"It's a masterpiece." -David Copperfield

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Randini: The Man Who Helped Houdini

Author Ann Beedham has just published a remarkable piece of Houdiniana, Randini: The Man Who Helped Houdini. This fully illustrated 236 page book reveals “the untold story of Randolph Douglas,” a Houdini fan living in the UK who created his own escapes and eventually become friends with Houdini himself.

The book features many period photos of “Randini” and a never before published photo of Randolph and Houdini in 1920. It also includes correspondence between the young escapist and the great magician, rare scrapbook clippings, and some fascinating sketches Randolph made of Houdini apparatus, including the Water Torture Cell.

I’ve only just received a copy so I haven’t read it yet, but this sure appears to be a fascinating look at a Houdini contemporary, and a wholly unique point of view on Houdini himself. This is easily a MUST for Houdini buffs.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Variant cover for DK's Houdini photo biography

I’ve just discovered this copy of DK’s photographic biography of Houdini by Vicki Cobb with a different cover. All other copies I’ve seen feature a photo of Houdini in the Siberian transport wrist chain, but this cover shows him suspended over the NYC subway construction site having just freed himself from a straight jacket.

As this is a 6th edition (ISBN 9780756642563),  so it’s possible DK changed the art at some point after the 1st edition. But it is also possible DK has been offering this alternate cover art from the start (as I’ve seen them do with other titles). Could there be more?

I don’t have the answer, but I’m pleased to have nabbed this edition for the collection.

Bess costume among rare Houdini items on display in Austin

A collection of rare Houdini items, including a stage coat worn by Bess during the Houdinis European tour, are going on display for the first time at the historic Driskill Hotel in Austin, Texas. Reproductions of the items will also be offered for sale. Here is the full press release:

Austin, TX – Houdini returns to the Driskill

Austin magicians have discovered rare Houdini belongings given to a local man over 50 years ago by a lifelong friend of the famous escape artist. Kent Cummins, the founder and Executive Director of The Kent Cummins Magic Camp and a Special Consultant to the Society of American Magicians will present the items at the historic Driskill Hotel where Houdini always stayed while performing in Austin.

Austin oilman Jim Baldauf recalls, “It was in 1955 when I was a budding boy magician, and Houdini’s old friend, Jim Bard, was in his mid 80s. He would pull out his scrapbooks and share stories and rare memorabilia related to his and Houdini’s careers. They started out in show business together, touring with the Welsh Bros. Circus in 1896. After the gigs, they would go out and shoot pool.”

In addition to a collection of posters, letters and postcards, Bard passed on to Baldauf personal Houdini belongings such as a statuary bust of the magician, and a stage coat worn by Houdini’s wife, Bess. As spelled out in letters from Bard, Bess gave the coat to Mrs. Bard in the 1920s, and Houdini gave the bust to Jim Bard some years earlier. Only two other copies of the sculpture are known to have survived, one in David Copperfield’s collection, and the second in another major Houdini collection. The stage coat, designed and handmade by Bess for a European tour, is a one-of-a-kind rarity that exists nowhere else in the world.

“I really didn’t know the value of what I had until I consulted with local magicians and studied a new biography which describes the lifelong friendship of Houdini and Bard,” Baldauf said. “Since then, several private collectors have expressed interest in the original items, but I decided to make reproductions available to the general public, and to let some of the revenues benefit two non-profit magic groups.”

Kent Cummins says the news conference will be the first public showing of the Houdini items; the sale of reproductions will kick off a fundraising campaign for the non-profit Austin Magic Camp. The Kent Cummins Magic Camp was founded in 1993 in Austin, and now helps nearly 1,000 children each year enjoy the fascination and fun of juggling, puppetry, and MAGIC!

The news conference will present the 100-year-old originals along with the Reproduction Offering. A group of Houdini experts and Texas magicians, including Baldauf, will be on hand to discuss the collection and to recreate some of Houdini’s stage magic. ‘Bess’ will appear in full-dress uniform to showcase the vintage stage coat.

WHAT: First Public Viewing of Rare Houdini Items
WHEN: 11 a.m., Thursday, September 3, 2009
WHERE: Driskill Hotel, Victorian Room, 604 Brazos, Austin, TX
WHY: Sale of Houdini Items to Benefit Austin Magic Camp

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Jonathan Hammond returns as Houdini

Jonathan Hammond will reprise his role as Houdini in the Broadway revival of Ragtime. Hammond played the role last April at the Kennedy Center. This marks the award-winning actor’s Broadway debut.

Ragtime will begin previews on Friday, October 23 and will officially open on Sunday, November 15, 2009 at the Neil Simon Theatre at 250 West 52 Street. Tickets are on sale now.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

New Ragtime poster includes Houdini

A new poster for the upcoming Broadway revival of Ragtime has been revealed on the official website, and as you can see in the image above (if you look closely), the poster includes Houdini among its collage of images.


This is a first. While Houdini made it onto various cover art of the original E.L. Doctorow novel, adverts for the 1981 film and the stage musical have been Houdini-free...until now.

Featuring direction and choreography by Marcia Milgrom Dodge, Ragtime will begin performances Friday, October 23 and officially open Sunday, November 15, 2009 at the Neil Simon Theatre at 250 West 52 Street.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Is Patrick Culliton about to reveal Houdini's secrets?

Patrick as Franz Kukol.
Renowned Houdini expert, actor, and author Patrick Culliton (aka “Houdini’s Ghost”) has posted on his website that he will released a new book called Houdini The Key on October 4, 2009. As with Patrick’s seminal two-volume set, Houdini Unlocked, the book promises to be limited and instantly collectible.

Patrick’s description of the book is intriguing. I can’t quite tell if he’s being ironic, or if he truly intends to blow the lid off of Houdini’s greatest secrets (and Patrick knows them all). Guess we’ll find out on October 4.

Click here to read Patrick’s description of Houdini The Key.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Jeremy Piven would like to play Houdini

Entourage star Jeremy Piven tells CenterDaily.com that he would like to play Houdini one day.

“I would like to play Houdini,” he said. “He was a fascinating guy. He was one of the first hard working artists and magicians. He was one of the first real icons, ever. And he died tragically and he just blew people away all over the world. There is a tremendous story there and I'd love to do that one day.”

Piven is currently starring in The Goods.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

The original Houdini meets Holmes adventure returns

First published in 1981, The Pandora Plague by Lee A. Matthias was one of the first books to team Houdini and Sherlock Holmes in a fictional adventure.* Now author Lee A. Matthias and BookSurge have published a newly revised, expanded and annotated edition of this long out-of-print novel.

London, 1902: The theft of an unusual pocket-watch brings famed magician, Harry Houdini, together with the world's foremost consulting detective, Sherlock Holmes. When it leads to the appearance of a mysterious locked strong-box, it becomes a case that rocks the British Empire to its core. 
When the magician is blackmailed in order to best the box's lock, Holmes and his ally, Dr. John Watson, expose a plot against the crown, itself. Only Holmes's immense intellect, combined with the "Official" resources of his equally brilliant brother, Mycroft Holmes, can penetrate the mystery in time. 
In the tradition of Nicholas Meyer's "The Seven-Per-Cent Solution," and "The West End Horror," author Lee A. Matthias recreates Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's magnificent style and characters in "The Pandora Plague," a rip roaring adventure full of magic, mystery, and murder.

There is also an official Pandora Plague website with background on how the book came to be.

*The very first appears to have been a 1908 German dime novel called Auf den spuren Houdinis ("On the Trail of Houdini").

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Houdini haunts ‘Winchester’

Winchester, a new graphic novel that roots a fictional story in the very real Winchester Mystery House in California, features Houdini as the antagonist. Writer-editor Dan Vado tells Newsarama.com:

“Harry Houdini spent his non-magical life debunking the notion of a spirit world. He had an ongoing feud/relationship with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle about the existence of an after life. Spirituality was big in those days and Houdini so completely debunked a seance that he and Doyle attended (Houdini, being a magician, knew everyone's tricks) that Doyle asked him if he wasn't himself channeling the spirit world. 
I thought it would be cool irony for someone who did not believe in ghosts and spirits to end up as one and to then decide to try and rule a corner of it. 
Houdini did visit the Wunchester Mansion two years after the death of Sarah Winchester and he did conduct a seance there, but never really discussed it with anyone. Legend has it that he actually met with Sarah Winchester BEFORE she died, but he agreed to never speak of their meeting. Houdini is my bad guy, I think he will be a memorable one.”

Longtime readers may recall I visited the Winchester Mystery House in 2006 and reported on the Houdini connection.

UPDATEHoudini haunts Sarah Winchester #1.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Patrick Culliton to lecture on Houdini-Hodgson

Patrick Culliton, renowned Houdini expert and author of the two-volume Houdini Unlocked, will give a lecture on the infamous Houdini-Hodgson challenge at the 6th Worldwide Escape Artist Convention in Ontario, California.

Patrick promises new revelations about this, one of Houdini’s most physically taxing challenge escapes. The lecture will take place on Sunday, October 5th at 10AM.

Hosted annual by Cannon’s Great Escapes, the 6th Worldwide Escape Artist Convention will be held October 2 through 5 at the Doubletree Hotel Ontario Airport. For more information visit the official website.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Houdini radio serial in production

Serial Squadron, a company that produces original radio serials for release on DVD and MP3, have announced they are working on a new Houdini serial, The Adventures of Harry Houdini: Diet of Wyrms.

Written by Greg Glick, the 5-chapter cliffhanger serial finds Houdini, his wife Bess and assistant Ape (?) traveling to New England to investigate spiritualists, stolen books of magic and mysterious monsters.

Sounds like good fun. We’ll keep you posted on the progress. For more on Serial Squadron visit their website.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Houdini’s final ad

The excellent Carnegie Blog has uncovered a newspaper advert for Houdini’s very last performance on Sunday, October 24, 1926 at the Garrick Theater in Detroit, Michigan.

While reviews did note that Houdini didn’t quite seem himself that night, little did the audience know he was performing with a ruptured appendix and a 104 degree temperature (which rose to 106 by evenings end).

Houdini would die seven days later on Halloween 1926.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

American Museum of Magic receives bequest

The Battle Creek Enquirer reports that the American Museum of Magic in Marshall, Michigan recently obtained a bequest of magic memorabilia from the Jay Marshall Estate which contains a number of items relating to Houdini, including pictures, notes, and an audio recording of the great 20th century magician's voice.

The bulk of the Marshall collection is paper ephemera including posters, handbills, photos, theater programs, correspondence, patents and notes related to 19th and 20th century magicians. It will be housed with the current collections in the museum's present home two buildings in the Historic District in Marshall, Michigan, a small town midway between Detroit and Chicago.

The American Museum of Magic and the affiliated Museum Library are built around the collection of Robert Lund, one of the world's foremost magic collectors and co-founder of the museum with his wife, Elaine. Lund passed away in 1995, and since his wife's passing in 2006 the museum has operated governed by a board of directors as a non-profit corporation. The museum is open Monday through Saturday from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM, or by request (269-781-7570).

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