MADAME TUSSAUDS
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This is the famous waxworks started by Madame Tussaud in 1835 which is now one of the most popular tourist attractions in London with over two million visitors a year. There are wax models of the famous and infamous from every walk of life. So whether you want to mingle with kings and queens or the latest pop stars, this is the place to go.

New models are being produced all the time while have-beens are quietly removed from display and put into storage. Over the years hundreds of celebrities have made their way to Madame Tussaud's 'stage door' to be received in the private studio where the sculptor makes precise measurements and photographs the subject's head from every possible angle.

Highlights include the Chamber of Horrors which is the home of many notorious figures such as Jack the Ripper and the Grand Hall where you will find all manner of celebs, from Bill Clinton to Michael Jackson and Pavarotti to Mandela. Another highlight is 'The Spirit of London' exhibition which covers a period of more than 400 years and spans London's history from Elizabethan times to the present day, capturing the essence of London's pomp and circumstance.

Sights, sounds and even smells combine to tell the colourful story of Britain's capital city to visitors travelling in cars specially designed to resemble London taxi-cabs but thankfully, without the drivers! Indeed, the cars were actually made by the same company who build real London taxis! Over 70 figures are involved in 'The Spirit of London' many of which are animated and fused with a host of special effects.

Before Madame Tussaud had established herself in London, her collection of wax figures toured all around the country in wagons and caravans. Her macabre collection of relics from the French Revolution, alongside portraits of torturers, villains and murderers, proved irresistible to the visiting public. To protect society ladies of a delicate temperament, the collection of unsavoury characters was kept distinct from the rest of the exhibition in an area known as 'The Separate Room'. In 1846 the satirical magazine, Punch, coined the term 'Chamber of Horrors'.

Open
Every day of the year except Christmas day, it should take you about two hours to get around the wholeplace. Adjoining Madame Tussaud's is the London Planetarium. If you want to make a day of it you can buy a combined ticket for both Tussauds and the Planetarium but beware that children under 5 are not admitted to the Planetarium.

Access
By Underground: Baker Street Station (Metropolitan, Circle, Jubilee, Bakerloo and Hammersmith & City Lines)
Buses: 13, 18, 27, 30, 74, 82, 113, 139, 159, 274

Hotels near Madame Tussauds, London NW1 offering Special Discount Rates
10 Manchester Street, 10 Manchester Street, Baker Street, London W1U 4DG
Blandford Hotel , 80 Chiltern Street, Baker Street, London W1M 1PS
Sherlock Holmes Hotel , 108 Baker Street, Baker Street, London W1U 6LB
St George Hotel , 49 Gloucester Place, Gloucester Place, London W1U 8JE
Millennium Hotel London Mayfair , Grosvenor Square, Grosvenor Square, London W1K 2HP
London Marriott Grosvenor Square Hotel , Grosvenor Square, London, W1K 6JP

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