Friday, March 11, 2016

The Flatbush years


One hundred years ago, Houdini returned home after an exhausting seven month coast to coast Vaudeville tour. But the New York home he returned to was not his famous brownstone at 278 W 113th Street in Harlem. It's not generally known, but Harry and Bess Houdini lived in Flatbush for 3 1/2 years between 1914 and 1918. In fact, it was in this Flatbush house at 394 East 21st Street (pictured above) that Houdini produced what today might be considered his single most important surviving artifact, but I will get to that.

When Houdini purchased his Harlem brownstone in 1904, it was to serve as a new Weiss family home and, primarily, a new home for his mother. At the time, Houdini was performing in Europe and only returned to New York for short periods. As a family home, 278 saw a steady rotation of resident Weisses (and Rahners). Houdini's brother Leopold even set up his radiology practice in the parlor.

When Cecelia Weiss died in 1913, Houdini was devastated and reportedly didn't like the memories that came with the house. At least that's the official story. Jon Oliver, who spoke with Harry Hardeen Jr., claims the real issue with 278 was that mama's corpse had been left inside the house for the week it took Houdini to return from Europe, and it had become uninhabitable (and unsellable). Whatever the truth, Houdini felt the need to escape.

Houdini's brother Dash, who performed as Hardeen, had purchased a home in Flatbush in 1912. Hardeen's pitchbook identified the address as 394 Kenmore Place, but in reality it was located at 394 East 21st Street. However, it was more house than Dash required (or could afford?) and in July 1914 he put an ad in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle looking to sublet the top floor:


The tenants Hardeen ended up with were the Houdinis. Houdini moved to 394 East 21st Street in September 1914. On his new stationary (rimmed in black to show he was in mourning) he wrote to a friend:

Click to enlarge.

The Flatbush house became the hub of activity during the years Houdini was land-locked in North America because of the war in Europe. It was during his time that Houdini began to build what he hoped would be one of the world's greatest dramatic collections, and the mounds of new material he acquired flooded into Flatbush. When Houdini met Harry Kellar in 1916, he invited him to the house where he showed off his collection and also amazing the great magician (according to Kellar himself) with card magic.

But it was on October 29th, 1914, that the Flatbush house became the sight of what might arguably be the single most important Houdini artifact of them all. It was here that Houdini used an Edison wax cylinder phonograph to record his voice, now the only recording of Houdini's voice in existence. While I can't say conclusively that he made the recording in the house itself, he identifies his location as "Flatbush, New York" and his sister Gladys is with him, so I'm thinking it's likely this was done at home.

The Houdinis (and, presumably, their many pets) lived on the top floor of 394 while the Hardeens (and their children) lived below. Was living in such close quarters a strain? Possibly. In his book, Houdini!!! The Career of Ehrich Weiss, Kenneth Silverman identifies a few cryptic references in Houdini letters and diaries that suggest tension. "I do not like atmosphere re certain things in Flatbush" Houdini wrote to Oscar Teale. And when Houdini was honored at an S.A.M. banquet, he noted curtly in his diary: "Dash and Elsie did not wish to go."

The shared residence also caused some amusing confusion. When Hardeen was arrested for speeding, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that it was Houdini who received the $25 fine. The paper later printed a retraction, quoting Houdini himself as saying that he had "never been arrested nor fined, and does not drive a motor car."

1929 map showing the location of 394.

Harry and Bess moved back to 278 in February 1918. His magic and drama collections alone filled six moving vans. Some of the papers mistakenly reported that Houdini had recently bought the house. Houdini transferred legal ownership of 278 to Bess on July 22, 1918. He would go on to make 278 the home that it really never was to him before.

Hardeen moved out of 394 in 1921, relocating a few blocks to 537 East 21st St. This would be the home he and Elise would live out the remainder of their lives.

Today a modern apartment block sits at the site of Houdini's forgotten Flatbush residence.



A very big thanks to Bill Mullins for his invaluable help in locating Hardeen's house and for the Brooklyn Eagle classified ad and map.

Also thanks to Joe Notaro of Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence and Jon Oliver. The Houdini Flatbush letter is reproduced from the collection of James Crossini on page 29 of The Illustrated Houdini Research Diary, Part 4: 1911 to 1915 by Frank Koval.

Related:

San Diego restaurant celebrates Houdini's birthday

San Diego's Grant Grill restaurant will host a special "Houdini's Birthday Dinner and March Magic Extravaganza" on Thursday, March 24 from 6 to 9 PM. Here are the details:


Expect the unexpected at this uniquely crafted culinary entertainment experience! Come one, come all and celebrate illusionist Harry Houdini's Birthday with an extraordinary night of fine dining and fun.

The March Magic Extravaganza is presented by San Diego's landmark Grant Grill restaurant at THE US GRANT Hotel in partnership with illusion sensation and certified sommelier, Ben Silver Magic.

Your night begins in the Lounge, sipping and savoring the surprising innovations from Grant Grill's molecular mixology and edible cocktail experiments, as well as enjoying an overture to the mesmerizing world of Sommelier Magic which will awaken your senses for the programming ahead. Now readied for the show, you will be invited into the main dining room and seated amongst friends, new and old, as Grant Grill's Executive Chef showcases four-acts of culinary feats from the "mystery menu." Each of the four dinner courses will shock and awe the palate, playing into life's greatest mysteries like "which came first, the chicken or the egg." An unexpected mix of pinot noir pairings and a grand finale cocktail provide the finishing touch to the culinary experience. In addition to the thoughtfully crafted magic of the menu, guests will have a front row seat to the strolling entertainment, a riveting series of intimate illusions performed table-side.

For more information visit the Grant Grill website. Tickets can be purchased at Eventbright.

Thanks to iTricks.

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Thursday, March 10, 2016

Houdini book of poetry from 1933

Here's one that's new to me. This 4-page booklet of Houdini-inspired poetry was written by Bob Brown and published by The Modern Editions Press in 1933. Arthur Moses recently scored this on eBay and says: "I have known about this for over 30 years and have never seen it offered before. I only know of two other holdings; both in University collections."


My guess is this is the earliest book of Houdini-inspired poetry. There have been many since, including: Ha! Ha! Houdini by Patti Smith; Houdini Houdini by Lynn Luria-Sukenick; The One and Only Human Galaxy by Elizabeth Swados; Sleeping With Houdini by Nin Andrews; and Anatomy of Keys by Steven Price.

Related:

Frock Flicks Houdini miniseries costume review

I know we are all about Houdini & Doyle these days, but I highly recommend revisiting the 2014 Houdini miniseries via this a terrific 2-part review of the costumes by costume historian Sarah Lorraine on her blog, Frock Flicks. Here's a taste:

Bess’ Floral Sisters Outfit
The first scene we see Bess in, she’s dancing, so it’s hard to get a good pic of her outfit. I’m really only including it because this establishes that Bess was a vaudeville performer when she and Harry met. I’m only speculating, but her really dark makeup throughout the show might be some kind of visual cue that she’s different. Harry actually asks her why she has to wear such heavy makeup during their wedding night scene, and she brushes it off and keeps piling on the black eyeshadow. You do you, grrl.

Both parts are a must read -- funny and informative -- and Sarah is on our same wavelength in regards to the miniseries tenuous relationship to real history. Click to read:


A big thanks to Christine U'Ren, who recently authored a terrific 3-part blog on Houdini in San Francisco, for alerting me to this one.

Related:

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

FOX releases Houdini & Doyle poster

FOX has released a new poster for the upcoming Houdini & Doyle. The 10-episode series starts May 2 on the network. The poster appeared on TVLine.


Houdini & Doyle stars Michael Weston as Houdini, Stephen Mangan as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Rebecca Liddiard as Constable Adelaide Stratton. The series will debut this Sunday in the UK on ITV and ITV Encore.

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Tuesday, March 8, 2016

The Cancer of Superstition is FOUND!

Potter & Potter Auctions have just made the catalog for their April 9th auction of "Houdiniana" available online and it's a stunner! Early correspondence between Houdini and Martin Beck, unseen film footage, a lobby display board, the infamous "frenemies" photo of Houdini and Margery, and...The Cancer of Superstition.


It's hard to say what is the most significant item in this auction, but it could very well be this 31 page unpublished work in progress manuscript for The Cancer of Superstition, a book Houdini was writing at the time of his death with the great H.P. Lovecraft. It has long been considered lost and a bit of a mystery. Not anymore! As the auction description notes:

Houdini, Harry and H.P. Lovecraft (ghostwriter). The Cancer of Superstition. Circa 1926. Collection of 31 leaves, paginated 1 – 10 [11 – 13 lacking] 14 – 34, being an unpublished manuscript of a work in progress on superstition, divided into the three sections, “The Genesis of Superstition,” “The Expansion of Superstition,” and “The Fallacy of Superstition.” Scattering of typed corrections over misspellings or word changes. Differing inks observed between first ten leaves and remainder of file. Pagination inclusive of bibliography (two leaves). Minor foxing, a few short tears and nicked edges, fine overall.

Previously known only in outline and through part of a first chapter, the work was suspended soon after Houdini’s death as the magician’s widow Beatrice did not wish to pursue it further (see Joshi and Schultz, An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia (2004) [116 – 17]). The material here shows the project further along than other surviving sources have indicated it had reached, Lovecraft and Houdini putting forth a general theory of the history of superstition as an “inborn inclination” traceable to “primitive races” “utterly ignorant of the laws of Nature” that now “persists only through mental indolence of those who reject modern science.” Situating superstition at great length among an array of pre-modern belief systems including animism, fetishism, witchcraft, and black magic, the fascinating document shows the authors struggling to balance this primitivist theory of the development of superstition against evidence of what was really a cross-cultural “scourge” surviving among their contemporaries, even the well educated, introducing citations of early twentieth century studies on superstitious beliefs among students and faculty at prestigious American universities. The few missing pages from the first section distract but a little from the overall strain of thinking revealed in the second and third parts, and a bibliography at the rear provides the full spectrum of ideas Lovecraft and Houdini were negotiating before the project was unexpectedly cut short.

Potter & Potter have put a $25,000 to $40,000 estimate on the manuscript. This will definitely be one to watch. But so will so many of the lots in this amazing auction of Houdiniana.

CLICK HERE to download a PDF of the catalog from the Potter & Potter website. You can also buy a printed edition for $35. The auction takes place at 10:00 AM on Saturday, April 9th in Potter & Potter's Chicago Gallery.

Lots are viewable and open to bid online at Liveauctioneers.com.

UPDATE: Not mentioned in the auction description above is the uncredited work of author C.M. Eddy Jr. on this project. For more on Eddy and the statues of this project at the time of Houdini's death, check out Joe Notaro's Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence to read an amazing letter written by Lovecraft after Houdini was hospitalized in Detroit:

"Poor Eddy, who with my aid has been doing some revision for the nimble wizard, is quite worried about his unexpected intervention of the gods."

UPDATE 2: For more on Eddy and his work on this project, read: C.M. Eddy, Jr. and The Cancer of Superstition manuscript.

UPDATE 3The Cancer of Superstition brings $28,000.

Related:

Diana Quick is Cecelia Weiss in Houdini & Doyle

Here's some Houdini & Doyle casting news that has been keep under wraps until now. Houdini's mother, Cecelia Weiss, will appear in the series played by 69-year-old Diana Quick, a popular British stage and television actress best known for her role as Lady Julia Flyte in the series Brideshead Revisited.

Quick joins the ranks of Angela Clarke (Houdini '53), Ruth Gordon (The Great Houdinis), Rita Zohar (Young Harry Houdini), Grace Zabriskie (Houdini '98), and Eszter Ónodi (Houdini Miniseries) in playing Houdini's "sainted" mother.

But the series might be using Cecelia's character in a unique way. As I reported back in November, she may also appear as a young woman played by 29-year-old actress Bo Martyn. Whether this will be in flashbacks or maybe something more supernatural remains to be seen.

Houdini & Doyle episode one, "The Maggie’s Redress", airs this Sunday at 10:15 PM on ITV and ITV Encore in the UK. The series will air on FOX in the U.S. and Global TV in Canada starting May 2.

Related:

Monday, March 7, 2016

All 10 Houdini & Doyle episodes revealed


SpoilerTV have revealed the titles and plots for all 10-episodes of Houdini & Doyle. The series premieres on ITV and ITV Encore in the UK on March 13. It will air on FOX in the U.S. and Global TV in Canada starting May 2.

Don't read on if you don't want to know, but I think these sound pretty exciting!

Episode 1: The Maggie’s Redress
Houdini, Doyle and Adelaide investigate the murder of a nun in one of the notorious Magdalene Laundries. A witness claims the killer is a young woman who was tormented by the nun. The only problem is, that young woman has been dead for six months.

Episode 2: A Dish of Adharma
A 12 year old boy shoots a prominent suffragette, claiming he’s avenging a murder - his own murder in a past life. And if the trio wants to find the truth, they must solve the decades-old killing.

Episode 3: In Manus Dei
When a heckler is mysteriously struck down at a faith healer’s show, the team investigates whether the healer is truly channeling the power of God. And if so, can he work a miracle on Doyle’s dying wife?

Episode 4: Spring-Heel’d Jack
In the first of several attacks, a businessman is murdered by a mysterious phantom with demonic eyes and gravity-defying leaps. As panic spreads across London, the trio tries to determine if this is a case of mass hysteria, or is there a beast out there that thrives on fear?

Episode 5: The Curse of Korzha
An attractive traveling medium uses her psychic gifts to solve crimes, frustrating Houdini when he can’t figure out her tricks. Doyle feels she may be the real thing, so he is mortified by her next prediction: the end of Adelaide Stratton.

Episode 6: The Monsters of Nethermoor
After a nightmarish encounter with otherworldly beings, a man wakes up in a field claiming his wife has been abducted by aliens. The team investigates but it’s only when Doyle has his own encounter that they learn the horrifying truth of what’s really out there.

Episode 7: Bedlam
When several people are found literally scared to death, the clues lead the team to Bedlam, the notorious insane asylum, with which Doyle has a disturbing history. And when he starts to lose his grip on reality, he doesn’t know if he’s losing his mind or is becoming the next victim.

Episode 8: Strigoi
Bram Stoker, author of Dracula and good friend of Doyle’s, shows up at Doyle’s house in a panic. Vampire hunters are trying to kill him, believing Stoker to be a vampire. As they investigate a disturbing murder, they begin to wonder if Stoker really is a vampire, and if not, what is the dark secret he’s desperately trying to hide from the world?

Episode 9: Necromanteion
The trio travels to Canada to investigate a homicidal poltergeist, where they are joined by other paranormal experts, including Thomas Edison, who unveils his latest invention - the Necrophone - a device that can purportedly communicate with the dead.

Episode 10: The Pall of LaPier
Small-town Ontario. A minister wakes to find everyone in his village dead, without the slightest sign of violence. Was this retribution for past acts of evil, as the local natives believe? And if not, how else to explain why the man of God was the only one spared?

You can keep up with all episode details and latest news on my dedicated Houdini & Doyle - Episode Guide.

ITV has also posted an extended preview clip from "The Maggie's Redress" HERE. Unfortunately, it is only viewable in the UK. But they've also released a new trailer viewable to all (below):



Houdini & Doyle stars Michael Weston as Houdini, Stephen Mangan as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Rebecca Liddiard as Constable Adelaide Stratton.

Related:

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Puzzling together The Master Mystery

Our great friend Joe Notaro at Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence is attempting to reassemble, at least in words, Houdini's complete 15-part movie serial The Master Mystery.

Several versions of the 1918 serial exist on DVD, VHS, and in film archives. Joe has reviewed them all closely and believes he has now seen the complete serial. (Read: I have finally seen all of The Master Mystery.)

Joe has launched a series of posts that take a close look at each version, clarifying exactly what is missing and what is included. Below are links to each installment:



Thanks to Joe for taking on this important and long overdue project. Maybe this will help aid in a true film restoration effort one day!

Related:

VOTE for the Arthur Moses Houdini collection to be shown in Dallas

The Perot Museum in Dallas is holding an online vote for which collections you'd like to see displayed as part of their upcoming "Eye of the Collector" exhibition. One of the candidates is the Houdini collection of Arthur Moses. This is one of the world's greatest Houdini collections, but one that is rarely seen outside Arthur's home. So let's help send it to Dallas!


To vote, CLICK HERE and scroll down to the "Most Unique Collection" category. You don't have to enter any info...just click the vote tab and it's done!

Related:

Houdini & Doyle in SFX magazine

The May 2016 issue of SFX magazine (Batman Vs. Superman cover) has a two-page spread on the new series Houdini & Doyle. Here's a peek.


SFX is published in the UK. Print and digital versions are available from My Favourite Magazines or via the SFX app.

Houdini & Doyle starts March 13 in the UK on ITV Encore, and on FOX in the U.S. and Global TV in Canada starting May 2.

Related:

Friday, March 4, 2016

"A story that never has been told."


While I was at the Official Houdini Seance in San Francisco last Halloween, fellow speaker and inner circle member Jamy Ian Swiss shared with me a remarkable document from his collection. The story of how the document came to be is almost as interesting as the story it tells. Here's Jamy:

"Many years ago I bought my copy of the Kellock book [Houdini His Life Story] from Jackie Flosso, Al Flosso's son, when Jackie was still running the shop [Martinka]. This copy was owned by Sam Horowitz, aka Mohammed Bey, and is signed boldly on the frontispiece by him, "S. Leo Horowitz."

Jackie deliberately drew my attention to the volume because of the fact that the two pages of lined, hand-written notes telling the story were folded in half and pressed within the book. He knew the contents and delightedly told me the story contained therein, and the fact that we did not know who wrote them. It is not Horowitz's handwriting, so likely a friend of either Horowitz's or, for that matter, of Al's."

The two hand-written pages tipped into the book were headlined: "A story that never has been told." They referred to page 259, which covers Houdini's vanishing elephant illusion at the New York Hippodrome in 1918. Here is the full text:

A story that never has been told.

No mention here of the trouble Houdini had to get the elephant into the theatre. The Hippodrome stage level was about 4 / 4 1/2 ft above the street level. All stage scenery was brought through large doors on the 40th ? St. entrance. Planks were inclined from the sidewalk to the large entrance to the stage.

The elephant was led to the inclined planks. He took about 3 steps up when the plank broke. New planks were secured, but the elephant refused to walk up. They tried everything but he would not go up. (An elephant never forgets.) Houdini called Ducrot to ask him to get Si Perkins who was an "elephant man" (an elephant handler) - he also could do magic. He asked Ducrot to get him and send him to the Hippo. It happened that Si Perkins was there in Ducrot's shop as was I. Ducrot closed the shop and he and Si Perkins went to the Hippo. I could not make it.

The next day I learned from Ducrot how Si Perkins got the elephant into the theatre. There was no use trying to get the elephant through the regular stage entrance. 
On the other end of the same side of the building a large hole was knocked out. The planks were ran up here and the elephant walked up. One of Houdini's tricks was to walk through a brick wall.

Now if he could only have done that with an elephant that really would have been something.

"Ducrot" refers to magician Frank Ducrot, who at this time was the owner and operator of the famous Martinka & Co. magic shop in New York City (Houdini bought a partial interest in Martinka's in 1919). As to Si Perkins, the "elephant man", I could not find anything conclusive, but I'm wondering if he could be the same Si Perkins who in the 1930s worked as the reptile curator at the San Diego Zoo in California (pictured below).

Frank Ducrot and Si Perkins.

But the real mystery remains, who wrote these pages? Below is the first page. Perhaps a magic collector out there will recognize this handwriting and help identify our mystery author.

Click to enlarge.

A very big thanks to Jamy Ian Swiss for allowing me to share his document here. It's a fun story and indeed a story that never has been told...until now.

UPDATE: In the comments below, you'll see that David Charvet and Leonard Hevia have put forward the idea, with some compelling evidence, that the storyteller here might be confusing Houdini's 1918 elephant vanish at the Hippodrome with his later elephant vanish at the Times Square Theater in 1922.

Related:

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Palm Springs Air Museum celebrates Houdini among Jewish aviators

The Palm Springs Air Museum in Palm Springs, CA, currently has a special exhibition of 24 panels devoted to Jewish & Israeli Aviators and Astronauts. Among those celebrated is Houdini, who in 1910 became the first man ever to fly a plane in Australia. The exhibition opened February 21 and runs through March 20.

The exhibition was created by Jewish-Hungarian aviator LÁSZLÓ ANGYAL. This marks the first stop in a world-wide tour of the exhibition. The exhibition is located inside the European Hangar, surrounded by vintage World War Two warbirds, and is included with regular museum admission. All funds raised by the Palm Springs Air Museum are used for educational purposes. The mission of the Palm Springs Air Museum is to educate future generations about the role Air Power plays in preserving our freedoms and way of life; to preserve our history and to honor our veterans. Steve Geiger of the Mensch International Foundation is responsible for bringing in this exhibition.

The Palm Springs Air Museum is located at 745 N. Gene Autry Trail in Palm Springs, CA. It's open daily, 10 AM – 5 PM. For more information visit: www.PalmSpringsAirMuseum.org.

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Houdini & Doyle starts March 13 in the UK


It looks like the UK will be getting Houdini & Doyle much earlier than the rest of the world. In an article today about actor Stephan Mangan's "Magnum-style" moustash (as in Tom Selleck's Magnum P.I.), Radio Times has finally revealed exactly when the new series will air:

Houdini & Doyle will premiere on ITV and ITV Encore at the same time on March 13th at 10:15pm. The series will then continue on ITV Encore from March 17th at 9:00pm each week.

The article also reveals that the actors have signed a "five year option" on the series. So if it's a hit, expect to see more Houdini and Doyle (and the moustash) in the future.

Houdini & Doyle stars Michael Weston as Houdini, Stephen Mangan as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Rebecca Liddiard as Constable Adelaide Stratton. The series will air on FOX in the U.S. and Global TV in Canada starting May 2.

Related:

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