
Roy Horn & white tiger Mantecore.
(Beth Clifton collage)
Illusionist Fischbacher, of Siegfried & Roy, created image of partner Horn as “positive reinforcement” trainer & conservationist
Both were role models for “Joe Exotic” et al
LAS VEGAS––Entertainer Siegfried Fischbacher, 81, died of pancreatic cancer on January 14, 2021, at the Las Vegas home he had shared with Roy Horn, his partner in life and performance, for nearly 50 years.
Roy Horn, 75, died on May 8, 2020 from complications of COVID-19. Siegfried & Roy show publicist Dave Kirvin told media that Horn died at the Mountain View Hospital in Las Vegas about a week after testing positive for COVID-19 infection.
The Siegfried & Roy illusion acts famously featured white tigers, pythons, and elephants,
Performing together since 1959, Siegfried & Roy were the evident inspirations for a generation of white tiger breeders, exhibitors, and would-be media stars, including “Joe Exotic” and “Doc” Antle, featured in the six-part March/April 2020 Netflix “reality” series Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem, & Madness, directed by Eric Goode and Rebecca Chaiklin.
(See Carole Baskin & Big Cat Rescue win custody of “Tiger King” Joe Exotic’s tigers and Kevin “Doc” Antle’s secret life on the lam from Iowa.)

Roy Horn and Siegfried Fischbacher
Tiger act bought $10 million home in Las Vegas
Siegfried & Roy “toured Europe, Japan and other venues,” recalled New York Times obituarist Robert D. McFadden, “ and were featured in a 1999 3D Imax movie, a 1994 television special, and at Radio City Music Hall in New York. They broke records for the longest-running act in Las Vegas, and were among the most popular and highest paid performers on the Strip. They also wrote a book, Siegfried & Roy: Mastering the Impossible (1992).
“Horn and Fischbacher,” McFadden wrote, “who were domestic as well as professional partners, kept their menageries, including dozens of exotic cats, at a glass-enclosed tropically forested habitat at the Mirage [hotel and casino]; at Jungle Paradise, their 88-acre estate outside of town; and at Jungle Palace, their $10 million Spanish-style home in Las Vegas.”
McFadden recalled that Horn and Fischbacher, “acknowledging that their acts depended on some endangered species, were prominent in various animal conservation efforts, particularly for the white tiger, native to Asia, and the white lion of Timbavati, in South Africa. They raised many of their show animals from birth, and said they were not exploited and were never tranquilized.”
Exhibit A for banning white tiger & lion breeding
But animal advocates, while conceding that Horn and Fischbacher may have treated their animals much more kindly than most animal-using entertainers, tend to have viewed those “conservation efforts” as mostly eyewash, meant to burnish the Siegfried & Roy show image.
A nine-member coalition, headed by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, on May 19, 2017 formally petitioned the USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service to initiate the federal rulemaking process to make breeding either white tigers or lion/tiger hybrids, as Siegfried & Roy did to maintain their menagerie, a violation of the Animal Health Protection Act of 2002 and the Animal Welfare Act of 1966.
Charged the petitioners to the USDA, which never acted in response, “Despite the known risks and lack of conservation value associated with breeding to create white tigers, exhibitors like Siegfried & Roy continue to mislead the public into believing that they are a rare subspecies rather than a genetic anomaly. Siegfried & Roy have had as many as 58 white tigers in their inventory at one time. The pair continue to breed to create white tigers for exhibition at Siegfried & Roy’s Secret Garden at the Mirage in Las Vegas.”

(Beth Clifton collage)
Petition spotlighted “Joe Exotic” years before Netflix
The PETA-led petition to the USDA also described the activities of many other white tiger and lion/tiger hybrid breeders.
“In Oklahoma, exhibitor Joe Schreibvogel,” also known as Joseph Maldonado and now as Tiger King star ‘Joe Exotic,’ “sells white tigers, ligers, liligers, and tiligers to private owners and exhibitors all over the country,” the petition to the USDA alleged.
U.S. District Court Judge Scott Palk on January 23, 2020 sentenced “Joe Exotic” to serve 22 years in prison for having solicited the murder of Big Cat Rescue founder Carole Baskin in 2018.
Convicted of the murder plot in April 2019, “Joe Exotic” was convicted at the same time of nine counts of violating the Endangered Species Act, by shotgunning five tigers in October 2017 and by illegally offering tiger cubs for sale between November 2016 and March 2018.
The PETA-led petition also spotlighted “Bhagavan ‘Doc’ Antle, also featured in The Tiger King, whose South Carolina roadside zoo, like the facilities formerly owned by “Joe Exotic,” has a long history of Animal Welfare Act violations.
“Antle takes his experiments to a whole new level,” the petitioners charged, “by breeding to create hybrid white ligers.”

Roy Horn & his mother, circa 1950.
Siegfried & Roy act originated in post-World War II Germany
Horn and Fischbacher, by contrast, have been widely credited with helping to popularize “positive reinforcement” animal training, but may also have done more to popularize and promote traffic in white tigers, developing the market served by “Joe Exotic,” Antle, and others, than all previous white tiger breeders combined.
Wrote McFadden, “Roy Uwe Ludwig Horn was born on October 3, 1944, in Nordenham, Germany, near Bremen. Like Fischbacher, who was five years older and raised in Rosenheim, a village in Bavaria, Horn grew up in the turmoil of wartime and postwar Germany. While Fischbacher was drawn to magic, Horn was taken with animals, including his wolf-dog Hexe, and a cheetah, Chico, at a zoo in Bremen where the boy took an after-school job feeding animals and cleaning cages.”
Horn, at age 13, in 1957 became a cabin boy on a German cruise ship, the T.S. Bremen.

Roy Horn (left) with Chico the cheetah and Siegfried Fischbacher, 1966.
Cheetah named Chico
Continued McFadden, “Fischbacher, a steward, was entertaining passengers with magic tricks, and Horn caught his act.”
Born in Rosenheim, Germany, on June 13, 1939, Fischbacher at age eight saw a book on magic tricks in a shop window.
“My eye caught something in the window; it was a book on magic,” Fischbacher recalled on the Siegfried & Roy web site. “I knew I had to have it. I can’t explain, even now, why that was. All that stood in the way was five marks––for me a fortune, a fortune for any little boy in Germany in 1947.”
As he walked away, Fischbacher continued, he found five marks on the sidewalk and immediately returned to buy the book.
Aboard the T.S. Bremen, Fischbacher soon enlisted Horn as his assistant for a stage show.
Eventually Horn asked, “Siegfried, disappearing rabbits is ordinary, but can you make a cheetah disappear?” Horn said.
Responded Fischbacher, “In magic, anything is possible.”
Horn had smuggled the cheetah Chico aboard the ship in a laundry bag, but keeping the cheetah concealed was difficult. Siegfried developed an illusion routine featuring Chico, providing a pretext for Chico being there.
Siegfried and Roy performed at a variety of venues in Germany and Switzerland before mostly small crowds until in 1966 Princess Grace of Monaco saw them at a charity performance in Monte Carlo “and gave them a rave notice,” recounted McFadden.
“A rush of publicity ensued. Adding animals and tricks, they were soon playing nightclubs in Paris and other European cities. They made their Las Vegas debut at the Tropicana in 1967,” McFadden continued, “and by the early 1970s, having made Las Vegas their base, they were under contract at the MGM Grand.”
Money made the tigers go around
Moving to the Frontier Hotel in 1981, Siegfried & Roy during the next seven years performed before three million people there.
“In 1987,” McFadden summarized, “they signed a five-year $57.5 million contract with Steve Wynn, owner of the planned $640 million Mirage casino-hotel, a deal Variety called the largest in show business history. It included $40 million more for a new theater for the show,” plus the $18 million Secret Garden animal habitat.
Headliners at the Mirage from 1990 to 2003, adding white tigers to the act in 1995 after purchasing a pair from the Cincinnati Zoo, Siegfried & Roy at peak performed before 400,000 people a year, generating $44 million in revenue.

Former Siegfried & Roy trainer Chris Lawrence was onstage with Roy Horn during 2003 attack. (NBC News photo)
Birthday attack stopped the show
That ended abruptly on Horn’s 59th birthday in 2003. Midway through a solo show with a seven-year-old white tiger named Mantecore, the tiger refused to lie down on command. Horn rapped Mantecore on the nose with his microphone. Mantecore swiped at Horn’s arm. Horn stumbled. Mantecore seized Horn by the neck, crushing his windpipe, and dragged Horn off stage as Horn tried to beat him away with the microphone.
Forced to suspend the Siegfried & Roy shows, the Mirage laid off 267 workers, but continued to house the Siegfried & Roy animals, including Mantecore, at the Secret Garden.
Horn and Fischbacher contended that Mantecore “had been unhinged by a woman in the front row with a beehive hairdo,” McFadden recalled, and after Horn tripped, “picked him up by the neck, as a tigress might a cub, attempting to carry him to safety.”
The USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service, however, “discounted all such theories and called it a simple attack by the tiger,” McFadden noted.

A white tiger at Big Cat Rescue. (Beth Clifton photo)
“Treating the cats like props”
Former Siegfried & Roy trainer Chris Lawrence, 46, in March 2019 gave a different explanation to The Hollywood Reporter.
“Many of the handlers thought that Roy was treating the cats more like props than he was respecting them for who they were,” Lawrence told The Hollywood Reporter.
Lawrence claimed that he himself “actually talked Roy into using the tiger that would ultimately maul him and end the most successful stage show in the history of Las Vegas.”
Said Lawrence, “What Roy did was, instead of walking Mantecore in a circle, as was usually done, he just used his arm to steer him right back into his body, in a pirouette motion. Mantecore’s face was right in (Horn’s) midsection. Roy not following the correct procedure fed into confusion and rebellion.”
Lawrence tried unsuccessfully to lure Mantecore away from Roy with raw meat, but was knocked down, along with Roy.

Bengali the tiger keeps on coming, with a red rubber ball rising like the morning sun behind him. (Carole Baskin photo)
Oldest Siegfried & Roy tiger died at Big Cat Rescue
Siegfried & Roy, with Mantecore, performed only once more together, for a cancer charity benefit in 2009.
Wrote Las Vegas Review-Journal reporter Mike Weatherford then, “Siegfried Fischbacher and Horn were trying to figure out when and how to bow out gracefully even before the accident that put an abrupt end to their show. The Mirage hit had been running for thirteen and a half years and 5,750 performances. Horn had just celebrated his 59th birthday. Fischbacher had already passed 60.”
Mantecore died on March 19, 2014, at age 17––old for a tiger, but not nearly the oldest of the tigers Siegfried & Roy bred.
That tiger, 21 or 22 years of age, either way one of the half dozen oldest tigers on record, and one of two tigers within that elite half dozen to share the name Bengali, died on May 31, 2016 at Big Cat Rescue on the outskirts of Tampa, Florida. Siegfried & Roy had sold him to a circus. The circus retired him to Big Cat Rescue in 2000.

(Beth Clifton collage)
Another former Siegfried & Roy tiger, Sarmoti, acquired at the same time, died at Big Cat Rescue at age 20 in 2013.
Sarmoti, Big Cat Rescue founder Carole Baskin told ANIMALS 24-7, “is an acronym for Siegfried And Roy, Masters Of The Impossible.”
(See A tale of two of the world’s oldest tigers, both named Bengali.)
While never condoning or supporting the breeding of exploitation of white tigers or members of any other species, I will be forever grateful to Roy Horn for speaking up in defense of Mantecore, and for the kindness and compassion he and Siegfried Fischbacher did show to the cats in their care. He will be missed. Sharing to socials in sorrow. RIP Roy Horn.
While Siegfried and Roy were among Las Vegas’ most iconic residents and our community was saddened by their deaths, animal welfare advocates realize the influence they had on entertainers who have tried to emulate them by exploiting exotics and apex predators. Their shows did not help discourage private ownership of wild animals, unfortunately. And while they hopefully cared enough and had the resources to make appropriate arrangements for the ongoing care of their animals in the event of their deaths, the majority of other wild animal owners do not. If anything, their deaths should be raising the question of what happens to these animals once the owners pass. Sanctuaries can’t absorb them all and they cannot be released back into the wild. Some will end up at roadside attractions or live out the remainder of their sad lives chained up in a dark basement or warehouse until they die. These are the sad facts that the majority of the public is not aware of when they purchase those tickets and applaud the acts.
Sharing previous poster Annoula’s concern about the cats who survive; praying they will be adopted by accredited sanctuaries and able to live their lives in good care and without exploitation.
RIP Siegfriend Fishbacher, reunited with his partner Roy Horn. May their legacy ultimately be one of better care for big cats, who certainly deserve our respect and protection. I have been advocating for passage of the Big Cat Public Safety Act since its inception, and encourage readers to contact their legislators to strongly encourage passage.