Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Legend of Harry Houdini
Episode Date: March 10, 2023In the late 19th century, a young man by the name of Erich Weiss decided to pursue a career in magic and illusion. To honor his favorite magician, he took the name The Great Houdini. He became one o...f the most successful magicians in history and also found success in motion pictures and aviation. It all ended with his untimely death at the age of 52, the cause of which is still debated to this day. Learn more about the legend of the Harry Houdini on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In the late 19th century, a young man by the name of Eric Weiss decided to pursue a career in magic and illusion.
To honor his favorite magician, he took the name the Great Houdini.
He became one of the most successful magicians in history and also found success in motion pictures and aviation.
However, his career came to an end with his untimely death at the age of 52, the cause of which is still debated to this day.
Learn more about the legend of Harry Houdini on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The man the world would come to know as Harry Houdini was born Eric Weiss in 1874 to a Jewish family in Budapest, Hungary.
As a child, his family immigrated to the United States in 1878, where his father took a position as a rhaps.
in the small town of Appleton, Wisconsin. More on that in a bit. Four years later, his father lost
his job and the family moved to Milwaukee, fell destitute, and five years later, the family moved to
New York City. When Eric was just nine years old in Milwaukee, he began his career performing for
the public when he appeared as a trapeze artist known as Eric Prince of the Air. In 1890, he started
to show interest in magic and gave himself the stage name Harry Houdini. The name was taken in
honor of a French magician he respected by the name of Jean-Eugin Robert Hudan, who was
considered to be the father of modern magic and illusion. He mistakenly thought that adding the
eye to the end of a word, turning Hudan into Houdini, meant belonging to in French,
which it does not. His first name, Harry, he said, was a nod to the American magician,
Harry Keller. When he started performing magic, he wasn't doing the type of act that would make him
famous. He did some traveling with a circus and performed in vaudeville shows, and his initial
magic consisted of simple card tricks and sleight of hand. He met his wife, Bess Roner, while
performing magic in Coney Island. As a sleight of hand magician, he was competent but not great,
despite the fact that he would bill himself as the king of cards. In the late 1890s, he began to shift
his focus from sleight of hand and card tricks to escape acts at the behest of the vaudeville promoter
Martin Beck. He became particularly adept at getting out of handcuffs. In 1895, he and his wife
debuted his metamorphosis act. While other magicians did the metamorphosis act, the use of his wife
in the act made it different and more attention-grabbing than other acts. The metamorphosis act involved
Houdini being put into handcuffs with his hand behind his back, then put into a closed bag, and then
locked into a sealed box, which was put inside a cabinet. Mrs. Houdini would then draw a curtain,
clap three times, and then the curtain would be opened by Harry Houdini, with Mrs. Houdini
now inside the box. His big break came in 1890 when Beck booked him on a nationwide tour of the
largest vaudeville theaters. One of the reasons why his tour was so successful was because he would
stage escape attempts from local jails after being searched by police. They were huge promotional
events for his shows and were covered by local newspapers. He would also allow members of the audience
to tie him up or put him in handcuffs from which he would always
escape. He was such a hit on his American tour than in 1900 he was booked to tour England.
He performed another public escape in London, this time at Scotland Yard in front of the founder of the
British Secret Service Bureau, William Melville. He escaped from handcuffs that were put on by
Melville, which left him baffled as to just how he did it. His Scotland Yard stunt garnered so
much attention that he sold out the Alhambra Theatre in London for six months straight. On one
occasion, the London Mirror newspaper tested him with a specially designed set of handcuffs,
which he managed to free himself from in under an hour. He became known as the King of Handcuffs
and the celebrated police baffler. From England, he then went to Continental Europe, where he
became just as big of a hit. In Cologne Germany, a police officer accused Houdini of being
a fraud and bribing officials so he could get free. Houdini then sued him for defamation and won the
case, when he demonstrated his skills by opening the judge's safe. In Moscow, he was stripped and
placed inside of a Siberian prison wagon, from which he also managed to escape. In 1904,
Houdini returned to the United States a rich man and purchased an expensive brownstone home in Harlem.
Back in the United States, he launched a magazine, wrote an article trashing his namesake,
Robert Hudan, and continued to entertain crowds around the country. In addition to his jail breaks and
handcuff escapes, he would also break free from straight jackets while suspended upside down in front of
crowds. In 1908, he introduced his most daring escape to date, the milk jug escape. In the milk jug
escape, Houdini had a large metal milk jug on stage filled with water. The jug would be displayed
to the audience to show that there were no holes anywhere in the jug. Houdini would then be
handcuffed in the front, submerged in the jug, and then the cap of the jug was placed on top and locked.
would then be raised in front of the jug to hide it, and a few seconds later the curtain would
drop, and Houdini would be outside the jug with his hands freed. In 1912, during a performance in
Berlin, he introduced a new trick called the Chinese water torture cell. The Chinese water
torture cell was a tall box made out of glass and steel such that the audience could see everything
inside. He would then be placed inside the box, which was filled with water, handcuffed,
upside down, and then the box at the top was locked.
He actually did his first performance of the Chinese water torture cell in 1911 in London
as part of a one-man show with an audience of one person.
This was simply so he could get a copyright on the trick,
unlike his milk jug escape, which soon had imitators doing it.
Some of his escapes were in fact tricks,
and if you're so inclined, you can find some videos online
that show the secret to the milk jug escape.
However, much of what he did was simply a matter of pure physicality and skill.
He really could break out of many.
handcuffs and locks, and he was a master of lock picking. He also could really get out of a
straitjacket. It's a skill that anyone can master if you practice it. He was a natural athlete and was
incredibly strong and fit, and he also had the ability to hold his breath for several minutes.
Houdini, in addition to being the highest paid vaudeville act in the country, also had many other
interests. He was actually an aviation pioneer. In 1909, he purchased his own airplane and took it with him
while on tour in Australia. He flew his plane in Australia on March 18, 1910, thinking that he was the
first person ever to take a powered flight in the country. In reality, he was the third person,
as someone had done it three months earlier. He also had a brief career in motion pitchers.
He began in 1906 by filming himself performing outdoor escapes and then showing those films
during his vaudeville shows. Over the years, he had several small roles and movies made about his
escapes, but in 1919, he got his first real role in a feature film called The Grim Game.
In it, he plays a young man who is wrongfully jailed for murder and must escape to save his
fiancee. In 1920, he starred in Terror Island, and after that, he started his own production
company called the Houdini Pitcher Corporation. The company made several pitchers, but gave up in
1923 due to a lack of success. He also turned his attention towards debunking psychics and
spiritualists. Because he had a background in magic, he knew the
tricks that spiritualists used to claim to talk to the dead and take advantage of people in mourning.
He joined with Scientific American Magazine to offer a cash prize to anyone who could prove that they
had supernatural abilities. He exposed several notable spiritualists as frauds, most significantly
the popular Mina Crandon. He was also the president of the Society of American Magicians
and president of Martinka and company, America's oldest magic company which still exists today.
Before he died, he created a pact with his wife that if he died, he died, he created a pact with his wife that if he
died, he would try to contact her after death with a special code that they agreed upon,
which was, Rosabelle Believe. Not all of his escapes went off flawlessly. He was once buried alive
in a stunt that almost suffocated him. Likewise, in 1915, he allowed himself to be locked inside
the carcass of a beached whale where he also almost suffocated. Harry Houdini's death has been
shrouded in mystery since the day it happened. The events which led up to his demise started on his
tour on October 11, 1926 in Albany, New York. While being shackled to the Chinese water
torture cell, a faulty piece of equipment hit his leg and fractured his left ankle. Then on
October 22nd, he was in Montreal where he gave a lecture at McGill University. And later that
evening, he invited several students backstage at his performance. Houdini had long been known for
his ability to take a punch to the stomach. Backstage at the show, one of the students,
Jay Gordon Whitehead, asked Houdini about this. He was a lot of the show. He was a long been known. He was
was lying down on a couch at the time resting his ankle. When he told the student, yes,
the student repeatedly punched him in the stomach several times in quick succession.
The trick for Houdini to take a punch to the stomach was that he had to prepare himself
and tense up his abdominal muscles. However, this time he wasn't prepared. Houdini performed that
night in pain, and the pain only worsened the next several days. The stomach pains continued
and his temperature rose to 104 degrees Fahrenheit or 40 degrees Celsius. He saw that
a doctor who suggested he had appendicitis and that he should go to a hospital.
He arrived in Detroit on October 24th in pain and managed to struggle through a performance at the
Garrick Theater. As soon as the final curtain fell, he collapsed. It was his last performance ever.
After the show, he was rushed to a hospital for an emergency appendectomy. However, when the doctors
opened him up, they found that his appendix had burst several days earlier. The damage had already
been done, and he was suffering from a massive infection. He managed to hold on for another week
and passed away on Halloween at the age of 52. The debate surrounding his death had to do with how
much his getting punched in the stomach had to do with his appendix bursting. After his death
for the next 10 years, his widow held a seance where she tried to contact Houdini to receive their
secret phrase. She never received it. Since his death, the legacy of Houdini has only grown. The
collection of Houdini memorabilia has become a big business. Today, the world's largest collection
of Houdini memorabilia is owned by the magician David Copperfield. He has an entire warehouse
in Las Vegas for his collection. At the start of the episode, I mentioned that Harry Houdini
first lived in Appleton, Wisconsin when his family first migrated to the United States.
Today, Appleton has a Houdini Museum, the town square is called Houdini Plaza, and there's a Houdini
historical walking tour you can take, which visit several of the buildings which were relevant to his
family when he was younger. The reason why I bring this up is that the walking tour and all the bronze
plaques around town were developed by me. I grew up in the same town that Harry Houdini did, and I was
assigned to work on the Houdini historical walking tour when I was in college one summer working for
the city planning department. So that's my personal little link to Harry Houdini. Almost a century after the
death of Houdini, he is still probably the most famous magician in the world. His name has
become a euphemism for someone disappearing or pulling off an escape. His performance and his
creativity in the area of magic have inspired generations of magicians and probably will continue
to do so for generations to come. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles
Daniel. The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett. I have some news for those of you
who listen to the show on Spotify. I've been reading reviews in this
segment of the show, mostly from Apple Podcasts, because you can actually leave reviews there.
If you're one of the many Spotify listeners, you've only been able to leave a rating on the
app, and thank you to all of those who have done that. However, Spotify as of today has now
created the ability to leave comments on individual episodes. For any episode you listen to,
such as this one, you'll see a question that says, what did you think about this episode if
you're listening on a Spotify smartphone app? You can leave a comment about that particular
episode or about the show in general. However, given the way it works on the back end, I'm probably
only going to see comments left on the most recent episodes because otherwise I'd have to go check
almost a thousand different shows. Just as an example, here are some of the Spotify comments
just left in the last 24 hours on the recent episode on the Knights of Malta. Joe Ray said,
I loved it. Fascinating. I'm also a little embarrassed about how long I spent trying to memorize
the full name of the Knights of Malta. Yun Li simply said, excellent. Danny said,
brief, concise, informative, well-produced, and importantly interesting.
Another great episode.
Thank you for all the work.
And finally, Andre Secairac Casa de Madera said, as always on point, factual objective
and well-delivered.
Thanks a bunch.
Listener from Brazil.
So, if you listen to the show on Spotify, you can now have your review of the podcast or
an individual episode read on the show.
And gentlemen, I take great pleasure in introducing
my latest invention, the Wacetopatical.
Although there is nothing supernatural about it,
I am willing to profit from $1,000 to anyone
who can prove that it is possible to obtain air
inside of the process cell when I'm locked up in it in the regulation manner after it has been filled with water.
