LOS
ANGELES: Spoony Singh, who once said he founded the world
famous Hollywood Wax Museum to give tourists who couldn’t find any
real celebrities in Hollywood the next best thing, has died. He was
83. Singh died on Wednesday at his Malibu home of congestive heart
failure, his family announced Friday. It was while touring Hollywood
looking for famous faces in 1964 that Singh thought of the museum.
The closest he came to spotting a celebrity was seeing stars’
footprints in the courtyard of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on
Hollywood Boulevard.
“So, I thought, let’s bring the stars back to
Hollywood Boulevard. Let’s allow people to get close and look into
the eyes of their favourite entertainers,” he recalled years later.
“Believe me, I didn’t know if it would even work.”People lined up
for half a mile waiting to get in when the museum opened on February
26, 1965. The nearly 200 figures of Hollywood stars have changed
over the years as their fame has ebbed and flowed. Marilyn Monroe,
however, has remained a perennial favourite.Singh shrugged off
critics who called the museum cheesy over the years. “I know other
museums are more stately and artistic,” he told the Los Angeles
Times in 1970. “But on Hollywood Boulevard, dignity kind of gets
lost in the shuffle.” He helped develop the Hollywood Guinness World
Records Museum, which opened in 1991, and another Hollywood Wax
Museum, which opened in Branson in 1996.