Sealo

Sealo

Birth : 1901-11-24, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Death : 1980-01-01

History

Stanley Berent, better known as Sealo the Seal Boy, was afflicted with phocomelia, in which his small hands grew directly from his shoulders. Literally "seal arms", phocomelia is most commonly associated with prenatal exposure to the morning-sickness drug Thalidomide, although Sealo was born years before Thalidomide was invented. Sealo's fingers were fully mobile and in his act, he sawed a board, shaved his face, and autographed his publicity photos. For tasks his hands couldn't reach, such as zipping up his pants, he used a stick with a hook. He had trouble getting up and down the stairs to the stage, so he spent most of the day onstage, selling pitch cards. He preferred sleeping in hotels and taking taxis to the showgrounds daily. In 1972, Sealo and Pete Terhurne, the fire-eating dwarf, successfully fought to overturn a Florida law that banned the exhibition of the physically handicapped. During his career, Sealo worked with almost every major sideshow in the United States, though he spent the longest time with Pete Cortes. Pete, like Sealo, loved to play cards. After 35 years in the sideshow business, Sealo retired to the International Independent Showmen's Association retirement center in Gibsonton, then returned to his hometown of Pittsburgh in the mid-1980s as his health began to decline. He died in a Catholic hospital and is buried in a Catholic cemetery.

Profile

Sealo

Movies

Sisters
Extra (uncredited)
Inquisitive journalist Grace Collier is horrified when she witnesses her neighbor, fashion model Danielle Breton, violently murder a man. Panicking, she calls the police. But when the detective arrives at the scene and finds nothing amiss, Grace is forced to take matters into her own hands. Her first move is to recruit private investigator Joseph Larch, who helps her to uncover a secret about Danielle's past that has them both seeing double.