
why didn't the author give tarzan a beard?
After meeting local humans with smooth faces, Tarzan clocked his own scruff and thought, “Nope, this beard’s too ape-ish.” So, he grabbed a knife from his late dad’s cabin and scraped it off - calling it a “degrading emblem of apehood.” Who knew the jungle had such a strict dress code? Before humans entered the picture, Tarzan had zero reason to shave. Why bother when your only mirror is a gorilla glaring back at you? But once he saw his reflection, it was game over for the facial fuzz.











This has always been one of those curious inconsistencies I noticed growing up. Kow does someone raised in the wild manage to stay so clean-shaven? It really highlights how much storytelling choices are shaped by visual aesthetics rather than realism. From a biological standpoint, you'd expect at least some facial hair, especially if he’s supposed to be living entirely without grooming tools. I wonder if part of it was also a deliberate choice to keep Tarzan more universally appealing or to avoid aging his appearance. Do you think audiences today would accept a more rugged, bearded version of the character, or would that clash too much with the traditional image?
Yes Slavisa!
You've nailed it - they wanted him wild but not too wild. A full beard would've made him look way too scary, especially for family audiences back then when everyone was clean-cut.
These days people would probably prefer a bearded Tarzan - modern audiences like things that make sense. We're used to rugged characters now, so a bearded Tarzan would fit right in.
The MaleSuave Team
Hello,
Thinking back to the 1960's, no one had beards, it just didn't happen, period. I mean if Walt Disney said no to beards, then that was gospel. Walt Disney was one of the most influential people in North America. He was a creative genius and had Americans in the palm of his hand. There were a lot of things in the 60's that aren't around anymore. Cigarettes, all the cigarette ads on tv, everyone including, unfortunately, kids knew all the jingles. And I might mention it is what killed Walt Disney at the end of 1966.
Then a lot of things changed, the summer of love was in 1967, and the long haired, bearded hippies came along. By the early to mid 70's, beards were becoming quite the thing. Spring break 1976 in Daytona Beach is where I grew mine, and to this day I still have one.
Okay, I have a couple of questions, why do you think Edgar Rice Burroughs made Tarzan clean-shaven while still giving him long hair? And how realistic is the idea that Tarzan could shave with a knife in the jungle without injuring himself?
Thank you,
Mark
Hey Mark,
That's a really good point about Disney's influence back then. The whole era was different like that.
About your questions - I think Burroughs wanted Tarzan to look wild with the long hair but still handsome and noble with the clean-shaven face. They wanted him to appeal to readers, so made him seem 'civilised' even though he grew up deep inside the jungle.
As for actually shaving with a knife out there? There's literally no way that's realistic. You'd slice yourself up trying that, especially without a mirror, or any kind of prep or technique. We just have to suspend disbelief on that one.
That's so cool that you've had your beard since '76 - that's serious commitment!
The MaleSuave Team
I can not take part now in discussion - it is very occupied. But I will soon necessarily write that I think.
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