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The Washington Times Online Edition

Stars arrive in the buff

To create likenesses from Thomas Jefferson to Johnny Depp and Beyonce Knowles, sculptors "had to bone up on American history."To create likenesses from Thomas Jefferson to Johnny Depp and Beyonce Knowles, sculptors “had to bone up on American history.”

(AP) — Madonna, Tom Cruise, Samuel L. Jackson and Angelina Jolie have arrived in the District, where they”ll be among the stars of a big new attraction. One snag — they don”t yet have any clothes.

Dozens of naked bodies — all made of wax and fiberglass — lined the walls of a studio Wednesday at the newest Madame Tussauds wax museum as workers prepare for its opening next month. Mr. Cruise was only recognizable by a label on his bare shoulder — his head was still in a box — but designers promised to give him a dashing wardrobe soon.

“We fast-tracked all these figures to have them ready for the opening,” said Janine DiGioacchino, general manager for Madame Tussauds in New York and Washington. “Our studio team of 35 sculptors are working 24 hours, around the clock to get them done.”

The entertainment group”s seventh wax museum — its third in the United States after New York and Las Vegas — is starting to take shape in the lower level of the Woodward & Lothrop department-store building downtown. An opening gala is set for Oct. 4, and it opens to the public Oct. 5.

A shipment of 51 figures arrived at the museum this week after months of research and meticulous design at Tussauds” London headquarters.

Many figures, such as Thomas Jefferson and Johnny Depp, have full heads of human hair, inserted strand by strand into the wax sculpture.

“We had to bone up on our American history. We want the figures to be spot on,” said Lisa Partridge, a hair-color artist and 15-year veteran of Tussauds. “Jefferson had freckles. He was quite a redhead. Not many people knew that.”

The sculptures require touch-ups every day, after visitors feel the hair or get even more intimate.

“Sometimes we have to remove lipstick marks from some of the more popular figures,” Miss Partridge said. “The George Clooneys get a lot of attention from women who touch them and kiss them.”

Six new figures were made especially for the new, $16 million museum: Jefferson, President Truman, Robert E. Lee, J. Edgar Hoover, Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward and D.C. Council member Marion Barry.

The four-term mayor, famous for being caught on videotape at a downtown hotel smoking crack cocaine in an FBI sting, did a sitting for museum artists over the summer. Contrary to early talk, Mr. Barry won’t be placed in the museum’s “scandal room” with the likes of Mr. Hoover and President Nixon. Instead he’ll join George Washington in one of the first rooms, known as the “Spirit of Washington.”

“I’d not heard of [Mr. Barry] before, but he seems to love the limelight,” said sculptor Dave Burks, who took nearly 200 measurements of Mr. Barry’s head to design his figure. “He seemed to really enjoy it.”

Like so many attractions in Washington, politics and history are at the museum’s core. President Lincoln greets visitors at the entrance — just a block from where he was fatally shot at Ford’s Theatre. From there, guests will pay the admission — about $25 — to see more.

Each figure has a caption with a quote from the subject, some fun facts and the essential thing to know about that person.

“It’s not like we’re a museum in the fact that we’re worthy and there’s loads of stuff to get through,” said creative director Paul Williams. “It’s more like we’re entertaining people, and we’re giving them the facts, the fun stuff they can take back and say ‘Hey did you know this?’ ”

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