
“Blazing Curse of the Crying Boy”. It told how Ron and May Hall blamed
a cheap painting of a toddler with tears rolling down his face for a
fire which gutted their terraced council home in Rotherham, a mining
town in South Yorkshire. The blaze broke out in a chip-pan in the
kitchen of their home of 27 years and spread rapidly. But although the
downstairs rooms of the house were badly damaged, the framed print of
the Crying Boy escaped unscathed. It continued to hang there,
surrounded by a scene of devastation.
Normally a chip-pan blaze
would merit nothing more than a couple of paragraphs in a local
newspaper. What transformed this story into a page lead in Britain’s
leading tabloid was the intervention of Ron Hall’s brother Peter, a
firefighter based in Rotherham. A colleague of Peter’s, station officer
Alan Wilkinson, said he knew of numerous other cases where prints of
the ‘Crying Boy’ had turned up, undamaged, in the ruins of homes
destroyed by fires.
Accompanying the article
was a photograph of a ‘Crying Boy’, with the caption: “Tears for fears…
the portrait that firemen claim is cursed.” The firemen concerned had
not actually used the word ‘cursed’, but nevertheless the newspaper
report had helped to give the story a certain level of credibility. The
paper added that an estimated 50,000 ‘Crying Boy’ prints, signed ‘G
Bragolin’, had been sold in branches of British department stores,
particularly in the working class areas of northern England. Examples
could be seen hanging in the front rooms of family homes across the
nation, and one story even suggested a quarter of a million had been
sold.
The Terror of the Tabloids
The mass media play a
crucial role in creating and spreading modern folklore. Stories like
the ‘Crying Boy’ behave much like a virus when they take root in the
popular imagination. Furthermore, tabloid news values and the priority
given to providing a ‘good story’ frequently override accuracy and
scepticism, particularly where uncanny or supernatural events are
concerned.
Peter Chippindale and Chris
Horrie in their warts-and-all history of The Sun, entitled Stick it up
your Punter! (1990), credit legendary editor Kelvin MacKenzie as the
father of the ‘Crying Boy’ curse. During the mid-80s, The Sun was
engaged in a battle for readers with its Fleet Street rival the Daily
Mirror. It was also responsible for publishing a series of horrific and
bizarre stories with tenuous origins, of which some – such as ‘Freddie
Starr Ate My Hamster’ – earned a permanent place in pop culture. The
Crying Boy arrived at a time when MacKenzie was on the look-out for
what journalists call ‘a great splash’, which for him meant an
exclusive story that none of his rivals would dream of publishing
first. MacKenzie’s genius was to spot the potential ‘splash’ buried in
routine copy from a regional news agency. He announced confidently to
his staff: “This one’s got legs,” his phrase for a story that would
‘run and run’.
On 5 September 1985, The
Sun ran its follow-up, reporting that scores of “horrified readers
claiming to be victims of the ‘Curse of the Crying Boy’ had flooded
[the paper] with calls… they all feared they were jinxed by having the
print of a tot with tears pouring down his face in their homes.”
Readers were left with an overwhelming impression of a supernatural
link, reinforced by the use of words like ‘curse’, ‘jinx’, ‘feared’ and
‘horrified’.
Typical of these additional
stories was that told by Dora Mann, from Mitcham, Surrey, who claimed
her house was gutted just six months after she bought a print of the
painting. “All my paintings were destroyed – except the one of the
Crying Boy,” she claimed. Sandra Kaske, of Kilburn, North Yorkshire,
said that she, her sister-in-law, and a friend had all suffered
disastrous fires since they acquired copies. Another family, from
Nottingham, blamed the print for a blaze which had left them homeless.
Brian Parks, whose wife and three children needed treatment for smoke
inhalation, said he had destroyed his copy after returning from
hospital to find it hanging – undamaged, of course – on the blackened
wall of his living room.
As the stories accumulated,
new details emerged that encouraged the idea that possession of a print
put owners at risk of fire or serious injury. One woman from London
claimed she had seen her print “swing from side to side” on the wall,
while another from Paignton said her 11-year-old son had “caught his
private parts on a hook” after she bought the picture. Mrs Rose
Farrington of Preston, in a letter published by The Sun, wrote: “Since
I bought it in 1959, my three sons and my husband have all died. I’ve
often wondered if it had a curse.”
Another reader reported an
attempt to destroy two of the prints by fire – only to find, to her
horror, that they would not burn. Her claim was tested by security
guard Paul Collier, who tossed one of his two prints onto a bonfire.
Despite being left in the flames for an hour, it was not even scorched.
“It was frightening – the fire wouldn’t even touch it,” he told The
Sun. “I really believe it is jinxed. We feel doubly at risk with two of
these in the house [and] we are determined to get rid of them.”
Firemen and Folklore
Collier’s story recalls the
comments of the firemen who, in the aftermath of house fires in
Rotherham, mentioned prints that had inexplicably escaped damage. The
real mystery, from their perspective, was how the pictures had survived
fires that were in themselves perfectly explicable. In most cases,
straightforward explanations of carelessly discarded cigarettes,
overheated chip-pans and faulty electric heaters had been found during
the subsequent fire service investigation.
Rotherham fire station
officer Alan Wilkinson who, it emerged, had personally logged 50
‘Crying Boy’ fires dating back to 1973, dismissed any connection with
the supernatural, having satisfied himself that most of them had been
caused by human carelessness. But despite his pragmatism, he could not
explain how the prints had survived infernos which generated heat
sufficient to strip plaster from walls. His wife had her own theory: “I
always say it’s the tears that put the fire out.” The Sun was not
interested in finding a rational explanation. It ignored Wilkinson’s
comments and claimed “fire chiefs have admitted they have no logical
explanation for a number of recent incidents.”
Soon afterwards, it emerged
that the ‘cursed’ prints were not all copies of the same painting, nor
were all the prints by the same artist. The picture that survived the
fire in Rotherham that initially triggered the scare was signed by the
artist G Bragolin. The Sun claimed the original was “by an Italian
artist”. In fact, Giovanni Bragolin was a pseudonym adopted by Spanish
painter Bruno Amadio, who is also known as ‘Franchot Seville’. Attempts
to trace him floundered as art historians said he did not appear to
have “a coherent biography”. To make matters more confusing, further
‘Crying Boys’ that had featured in the fires, part of a series of
studies called ‘Childhood’, were painted by Scottish artist Anna
Zinkeisen, who died in 1976. The only common denominator was that all
were examples of cheap, mass-produced prints sold in great numbers by
English department stores during the 1960s and 70s. The geographical
cluster simply reflected their popularity among working class
communities in that part of the North.
Despite being dismissed by
art critics as kitsch, ‘the Crying Boy’ remained an extremely popular
print, particularly for female owners. Examples existed in at least
five different variations. At least two of these had companion studies
of ‘Crying Girls’ – some people owned copies of both – and others in
the series included pictures of girls and boys holding flowers. In
defiance of the scare headlines, some owners had developed such an
emotional bond with the prints that they refused to dispose of them.
“I’ve never cared for the picture myself because of its sadness,” the
partner of one proud owner was quoted as saying. He then went on to
pose two questions which many anxious Sun readers wanted answered: “Why
would you want a picture of a child crying? Why was the child crying?”
Naturally, journalists
turned to experts in the field of folklore and the occult for an
explanation. When one approached Folklore Society member Georgina
Boyes, the interview floundered when she refused to provide a suitably
Satanic explanation. Consequently, the journalist concerned “went off
in search of ‘a witch’ or ‘somebody into the occult’ who might make a
better headline”. Then Roy Vickery, secretary of the Folklore Society,
was quoted to the effect that the original artist might have mistreated
the child model in some way, adding: “All these fires could be the
child’s curse, his way of getting revenge.”
A print of Zenkeisen’s
Crying Boy became the centre of the next ‘mysterious fire’ reported by
The Sun. This destroyed a council house in Rotherham, which had emerged
not only as the geographical location of many of the reported fires,
but also as the source of the whole phenomenon. The same story quoted a
Fire Brigade spokesman reassuring owners of the print that although
there was no “cause for alarm… these incidents are becoming more
frequent”.
The widespread anxiety this
story generated led South Yorkshire Fire Service to issue a statement
which aimed to debunk the connection between the fires and the prints.
It pointed out that the most recent blaze was started by an electric
fire left too close to a bed. Chief Divisional Officer Mick Riley said
a large number of the prints had been sold and “any connection with the
fires is purely coincidental… fires are not started by pictures or
coincidence, but by careless acts and omissions.” Riley then revealed
the service’s own explanation: “The reason why this picture has not
always been destroyed in the fire is because it is printed on high
density hardboard, which is very difficult to ignite.”
The Bonfire of the Boys
The Fire Service’s
statement failed to have much effect in dousing the flames that The Sun
was happily stoking. Soon afterwards, news came of a Crying Boy that
had survived a fire which gutted an Italian restaurant in Great
Yarmouth. “Enough is enough, folks,” MacKenzie told his readers: “If
you are worried about a Crying Boy picture hanging in YOUR home, send
it to us immediately. We will destroy it for you – and that should see
the back of any curse.”
According to Chippindale
and Horrie’s account, “worried readers rang in to ask if they should
get rid of their copy to stop their houses burning down. ‘Sure,’
MacKenzie replied. ‘Send them in – we’ll do the job for you.’ Bouverie
Street was swamped… the Crying Boys were soon stacked 12ft (3.7m) high
in the newsroom, spilling out of cupboards, and entirely filling a
little-used interview room.”
Until then, MacKenzie’s
staff couldn’t work out how much credence their boss attached to the
story. When the assistant editor took down a picture of Churchill,
which had been hanging on the newsroom wall since the Falklands War,
and replaced it with a Crying Boy, the mystery was resolved:
“MacKenzie, bustling into the newsroom at his normal half-run, stopped
dead in his tracks and went white. ‘Take that down,’ he snapped. ‘I
don’t like it. It’s bad luck.’”
Fireman Alan Wilkinson
reacted in a similar fashion when his colleagues presented him with a
framed Crying Boy on his retirement from the brigade. Like Kelvin
MacKenzie, he denied being superstitious, but nevertheless immediately
returned the painting, saying: “No thanks, you can keep it.” Similarly,
Chief Officer Mick Riley, who was responsible for the statement
debunking the ‘curse’, wouldn’t accept a copy of the print as a gift,
saying his wife “wouldn’t like it; it wouldn’t fit in”. Interviewed by
his local paper, Wilkinson admitted that he had been presented with
another Crying Boy print by a worried woman who turned up at his home
one night. He took it to work “as a joke” and mounted it on the office
wall of the fire station. Within days, he was ordered by his superiors
to take it down. Heaping irony upon comedy, the story continued: “The
same day, an oven in the upstairs kitchen overheated and the firemen’s
dinners were burned.”
Kelvin MacKenzie faced a
similar dilemma. At the end of his six week ‘Crying Boy’ campaign, the
editor of The Sun had to dream up a suitable way of disposing of 2,500
copies of the print that readers had sent in. His initial plan to burn
them on the roof of the paper’s Bouverie Street offices was vetoed by
both the London and Thames Valley fire brigades. Both refused to
co-operate and denounced the whole campaign “as a cheap publicity
stunt”. The reasons for their reluctance were becoming clear. It
emerged that nationally the fire service had been the focus of hundreds
of calls and visits by anxious owners who believed the prints were
cursed, or that they were made of a dangerous flammable material.
Eventually, reporter Paul
Hooper, with photographers and Page Three girls in tow, left the
paper’s Bouverie Street HQ with two van-loads of prints ready for
burning on a makeshift pyre near Reading. The Sun splashed the story –
appropriately on Hallowe’en – under the headline: “Sun nails curse of
the weeping boy for good.” A photograph depicted a scantily-clad “red
hot Page Three beauty Sandra Jane Moore” feeding the bonfire as bemused
firemen looked on.
The Hallowe’en burning was
widely believed to have exorcised the ‘curse of the Crying Boy’, and
the number of tabloid stories began to decrease. But in March the
following year, a columnist in the Western Morning News pointed out
that the industrial turmoil faced by News International (owners of The
Sun), involving strikes and violent picketing at their new Fort Wapping
production plant, began shortly after the paper’s bonfire. Poking fun
at its Fleet Street rival, the paper implied the jinx so feared by
Kelvin MacKenzie had finally been visited upon its creator.
From Tabloid Tale to Urban Legend
As tabloid interest waned,
‘Crying Boy’ stories began to morph into a modern legend. New versions
appeared, including one which suggested those who were kind to the
prints were rewarded with good luck. Another was the idea that placing
a picture of the ‘Crying Girl’ next to that of the Crying Boy would
bring good luck. What the story lacked was a satisfying narrative
explaining how the print came to be an ignition source. Soon, that
story would be supplied and the arrival of the Internet would provide
the legend with a new lease of life independent of the print media
which originally set it running.
One web-source claims that
during the 1990s Crying Boy fires began to be reported for the first
time from other parts of the world. It also reflects how the basic
‘cursed painting’ motif was being moulded by professional story-tellers
and paranormal investigators for a new audience: “A medium claims the
spirit of the boy is trapped in the painting and it starts fires in an
attempt to burn the painting and free itself. Others claim the painting
is haunted or attracts poltergeist activity. Stories of the artist’s
and subject’s misfortune had attached themselves to the painting.”
The notion that the ‘Crying
Boy’ had been badly treated by the artist was gaining popularity. Few
cared that there were several different paintings and artists, or that
this idea began life as a throwaway remark offered to The Sun a decade
earlier. In 2000, Tom Slemen revived the story in book form as part of
his Haunted Liverpool series of largely unreferenced books. Like many
others in this genre, the stories they contain are presented in an
entertaining, narrative style which appeals to a mass readership. In
his entry on ‘The Crying Boy Jinx’ Slemen states as fact that the “head
of the Yorkshire Fire Brigade” had told newspapers that the Crying Boy
print had turned up in the rubble of houses that had “mysteriously
burnt to the ground”. According to Slemen, when journalists asked him
if he believed the picture was evil, “the fire chief refused to
comment.”
This factually incorrect
account introduced the narrative which followed, finally explaining why
the picture was evil. The story was uncovered by “a well respected
researcher into occult matters, a retired schoolmaster from Devon named
George Mallory” in 1995. Mallory traced the artist who had painted the
original, “an old Spanish portrait artist named Franchot Seville, who
lives in Madrid”. Seville, as astute readers will recognise, was one of
the pseudonyms used by Bruno Amadio, otherwise known as ‘G Bragolin’
whose signature appeared on some of the prints. So far so good.
According to Slemen,
Seville/Amadio/Bragolin told Mallory the subject of the paintings was a
little street urchin he had found wandering around Madrid in 1969. He
never spoke, and had a very sorrowful look in his eyes. Seville painted
the boy, and a Catholic priest identified him as Don Bonillo, a child
who had run away after seeing his parents die in a blaze. “The priest
told the artist to have nothing to do with the runaway, because
wherever he settled, fires of unknown origin would mysteriously break
out; the villagers called him ‘Diablo’ because of this.” Nevertheless,
the painter ignored the priest’s advice and adopted the boy. His
portraits sold well but one day his studio was destroyed by fire and
the artist was ruined. He accused the little boy of arson and Bonillo
ran off – naturally in tears – and was never seen again. The story
continued: “From all over Europe came the reports of the unlucky Crying
Boy paintings causing blazes. Seville was also regarded as a jinx, and
no one commissioned him to paint, or would even look at his paintings.
In 1976, a car exploded into a fireball on the outskirts of Barcelona
after crashing into a wall. The victim was charred beyond recognition,
but part of the victim’s driving licence in the glove compartment was
only partly burned. The name on the licence was one 19-year-old Don
Bonillo.”
Could this be the same
orphan the villagers knew as ‘Diablo’? In Wild Talents, Charles Fort
referred to such people as fire genii – “[B]y genius I mean one who
can’t avoid knowledge of fire, because he can’t avoid setting things
afire.” While the existence of some fire starters, such as the
telekinetic medium Nina Kulagina, is well documented, this was not the
case with Don Bonillo. The source of Slemen’s story is unknown and the
mysterious ‘George Mallory’ proves to be as untraceable as ‘Franchot
Seville’ or ‘Giovanni Bragolin’.
The appearance of the Don
Bonillo story completes the metamorphosis of the ‘curse of the Crying
Boy’ from tabloid obscurity to a fully fledged urban legend accessible
to anyone via the world wide web. The lack of any factual basis for the
Bonillo legend has done nothing to erode its popularity.
The Crying Boy Returns
In 2002, I was invited to
comment on the story for an episode of the reality TV series, Scream
Team. Inspired by the success of Most Haunted, this plucked six young
people from hundreds of hopefuls, then sent them out in a large silver
bus to travel around the British Isles investigating legends, curses
and ‘haunted places’. The premise was to encourage the sceptics and
believers in the group to resolve each puzzle by drawing upon the
expertise of assorted ‘experts’.
For the ‘Curse of the
Crying Boy’, the team was dispatched to Wigan, Lancashire, where the
owners of a transport café, Eddie and Marian Brockley, had recently
suffered a disastrous fire. The local media had linked this to what
they claimed was “one of the last surviving copies” of the print. It
had survived the café blaze and remained hanging on the blackened wall,
untouched by smoke or fire. Eddie, it emerged, was a typically bluff
northern pragmatist. He believed the link was pure coincidence, but his
wife was less certain. She had heard of similar fires associated with
the Crying Boy and refused to allow the offending print – a Zinkeisen –
back into the café.
Although the couple were
largely ambivalent about the idea of a curse, they played along with
the TV show’s plan. Then along came the sceptical journalist who did
his best to place the story in its true context. My contribution,
provided over a hearty full English breakfast, summarised the various
stories surrounding the print that were circulating on the Internet,
including Tom Slemen’s account of the infant fire-starter. There was no
factual evidence, I explained, that ‘Don Bonillo’ actually existed;
rather the story itself was a classic example of an urban legend
created by a newspaper, and spread by the Internet.
Inevitably, the next expert
introduced to the team was a trance medium whose task was to ‘tune in’
to the painting about whose history, viewers were assured, she knew
absolutely nothing. Nevertheless, within minutes she was able to divine
not only a direct link between the painting and an artist who lived in
Spain, but also a sensation of burning and visions of a car crash. She
was even able to name the little boy involved in the crash as “Din, Don
or Dan”. This was enough to convince the more superstitious members of
the team that there really was something in ‘the curse’.
The programme ended with
the team agreeing to destroy the Brockleys’ copy of the Crying Boy
outside the café in order to disperse any surviving evil influence it
might retain. The print was doused with petrol and attempts were made
to ignite it. Three attempts were made before the print finally
succumbed to the flames, to the great relief of the Scream Team.
The idea of the curse has
so much latent energy that my own interest in the legend has led me to
become the unwitting agent of its resurrection. Early last year, the
Sheffield Star carried a leading article on my research into the story
of the cursed painting. Soon afterwards, the paper – and my inbox – was
inundated with emails and letters from owners of surviving prints, many
of whom wanted me to remove them from their property. One reader, who
had just cleared his mother’s house, in which a Crying Boy was
discovered, wrote to say: “My wife will not have the picture in the
house. I have had to hang it in the garden shed with fire extinguishers
at the ready!”
Then, in July, The Star
announced that the curse had returned. A fire had gutted a house in
Rotherham – the very town where the legend began. The owner, Stan
Jones, claimed this was the latest of three separate house fires, each
of which had the picture hanging on a wall. He bought his copy for £2
at a market a decade ago and had become fond of it, but now he was
naturally having second thoughts. On the third occasion, Stan and
partner Michelle Houghton, who was heavily pregnant, narrowly escaped
death after falling asleep after leaving their supper cooking on a
grill. Stan raised the alarm and firefighters were able to reach his
unconscious partner just in time to revive her.
Meanwhile, discussion
boards across the world continue to debate the source of the ‘curse’
which animates the portraits. Prints occasionally turn up for sale on
eBay, while a Dutch ‘Crying Boy Fan Club’ website briefly appeared,
then disappeared, in 2006. A Google search throws up an intriguing
posting from Rodrigo Faria from Brazil, which attributes the painting
to the Spanish artist Giovanni Bragolin and adds that “feelings of
terror and illness are always associated with his paintings.” Faria
says the prints were popular in Brazil during the 1980s. “I’ve seen all
the 28 and I can assure you all of those paintings are representing
DEAD children,” he writes. “[They] are filled with [subliminal]
messages.”
Another Brazilian adds that
Bragolin appeared on a popular Brazilian TV channel where he admitted
making “an evil pact with the Devil” to sell his paintings. His advice
was: “PLEASE if you have one of these paintings, throw it away right
now.”
Like other enduring modern legends, the curse of the Crying Boy is alive and well… and looking for new victims.
Copyright: Fortean Times UK
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