Tag Archive for Houdini

Happy Birthday Houdini

Houdini

Happy Birthday Harry!!!

This great Google Banner celebrates the masters birthday.

Ehrich Weizs was born on March 24th, 1874 in Budapest BUT he would later claim is birthday as April 6th 1874. This second date represents his adoption of the USA as his home.

The Weiss family came to the United States on July 3, 1878, sailing on the SS Fresia. With his pregnant mother and his father there were  his four brothers. The family changed the Hungarian spelling of their German surname into Weiss (the German spelling) and the spelling of their son’s name into Ehrich. Friends called him “Ehrie” or “Harry

Harry’s show biz career wasn’t an immediate success and he worked in small side shows and carnival booths presenting himself as the King of Cards.

He is remembered for his highly publicized, dramatic and provocative escapes. This phase of his career started when he changed his billing from King of Cards, to King of Handcuffs.

His act evolved to include the ‘challenge escapes’ which for the most part were promotional stunts for his full evening shows.

The Myth of Houdini is, in reality, less interesting than Houdini the Man.

A master showman, entrepreneur, adventurer and self-publicist who captured the spirit of the time. His shaking off of chains a shackles could be seen a as a metaphor for the triumph of the individual over the bonds of the Great Depression.

His stance on aspects of the paranormal, his invitation to comment on aspects of mediumship to the scientific community and membership of the Society of American Magicians committee for the investigation of claims of the paranormal show not only his acute awareness of there being a ‘market’ for his evenings of fraudulent medium demonstrations but also his desire to take a skeptical approach to all claims of ‘real magic’.

But all of this is perhaps a topic for future posts…

For now it’s a Houdini Day and I’ll be talking about Houdini as an inspiration, as an entertainer and a skeptic on Penwith Radio later today (4pm -6pm GMT)

On a related note, Dorothy Young, the last surviving stage assistant of illusionist Harry Houdini and an accomplished dancer, has died. She was 103.

Young’s death was announced Wednesday by Drew University, where she was a prominent donor and patron of the arts. Spokesman Dave Muha said she died Sunday at her home in a Tinton Falls, N.J., retirement community.

Young joined Houdini’s company as a 17-year-old after attending an open casting call during a family trip to New York. She initially sat in the back because she was too shy to step forward, but Houdini and his manager soon noticed her and asked her to dance the Charleston. They signed her to a contract, and she eventually persuaded her parents to let her join the stage show.

During her year with Houdini in the mid-1920s, she gained recognition for playing the role of Radio Girl of 1950, emerging from a large mock-up of a radio and performing a dance routine. She also performed other roles during the tour, which proved to be Houdini’s last in the United States before he died in October 1926, two months after she had left the show .

Young then formed a dance act with Gilbert Kiamie, a New York businessman and the son of a wealthy silk lingerie magnate, and they gained international prominence for a Latin dance they created known as the rumbalero. They later married and remained together until Kiamie died in 1992.

Young went on to perform in several movies and also published a novel inspired by her career. She later became a benefactor of Drew University, endowing it with a $13 million arts center that bears her name. Several of her paintings hang in buildings on its campus in Madison.

She also attended numerous events at the school over the years. One of her last appearances there was in October 2008 for a commemoration of the 82nd anniversary of Houdini’s death that featured an inner circle of Houdini enthusiasts and historians.

Young had a son with her first husband, Robert Perkins, who died after 13 years of marriage.

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Another Houdini Movie in the Pipeline?

It’s amazing that nearly 100 years after his death Houdini is still a name to conjour with and, I feel, he would be suitably impressed to find that his name and fame was still a marketable commodity.

Screenwriter Noah Oppenhein has been hired by Summit Entertainment to write The Secret Life of Houdini. Summit first acquired the biography by William Kalush and Larry Sloman in 2009.

The story line apparently follows the exploits of  Houdini not only as an illusionist, but also as a spy for Great Britain. The studio wants to create a character that is part Sherlock Holmes  and part Indiana Jones, following his rise as both a magician and covert agent.

Brilliant Magic !

John Fisher, the great John Fisher, has been bringing great magic and great variety to our TV screens for years. Without him then the UK would not have been treated to performances from some of the greatest living magicians on BBC TV.

So it was with great excitement that I settled down to a re-showing of a John Fisher programme first aired three or four years ago. The Heroes of Magic – a two hour tour de force of magicians and magical performances. With archive footage of Cardini, Devant, Houdini, Dunninger, The Piddingtons, Chan Canasta, Dai Vernon … I refuse to accept the notion that any magician could not be moved watching these great performances.

Intelligent comments by established performers and respected magical teachers connected the clips as we were taken from one magical highlight to another. For me seeing Dunninger, Canasta and the Piddingtons was an education. It goes without saying the the featured performances by Rene Levand, Lance Burton, David Copperfield, Dai Vernon, Doug Henning, Richiardi, Channing Pollock, Harry Blackstone Senior and Junior, Slydinin and our own Paul Daniels satisfied the long held desire to see good magic on TV.

Such a shame that it’s time slot, 11pm Saturday night, would mean that only the aware and devoted would be up and watching.

More More More ……

Houdini and Holmes – Elementary My Dear Watson

The screenplay “Voices from the Dead” has apparently been purchased by Dreamworks.

Written by Babylon 5 writer Michael Straczynski’s script has said

“I was doing some research into Houdini when I discovered that he and Doyle were friends,” Straczynski said of the project’s origins. “I hadn’t previously been aware of this, and was fascinated by their relationship. I managed to get a lot online about them, and I ordered Houdini’s book where he talks about Doyle, and Doyle’s book where he talks about Houdini … the more I dug the more interesting it became. [When] that friendship broke apart over their different beliefs, the heat was equal to if not greater than the friendship that spawned it.

“”Voices From the Dead” is roughly 60% factual and 40% fictional, an examination of the friendship between Doyle and Houdini while also incorporating plenty of action to keep audiences on the edges of their seats.”

The story sees Houdini and Doyle working together to solve series Murders in 1920 New York.


Magicians and The Paranormal

Magicians have had a longstanding connection with the world of the paranormal and the supernatural. It is feasible to suggest that the early shaman and village ‘wise person’ used a potent mix of psychology, conjuring and ‘magic’ in order to act as the mediator between the spirit and earthly realms; the tribal counsellor and the healer. In fact the art if the conjuror has had several incarnations since then – the mountebank, the swindler, the carnival medicine man and the thief. Perhaps Robert Houdin can truly be credited with turning the street swindler into the suave deceiver so respected at evening soirees.

With the advent of the spiritualist movement in the late 1800′s some magicians found another way to please paying audiences. Now whilst not only mediums based their spiritual hokum on trickery, the fact remains that many did. Even the founders of spiritualism, The Fox Sisters admitted to blatant fraud towards the end of their careers.

In many respects the first popular magician to make a stand against misuse of magic and magical techniques was Harry Houdini. Not only did he set out to expose fraudulent mediums but he was one of the original members of the Society of American Magicians to be invited to set up a committee for the investigation of psychic claims with the full support of the scientific community.

For the last thirty years or more James Randi has been actively fighting a battle against flim flam and woo. His understanding of magical techniques has given him a unique perspective which in some cases has ‘seen through’ some of the flaws in scientific method and thinking.

Not only did James Randi as a performer emulate Houdini, but as a critical thinker he has donned the mantle of psychic investigator. More to the point Randi has inspired a new generation of magicians who are making a stand against the fraudulent application of tricks. Banacek, Penn and Teller, Jamie Ian Swiss being the more notable examples.

I remember as a fledgling mentalist I got angry at folks like Randi as, at the time I saw them breaking the ‘magicians code” in suggesting the methods behind effects similar to those that featured in my act. At the time my enthusiasm for the art and innocence meant that I did not feel the public needed the kind of protection Randi and his fellow conjurors were offering.

Well I”ve been performing for best part of twenty five years now and guess what – the public do need protecting. Now more than ever.

As a performer who takes the paranormal, the psychic and the occult as themes for his performances I try to be very aware of how i need to maintain the mystery of the presentation whilst not promoting beliefs in wooly thinking and woo woo.

Of course these considerations are not a problem for card and coin magicians or those demonstrating some for of manual dexterity or theatrical illusion, but they are vital for the growing number of magicians choosing to be psychological illusionists, mentalists, psychic entertainers and such like.

What responsibilities do you have in this area.

For my part I am a Rational Mystic and try to offer some entertaining distractions and provocative debates an the Haunted Cornwall radio show….

Alan

This blog is monetized using Are-PayPal WP Plugin SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline