"It's a masterpiece." -David Copperfield

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Now you can sponsor or advertise on WILD ABOUT HARRY

Do you like the work we do here at WILD ABOUT HARRY? Would you like to support our continued efforts to uncover even more information about Houdini's past, present, and future? Would you like to advertise your own magic website or business on this blog? Well, now you can!

I've launched a new Sponsorship & Advertising page where you can see a list of sponsorship levels and advertising flat rates. (Unfortunately, I'm not set-up to do any kind of pay-by-click system.)

Your generous support will go into my continued efforts keeping this blog updated with ALL the latest Houdini news and new findings, as well as helping fund my own research for a soon-to-be-announced Houdini book. I've also been toying with the idea of publishing a collection of each year's WILD ABOUT HARRY posts in book form.

Thank you for your support and encouragement, and a big thanks to those who have already contributed. It's truly my pleasure to offer up this hub of Houdini news and research on the web. - John Cox

Friday, August 19, 2011

Lady Gaga gives Houdini a nod in her latest video

It looks like Lady Gaga has joined the ranks of Kate Bush and Gwen Stefani in drawing inspiration from Houdini. According to MTV.com, in her latest video, Yoü And I, we'll catch a glimpse of Gaga inside her version Houdini's Water Torture Cell. I love it when this happens!

The video will makes its TV premiere tonight at 7:49 p.m. ET/PT on MTV and Logo, followed by a live Q&A with Gaga on MTV.com.

When Orson met Harry

Check out the article, Bits of Coincidence, on Meredith Grau's terrific blog, L.A. La Land: Fame, Fortune, and Forensics. It tells the story of when Orson Welles as a boy met Houdini, and the life lesson he took away from the encounter.

Now, I knew Welles said he saw Houdini in his youth (commenting on how Houdini's show was filled with "German illusions"), but I've never heard this story of a personal backstage meeting. Of course, Welles was as much a teller of tall tales as Houdini, so maybe this didn't really happen (or maybe it wasn't Houdini). But, hey, it's still a cool story, so click on over to L.A. La Land and have a read.

Welles and wife Rita Hayworth perform The Houdinis Metamorphosis.

UPDATE: The above photo does indeed show Orson and Rita Hayworth performing the substitution trunk. This was part of Orson's USO Wonder Show. In the show Orson also performed Houdini's Needles.

Link: Appleton backs Houdini Plaza designs

Here's the latest in the ongoing saga to redesign "Houdini Plaza" in Houdini's hometown of Appleton, Wisconsin. (Click the headline to read.)

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Mr. Electric illuminates the Skirball, Sunday


Just a reminder that the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles will host a conversation between magic historian Mike Caveney and the legendary Marvyn Roy (a.k.a Mr. Electric) this Sunday at 2:00 p.m. inside the Skirball's Magnin Auditorium. The talk will be followed by a book signing.

For this final Houdini Art and Magic event, the Skirball is generously offering WILD ABOUT HARRY readers a two-for-one discount on tickets. Just enter the promo code 99731 when booking online or over the phone, (877) 722-4849. Click for more details and to order tickets online.

Houdini Art and Magic leaves the Skirball on September 4, so this Sunday might be an ideal time to visit or revisit the exhibition. I'll see you there!

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Saint John historian claims Houdini straitjacket origin story a myth

There's a very interesting article today in the Canadian Telegraph Journal in which local Saint John historian, Harold Wright, challenges the wildly accepted story that Houdini got the idea for his straitjacket escape after visiting Saint John's Provincial Lunatic Asylum in New Brunswick at the invitation of Dr. James Steeves, the director of the facility.

While Write acknowledges that Houdini was in Saint John in 1896, he says "no proof exists that Houdini ever knew Steeves or that he ever visited the asylum." Wright says Houdini invented the story about the birth of his straitjacket routine "around 1908" as a way "to create a myth around his show while distinguishing himself from the countless other magicians and illusionists that were touring North America at the time."

I've never heard anyone suggest that this story was a myth, but Wright might be on to something here. Kalush and Sloman give a vivid account of this Saint John Asylum discovery in The Secret Life of Houdini (which is quoted in the Telegraph article), but their only referenced source is Houdini's own account in his Conjurers Monthly Magazine in January 1908, and, as we all know, Houdini is not the best source for the truth.

Kenneth Silverman puts the story in what I think is the proper perspective in Houdini!!! The Career of Ehrich Weiss. He cites Houdini's first documented straitjacket escape as taking place in San Francisco in 1899, and then briefly mentions the Saint John story as Houdini's "later account" of its origin (his source being Handcuff Secrets, 1910). Bruce MacNab's authoritative article about Houdini's first Canadian tour in The Beaver, June 2009 ("Hard Times in the Maritimes"), does not mention the Saint John/straitjacket story at all -- maybe because of the lack a reliable source?

I'm not sure where I come down on this one. Reading Houdini's own account in Conjurers, it doesn't seem like he's making any great Houdiniesque exaggeration or boast, and it's not surprising there wouldn't be any documentation of his visit in 1896 as Houdini was a nobody then. And if Houdini were making this up, why set it in New Brunswick? Unless maybe he was looking to absolve U.S. asylums as straitjackets where, even then, considered cruel forms of "treating" the mentally ill.

But what's this about Houdini being in Saint John only "as a stagehand for his wife Bess"? I wish Wright would have elaborated on this. While this at first sounds absurd, know that this was during the hectic days of the Marco Company when Harry and Bess took on many different roles in the ill-fated travelling magic show.

Click to read 'Escape artist: Historian says illusionist created myth, which had Saint John link' at the Telegraph Journal.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

HOUDINI on channel 13

Here's one for no reason other than I'm feeling nostalgic for those days when I would scan every line on every page of the new TV Guide hoping to catch something about Houdini. One day I opened up to the full page ad below. It still impresses me that the umpteenth repeat on a local L.A. station of what was then a 30 year old film would warrant a full page ad in TV Guide. But, hey, it's HOUDINI!


Of course, Houdini always got nice attention when he periodically appeared on good old KCOP 13. Here are a few more TV Guide ads from my scrapbook for airings in the '70s and '80s.



Monday, August 15, 2011

PRESS RELEASE: Houdini and Conan Doyle by Christopher Sandford

Christopher Sandford

How two famous friends became bitter enemies in a battle over life, death – and the afterlife

Praise for Christopher Sandford’s McQueen
‘Highly entertaining… a compelling portrait of a true original’ Mail on Sunday

‘[A] penetrating and entertaining biography’ Sunday Express

In the early 20th century, in the English-speaking world, Arthur Conan Doyle and Harry Houdini were two of the most feted and famous men alive. And their relationship is extraordinary. As strange as it may seem Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of the ultra-rational detective Sherlock Holmes, was a believer in Spiritualism. He came to his belief that one could communicate with the dead, after his son was killed in World War I, and became an expert in the field.

Harry Houdini, the world’s foremost magician, was a friend of Conan Doyle's, but was sceptical of his belief in the supernatural. Houdini took every opportunity to use his knowledge of illusion to expose psychics who he thought were fakes, particularly incensed by their exploitation of grief and insecurity.

Based on original research, this sensational duel biography conjures up the early 20th century and the fame, personality and competing beliefs of two popular geniuses.

Christopher Sandford has been a professional writer for 29 years. A regular contributor to Cricketer International in the eighties, he has written biographies of English cricket legends Godfrey Evans and Tom Graveney, as well as biographies of Keith Richards, Steve McQueen, Roman Polanski and, most recently, Imran Khan. His articles have appeared in, among others, The Times, Daily Telegraph, The Spectator, Cosmopolitan, Vanity Fair and the New York Times. He divides his time between Seattle and England.

HBK £20.00 ISBN 9780715641460 Published 27/10/2011

Thanks to Jessica Thompson at Duckworth Publishing. You can pre-order Houdini and Conan Doyle (UK edition) at Amazon.co.uk. The U.S. edition can be pre-ordered here.

Life-size Houdini mystery mannequin

A life-size Houdini mannequin wearing a straitjacket is currently listed on eBay with an opening bid price of $2,700.00. The seller doesn't have any history on this, but he says the face made of a rubber material and the hair is "punched in."

From the looks and description, this appears to be a professionally made prop, right down to what the seller says are vintage clothes and boats. I suspect it was used to show Houdini suspended in the jacket -- it looks to me like the rope that is now wrapped around his neck was originally used as the suspension line.

But what could this be from? As with the coffin that cycled a while back, could this turn out to be a prop from Ragtime? Or did it come from another Houdini stage or screen project? The face sculpt appears to be Houdini himself, not an actor, so we don't have any clues there.

I doubt the seller is going to get anywhere near his price without some information where this came from. So does anyone recognize this fella? Who are you, Houdini?


Thanks to Kevin Connolly at Houdini Himself for the find.

UPDATE: Reader Timothy Randall has provided the following:

"It's a figure sculpted by a guy from Niagara Falls and was displayed in the Ripley's Museum in Orlando. An exact replica was used in the Water Torture display at the Houdini Magical Hall of Fame (and was destroyed in the fire) and a copy also was/is displayed in the Louis Tussaud's Waxworks (also in Niagara)."

Thank you, Timothy.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

WILD ABOUT HARRY Facebook page

In a move to unify all my annex sites and feeds (Twitter, mySpace, Tumblr, Facebook) under the WILD ABOUT HARRY "brand", I've created a new Wild About Harry Facebook page. I'm not going to delete my Harry Houdini community page (and it's 1200+ fans), but I would encourage everyone to "Like" the new page as this is where I will post all the update links from this blog from now on.

So head on over to Wild About Harry (Houdini) on Facebook and give it a "Like" today!

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Willard's side

Every Houdini biography contains the story of how, in 1915, Houdini traded verbal blows with heavyweight champion Jess Willard from the stage of the Los Angeles Orpheum. Hearing that Willard was in attendance, Houdini invited him onstage to be part of his committee. Willard refused, calling Houdini as a "faker." The verbal battle went back and forth until Houdini delivered the knockout line: "I will be Harry Houdini when you are not the heavyweight champion of the world." (A wire release reported that he said, "I'll be in the spotlight when you are in the discard.")

CLICK TO ENLARGE
The audience of nearly 2000 sided with Houdini, and Willard left the theater, reportedly to boos and hisses. The papers also sided with Houdini, especially the Los Angeles Record, keeping the story alive for days until Willard left town. Houdini wrote gleefully to his sister Gladys that when he now walks down the street he's greeted with, "Hello champ."

I don't know. I've never been a big fan of this story. I don't think it shows Houdini in his best light. He had the advantage over a member of his audience and he certainly pressed it. In Houdini!!! The Career of Ehrich Weiss, author Ken Silverman says Willard's bluster that night might well have been a cover for stage-fright -- that outside the ring Willard was self-conscious about his enormous 6 ft. 6 1/2 in. size. I don't know much about Jess Willard, but it seems he not only found himself on the wrong side of Houdini that November day in 1915, but also the wrong side of an emerging media machine. What we would call a "media backlash" today. Also, history has only recorded Houdini's side of the story.

Now, thanks to The Culliton Papers, we can hear Willard's side. This letter he wrote to the Los Angeles Examiner on December 3, 1915 has never been transcribed or quoted (as far as I could find) in any Houdini biography. It's a pretty good counterpunch, and despite calling Houdini's act "moth-eaten" (kind of funny), it's hard to not sympathize with Willard's point about how, as paying customer, he was "entitled to decent treatment."

Willard also shows a pretty crafty understanding of media himself by not using Houdini's name in his letter, thus not giving Houdini the publicity Willard claims was the real intent behind this episode (and certainly Houdini openly boasted he'd received "at least a million dollars advertising space from this fray"). Ironically, not using Houdini's name also makes this letter hard to find via modern keyword searches, so Willard's side of the story has been lost to history. Until now.

By the way, I was surprised to learn that Jess Willard lived until 1968! But this article in the Examiner seems to be the last time he spoke publicly of his encounter with Houdini.

UPDATE: Make sure you click in and read Patrick Culliton's own comments on this. Did Willard use an anti-Semitic slur against Houdini that night that went unreported in the papers? If so, that certainly explains why Houdini and the audience turned on him as they did. Very interesting notion. Thank you, Pat!

Also enjoy:

Friday, August 12, 2011

First installment of The Culliton Papers this weekend

This weekend I will post the first installment of my special series, The Culliton Papers. This first story might come as a surprise to those who think we are just Houdini's cheerleaders here at WILD ABOUT HARRY, as we'll climb back into the ring and take: "Willard's side."

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Time is running out for Houdini at the Skirball

Houdini is about to escape from the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles. On September 4, Houdini Art and Magic will close for the journey to its next stop at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco. (Masters of Illusion will remain through January 2012.)

If you haven't yet made it to the exhibit, or if you want to make one last return visit, there might be no better time than this Tuesday, August 16, when Erin Clancey will be giving a special Curatorial Walkthrough at 1:30 p.m. Reservations are required and each ticket includes museum admission for that afternoon. There are only a handful of spots left for this special inside look at Houdini Art and Magic, so act fact! Click for more details and to order tickets online.

Also, on Sunday, August 21 at 2:00 p.m. inside the Skirball's Magnin Auditorium, there will be a conversation between magic historian Mike Caveney and the legendary Marvyn Roy (a.k.a Mr. Electric), followed by a book signing. For this final scheduled Houdini Art and Magic event the Skirball is generously offering WILD ABOUT HARRY readers a two-for-one discount on tickets. Just enter the promo code 99731 when booking online or over the phone, (877) 722-4849. Click for more details and to order tickets online.

This is it. See Houdini before he slips away!

Houdini artwork by Mark Summers from Los Angeles Magazine (May 2011).

Translate