"It's a masterpiece." -David Copperfield

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Two Houdini movies screening in Brandon, VT

The historic Brandon Town Hall and Community Center in Brandon, Vermont will screen Houdini's The Man From Beyond and Terror Island this Saturday, September 16, from 7pm to 9pm. Both movies will include live musical accompaniment by Jeff Rapsis, a New Hampshire-based performer regarded as one of the nation's leading silent film musicians.

Admission is free, with donations welcome. All proceeds support ongoing restoration of the Town Hall, which dates from 1860.

Terror Island (1920) was the second feature Houdini made in Hollywood for Famous Players-Lasky Paramount. The Man From Beyond (1922) was the first film produced by the magician's own Houdini Picture Corporation.

For more information, visit the Brandon Hall official website or the event page on Facebook.

Thanks to the Addison Independent.

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Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Houdini captured at Historic Auto Attractions

I love discovering Houdini artifacts and displays where you might not expect them. Recently I found this photo of a Houdini display at Historic Auto Attractions in Roscoe, Illinois. Who knew!?


This is more than your average display. The full body straitjacket appears to be an original that sold for $24,150.00 in Butterfield & Butterfield's auction of memorabilia from The Houdini Magical Hall of Fame in November 1999. The red trunk on the left of the pic is also familiar to me (my recollection is that it reads "Glass"), but I'm not able to find it in any of my auction catalogs.

This photo was taken by "sporst" and posted to Fliker. I wasn't able to contact the user (not without selling my soul to yahoo), so if you are "sporst" and would like a different credit or for me to remove this image, please contact me. In the meantime, thank you for sharing this!

Below are links to a few other unexpected Houdini displays.

UPDATE: Chuck Romano over at My Magic Uncle also covered this in 2013, so it looks like he knew!

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Tuesday, September 12, 2017

The curious story of Houdini and Carleete

The 2013 blog Carleete tells the story of escape artist Harry Howes ("Carleete") who is said to have sold Houdini the idea for his famous Water Torture Cell.

The blog is a bit of a tangle of unclear dates and confused interpretations of the "water escape," but the basic story is that in 1911 Carleete toured Britain with an underwater barrel escape similar to Houdini's Milk Can (which Houdini invented in 1908). When Houdini was in Bradford, he paid Carleete to challenge him with his apparatus. When Houdini later introduced his Water Torture Cell, the idea that he had purchased his "water escape" from Carleete was born.

Of course, the USD and Carleete's barrel are hardly similar, but this claim dogged Houdini for years, and even gets a mention in Houdini The Untold Story.

The blog also includes a reprint of a terrific article by David De-Val from the April 1986 Escapism about Houdini's meeting with Carleete as recalled by his son Osmond (pictured above). It contains a wealth of interesting details -- including Houdini introducing himself as Mr. Harry Weiss -- and it offers one of the few eyewitness accounts of Houdini conspiring to set-up a challenge.

So click on over to Carleete and check out the post and David De-Val's must-read "Houdini & Carleete." You can also view a video on YouTube of Carleete's other son, Bayne Howes, telling an entirely different (barrel free) version of events.

Thanks to "Jack" of Houdini & Hardeen for the tip.

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Monday, September 11, 2017

A new addition to The Houdini Estate

Yesterday I zipped up into Laurel Canyon to have a look at this recent addition to the famed Houdini Estate. Very nice!


This new signage is in front of the property on Willow Glen. So even though the estate is private, you can still get a nice photo. Think that now makes this a must stop on the L.A. Houdini sightseeing circuit.

Once a ruin, the beautifully restored "Houdini Estate" is available as a rental for weddings and other special events via the official website. For a full history of Houdini's connection to the property, check out this post from 2012.

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    Sunday, September 10, 2017

    Houdini in the 1981 Ragtime movie

    Houdini's role in E.L. Doctorow's bestselling 1975 novel Ragtime is well known. You could even say the great "Houdini Renaissance" of the 1970s started with Ragtime. Houdini also appeared in the hit Broadway musical. He even sings a song. But far less known is his appearance in the 1981 film adaptation directed by Miloš Forman.

    When the movie was announced in the November 2, 1980 issue of the Los Angeles Times, the paper used a nice still of Houdini in action. This was exciting as it suggested Houdini would be a large part of the film. Houdini was played by Jeffrey DeMunn, who reportedly performed the suspended straitjacket escape himself.


    However, when the movie was released in November 1981, Houdini's role consisted of only two brief, silent appearances. I don't know when this reduction took place, but considering both John Belushi and Harvey Keitel were considered for the part (with some reports saying Keitel was "set" for the role), it must have been a larger part at some point in the development process.

    Ragtime author E.L. Doctorow did not participate in the development of the screenplay as he believed a feature film could not do justice to his novel and that it should be done as a ten-part television miniseries. He may have been right. The first cut came in at over three hours and had to be shortened to its final 2:36 runtime. Was Houdini part of any of that cut footage I wonder?

    While Houdini's appearances are brief, they are not insignificant. The first is during a newsreel montage that opens the film. Here we learn Houdini is departing on a nationwide tour (with his mother). This tells us that during this gilded age, the world's greatest magician was, reassuringly, everywhere.


    The movie then concludes with Houdini doing a suspended straitjacket escape high above a crowd, even above the American flag. Perhaps this is an expression of the ultimate high point of the era, the soaring triumph of the individual. The irony is that the crowd below are reading newspapers announcing the start of World War I -- the end of that very era, and the movie.


    Despite 8 Oscar nominations, Ragtime was greeted with tepid reviews and box office. The New York Times wrote: "The movie, which opens today at the Loews State and Coronet Theaters, is sorrowful, funny and beautiful. It is also, finally, very unsatisfactory." Jeffrey DeMunn would go on to play Houdini again in the 1986 television movie Young Harry Houdini, making him the only two-time Houdini (at least on film).

    I also find the movie to be just okay. Certainly I would have preferred more Houdini. But the trailer (below) still gives me chills. "Bad time. Good time. Ragtime." Love it.



    For more appearances of Houdini in film and television, check out my page devoted to The many lives of Harry Houdini on film.

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    Saturday, September 9, 2017

    Houdini now haunting McSorley’s Old Ale House

    I honestly don't know where Houdini finds the time to do all the haunting he's credited with. But maybe that explains why he hasn't shown up at any official seance in 90 years. He's one busy spook!

    Now according to America's Haunted Road Trip, Houdini haunts the famous McSorley’s Old Ale House in New York City...as a cat! This from the website:

    According to Dr. Philip Ernest Schoenberg, tour guide for Ghosts of New York, whenever a cat is seen in the window of McSorley’s, Harry Houdini is present as the spirit inside the cat. Why Houdini, you ask? Dr. Schoenberg claims that the set of handcuffs secured to the footrail of the bar once belonged to Houdini.

    We tackled the question of those handcuffs last year (links below). In short, while Houdini may have affixed handcuffs to the McSorley’s bar, the handcuffs there today are likely replacements. And as far as the cat goes...Houdini was really more of a dog person.

    Hairy Houdini?

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    Friday, September 8, 2017

    Different Worlds #40

    Here's an obscure one. The July/August 1985 issue of Different Worlds -- a magazine devoted to role playing games -- featured a nice Houdini cover by David Dixon evoking the H.P. Lovecraft story Imprisoned With The Pharaohs. However, the magazine itself features no Houdini content -- just an article about Lovecraft called, "Adventuring in the Worlds of H.P. Lovecraft - Part I: The Cthulhu Mythos."


    And if you think this one is obscure enough to slip past the mighty magazine collector Arthur Moses...you'd be wrong. Different Words #40 appears on page 36 of his definitive Houdini Periodical Bibliography.

    You can buy this and other issues of Different Worlds via diffworlds.com. There's also a copy currently on eBay (which is how I discovered this).

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    Thursday, September 7, 2017

    Two day Houdini "Spirit Quest" in Groveland, MA


    Ron Kolek and The New England Ghost Project is offering a special two-day Houdini and Conan Doyle "Spirit Quest 2017" in Groveland, Massachusetts at the end of this month. Below are details.

    Friday Night (September 29)
    Dining with the Dead & Houdini Stage Show
    Join us for a special costumed Dining with the Dead (costumes optional). Enjoy a heart warming meal of Lenzi's famous chicken pot pie and vegetables served with rice and New England Apple Pie and vanilla ice cream for dessert. We will have prizes for the best costumes and light entertainment. You will even have the opportunity to have your photo taken with a "Ghost" at the William Hope and William Mumler Ghost Photo Booth.

    Then step back in time, as you will discover for yourself what it was like to attend the Great Harry Houdini Stage Show. You will be amazed as the Amazing Viano performs feats of escapism and mystifying magic.

    The evening ends as it did with Harry's performances with a séance under the watchful eye of the Great Houdini. Will he expose the medium or will she collect the prize?

    Saturday Night (September 30)
    Psychic Detective, Haunted House & Houdini Séance
    After light dinner of pizza and soft drinks you will be divided up into groups. One group, under the guidance of trance medium Maureen Wood, will learn to develop their instincts to become a psychic detective in a special workshop. The other group, under the supervision of the "Wall Street Journal's Gold Standard in Ghost Hunting" Steve Parson from the UK will take part in the haunted house experiment,where they will use their skills to differentiate the normal from the paranormal.

    As the night continues, Steve and Maureen will exchange groups so that everyone has the opportunity to take part in both events. The night ends with a Harry Houdini Séance including artifacts once used by the magician himself.

    Will Harry come through? Will we receive a message? Or will we visited by an unknown visitor? Join us and find out!

    To purchase tickets visit the Spirit Quest 2017 page at the New England Ghost Project.

    Organizer and Lead Investigator Ron Kolek will be on Stirring The Cauldron with Marla Brooks tonight at 9PM on Para-X Radio Network.


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    Wednesday, September 6, 2017

    Is Houdini haunting the Eastbourne Hippodrome?

    Yahoo7 has a story today about a ghostly photograph taken at the Eastbourne Hippodrome in the UK where Houdini performed in 1905. According to the article:

    Daniel, Portsmouth, took the image in 2015 with his partner Lauren Higgins, 27, but he is only now revealing the image as he claims it is 'by far the best picture' he has taken on a ghost hunt.
    "It could have been Houdini visiting, especially since it was on stage and then disappeared quickly,” the dad-of-two says.

    By coincidence (or not), Sussux Darkside is planning a "Ghost Hunt & Houdini Seance" at the Eastbourne Hippodrome at the end of this month. I Believe (in publicity).

    Click here to see the ghostly pic at Yahoo7.

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    Tuesday, September 5, 2017

    Skeptical Inquirer discovers Houdini's Girl Detective

    The September/October 2017 issue of Skeptical Inquirer contains a review of last year's Houdini’s Girl Detective: The Real-Life Ghost-Busting Adventures of Rose Mackenberg by Tony Wolf.


    I don't have the issue in hand, but my tipster tells me the review by Terence Hines isn't the best. But having read the book, I found it contained some valuable material, and anything on Rose is worth reading.

    You can subscribe to Skeptical Inquirer via their website. Houdini’s Girl Detective can be purchased at Amazon (U.S.) and Amazon.co.uk (UK).

    Thanks to William Sandell.

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    Sunday, September 3, 2017

    The Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery...or misfire?

    The "Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery" has to be the least discussed original Houdini effect. In most biographies it receives only a few lines, if it's mentioned at all. In fact, if it weren't for the often reproduced UK poster (right), I think this effect might have become lost to Houdini history. Why is that? Is it because Houdini didn't do it for long? Or is it because the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery was a rare case of a Houdini misfire. Let's explore.

    The origin of the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery goes back to Houdini's earliest days as a performer. Harry's first partner in The Brothers Houdini, Jacob Hyman, left the act and was replaced by Houdini's real brother, Theo. After a short stint in the army, Hyman got back into show business as J.H. Houdini. Having co-created the name, Jacob believed he had as much right to use it as Harry. His feature was an escape from a barrel that he called The Barrel Mystery.

    Jacob Hyman a.k.a. J.H. Houdini
    When Harry began achieving great fame in Europe, Jacob continued to tour small time American Vaudeville as "Houdini". This caused confusion in the press and with the public (and can still trip up researchers today). By 1903, the idea of two Houdinis became intolerable to Harry. After waging a war of words in the press, Harry dispatched his brother Leopold and a lawyer to confront Jacob. Exactly what was worked out is not known, but from that day forward, Harry became the only Houdini and also acquired Jacob's featured barrel escape. It seems likely Houdini simply bought out his former partner, as Jacob would go to medical school and become a Beverly Hills physician. (He and Harry remained good friends.)

    Now in possession of Jacob's barrel, Houdini developed a new effect to replace Metamorphosis. The effect would see him locked in the barrel and then "triple-locked" into a portable prison cell. In "less that 2 seconds", Houdini would make his escape and his assistant, Franz Kukol, would be discovered inside. It's interesting that it was not Bess who played this substitution role as she had for 10 years with Metamorphosis. But it appears Bess was ready to leave the act, at least as a regular participant. The Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery offered her that...escape.

    The first performance of the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery was at the Regent Theatre in Salford during the week of October 3, 1904. Houdini offered £100 to anyone who could find trap doors within the jail cell. (The barrel is apparently not part of the deal.) But a review of his act the following week at the Empire Palace of Varieties in Bristol describes the effect is being performed with a curtain cabinet instead of the jail cell, much in the style of Metamorphosis. Perhaps there was a problem with the cell that night. Or might this be the first sign that something wasn't quite working?

    Advert in the Houdini Museum of New York.

    On paper, the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery seems like a winner and an improvement over Metamorphosis in every way. First off, a barrel seems even more confining than a large steamer trunk. Instead of a curtain cabinet, meant only to conceal the exchange, a locked prison cell adds another layer of difficulty, while also nicely evoking Houdini's famous prison breaks. And the appearance of an assistant in the barrel provides the same surprise finale as Metamorphosis.

    However, it's clear from the notices that the new feat did not pack the same punch as Metamorphosis. Newspapers frequently praised Metamorphosis as "clever" and a "neat trick." But descriptions of the Barrel Mystery tend to be somewhat dispassionate, such as this November 15, 1904 review of Houdini’s act in Leeds:

    Houdini, in addition to his handcuff business, at which he is a past master, showed a packed house at the Tivoli last night a model of a prison cell. Enclosed and locked in a sort of barrel, he was duly placed in the cell, which was triply locked outside. In a minute or so, he was outside the cell and the barrel, when opened, contained an attendant.

    So what was wrong? The Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery had it all. But maybe that was the problem. Was it an escape or a magic trick? It seemed designed to be both, but in doing so, it becomes neither. The set-up is pure escape, and a sacred one at that. This is "The Jail Breaker" after all. But the appearance of an assistant at the end reveals it to have been "just a trick" all along. One could see this as being confusing for the audience. It could have the unintended effect of undercutting the legitimacy of all of Houdini's escapes. Because if Houdini could secrete an assistant inside his escape apparatus whenever he liked, well...

    It's also been suggested that the appearance of a male assistant lacks the poetry of man into a woman, husband into wife. Hardeen himself noted the improvement in Metamorphosis when Harry replaced him with Bess. Said Dash, "The exchange of one young man for another who looked a lot like him could not be as dynamic as the virtual transformation of a woman into a man."

    This is probably why, despite the posters he had made touting the exchange, Houdini appears to have dropped the substitution element, at least on occasion. The Sunderland Echo on May 23 1905 describes the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery as a straightforward escape, with Metamorphosis back in the act as the closer. But even as an escape, it doesn't seem to have always wowed the crowds. As Houdini explained the workings of his prison cell one night in Hastings, someone in the upper part of the house repeatedly shouted, "It is faked."

    Nevertheless, Houdini took the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery to America and featured it during his triumphant return tour of 1906. Despite having a fresh poster created that now billed it as "The Prison and Barrel Transposition" (right), he again appears to have presented it as a straight escape, as suggested in this April 19, 1906 review in the Hartford Courant:

    In Salem, Mass, he was locked in a stout barrel with four locks and many straps, and placed in a facsimile of a German cell. In a few moments he was free.

    But not all the reviews were dispassionate. When Houdini played the American Theater in New York in May 1906, the NY Clipper records:

    His "prison cell and barrel substitution" was new to most of the audience, and was a tremendous success, being one of his best offerings.

    Houdini was doing the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery as late as December 1906 (when the above photo was taken), so it's likely it continued as a periodic feature right through his 1907 tour. But with the coming of his next original invention in 1908, the undeniably successful Milk Can escape, the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery vanishes from the record. Metamorphosis returns as Houdini's preferred substitution illusion, and never again would Houdini so mix magic and escape into a single effect.

    There is no known photo of Houdini performing the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery, and none of the apparatus survives (as far as I know). One can see the barrel in photos of Jacob Hyman, and it's likely its secret is revealed in Walter Gibson's Houdini's Escapes (page 212). Unfortunately, there are no photos or even a sketch of the prison cell. That part of the effect remains a mystery.

    Today Metamorphosis stands as Houdini's great substitution trick, and is still performed to acclaim. The legacy of the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery remains a poster, and perhaps a rare example of when Houdini got it wrong.

    Information critical to my understanding of the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery appears in Derek Tait's terrific new book, The Great Houdini: His British Tours. Also thanks to Joe Posnanski and Bill Mullins for finding me reviews in America. The photo of Jack Hyman with the barrel is from The Secret Life of Houdini Laid Bare. The original belongs to Roger Dreyer. U.S. poster pic comes from HHCE.

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    Friday, September 1, 2017

    Rolling out the barrel

    This Labor Day weekend I will share the largely untold story of an original Houdini effect that receives almost no mention in any of the major books. In fact, if it weren't for a popular poster reproduction, it's possible this effect would have been lost to Houdini history.

    Why is this? I think I might have an idea. So check out WILD ABOUT HARRY this weekend for the full story of the Prison Cell & Barrel Mystery.

    Houdini and Doyle hold The Last Séance

    A new play is coming our way at the end of this month. The Last Séance by Jennifer Berman will play three performances at the Hudson Guild Theater as part of the New York Theater Summerfest at the end of this month. Houdini is played by Justin Chevalier. Below are details.

    Against the backdrop of the early twentieth century, HARRY HOUDINI and ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE confront each other over the emerging phenomenon of Spiritualism. While devoted follower DOYLE embraces the ability to talk to the dead, HOUDINI becomes an anti-Spiritualist crusader. Can their friendship survive as the forces and faiths of this world, and the next, conspire to pull them apart?
    Sept. 25, 2017 @ 6:15PM
    Sept. 29, 2017 @ 9PM
    October 1, 2017 @ 3:30PM

    For more information and to purchase tickets visit The New York Theater Festival.

    Houdini and Doyle have certainly been popular with playwrights over the past few years. Below are links to a few other Houdini/Doyle stage adventures.

    Thanks to our friends at the Houdini Museum in Scranton for the alert.

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