Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jeanette Schmid

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Birth name
  
Rudolf Schmid

Years active
  
1945–2005

Instruments
  
Voice


Occupation(s)
  
whistler

Genres
  
whistling

Name
  
Jeanette Schmid

Jeanette Schmid Jeanette Schmid the Crossdressing Whistler Rogues Vagabonds

Also known as
  
Baroness Lips von Lipstrill

Born
  
6 November 1924 Volary, Sudetenland (
1924-11-06
)

Died
  
March 9, 2005, Vienna, Austria

Jeanette Schmid (6 November 1924 – 9 March 2005) was a professional transsexual whistler.

Life

Born Rudolf Schmid in Volary, Sudetenland (in what is now the Czech Republic), Schmid began to dress in feminine clothing at a young age and loved singing and dancing. Schmid did not fit in with the Nazi ideal of the Aryan male but enlisted in the Wehrmacht in 1941 and was posted to Udine, Italy until sent home due to typhoid fever.

As Czechoslovakians began to take revenge against Sudeten Germans at the end of the war, Schmid was forced to flee to Munich where she began a career as a female impersonator. She rapidly gained fame for her talent, bawdy material, and slinky outfits. The Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, and his wife Queen Soraya, saw Schmid perform in Hamburg and invited her to Tehran, but Schmid's material and dress were considered inappropriate by many in Iran, and she was forced to devise a new routine. She instead whistled a Strauss polka and Offenbach's "Barcarole" for the Shah and his court.

Following her Iran performance, Schmid toured the world as a cross-dressing whistler, performing on stage with acts like Frank Sinatra, Édith Piaf and Marlene Dietrich while living in Cairo. In 1964, Schmid underwent sex reassignment surgery and changed her name to Jeanette. Schmid moved to Vienna, the world capital of whistling, to continue her whistling career.

Schmid continued to tour the world under the stage name Baroness Lips von Lipstrill, including a successful stint on Broadway. She was awarded the Austrian Decoration of Merit in Gold in 2004.

Schmid died in Vienna in 2005.

References

Jeanette Schmid Wikipedia