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HARRY HOUDINI
– MAGICAL MUGGLE

Just as Harry Potter is (to be) the greatest wizard of all time of the wizarding
world, Harry Houdini, during his lifetime was certainly the master magician of
his muggle world. Houdini was a real person, although his exploits and amazing
feats of daring are the stuff that legends are made of. And as legends tend
to perhaps be based on facts, the edges of what’s true and what’s been
enhanced (as in added, deleted or newly created) leave us a bit blurry-eyed
but non-the-less mesmerized.
Harry Houdini was born as Ehrich
Weisz (or Weiss) on March 24th, 1874 in Budapest, Hungary; however, Houdini
always claimed to be born on April 6th in the small town of Appleton,
Wisconsin, and indeed, his family moved to Appleton when he was a small child.
Harry’s mother may have been the reason Harry’s birth date was two weeks off
because that is when she always celebrated it. (Go figure.)
The family struggled through hard
times and moved often. When Harry was nine his father took him to see a
traveling magician and the spell of performing magic on stage was cast. Nine
year old “Ehrich, The Prince of the Air” made his professional debut on October
28th, 1883 as a contortionist and trapeze performer. Three years
later magician “Eric the Great” ran away from home with dreams of making money
with the circus. He returned home to his family (then in New York) a year later
no richer and no less stage struck.
The turning point in young
Harry/Erich’s life was when he read the autobiography of French-born magician
Jean Robert-Houdin. Erich wanted to be just like Robert-Houdin so he changed
his last name to Houdini (which translates to “Houdin-like”). I’m not quite
sure when he changed his first name from Ehrich to Harry but it obviously did
the trick in changing his destiny from a “who?” to “Houdini! That’s who!”… and
the rest if history… if you will.
Houdini’s
most famous stunt was his hand-cuff escape. One of Harry’s early jobs was
as an
apprentice blacksmith. One day the police brought in a young man whom they had
handcuffed and who had tried to unlock the cuffs with a key he owned. The key
broke in the lock and the crook was stuck. The master blacksmith started
working at trying to open the handcuff in question but left the task undone to
take his dinner break (we have our priorities, you know) leaving Harry to carry
on. After several attempts and broken saw blades Harry decided to pick the lock
and succeeded. (I wonder if Fred and George have studied Houdini’s methods?)
He continued to use the basic principle of lock picking to open handcuffs around
the world and was dubbed the “Handcuff King”.
Harry wasn’t an overnight success
and there were many years of empty pockets and empty stomachs, but in 1900 he and
his wife, Bess, sailed for Europe where Houdini’s performances became sold-out
box office triumphs. During their five-year tour Harry performed incredible
escapes from a pair of handcuffs at Scotland Yard and from the chilling depths
of the Seine River in Paris. His other escapes included freeing himself from
sunken packing cases, coffins, burglar-proof safes, padded cells and straight
jackets, a roll-top desk, a preserved giant squid (possibly a relation of the one
in the Hogwarts lake?), a U.S. mail pouch and a plate glass box, just to name a
few.
One time he climbed inside a safe that he was
supposed to be working on and locked himself inside. Panic and pandemonium
erupted in the shop because nobody knew the combination and all thought Harry
was a goner. However, a few minutes later the safe door swung open
and out came Harry completely safe and unscathed. He had opened it from
the inside. He apparently commented that "Safes are designed to keep
people out, not in."
This amazing man dazzled his
audiences for several years with this charm, athletic skills, head-scratching
illusions and thrilling escapes. However the aura of his invincibility seems to
have ironically led to his tragic end. On October 22, 1926, before his
scheduled performance at the Princess Theater in Montreal, Houdini was
entertaining several students from McGill University in his dressing room. One
of the students asked him if he really could take a punch to the stomach without
it hurting him. Normally this was so but Houdini needed time to prepare for it
by tightening his stomach muscles. The student didn’t wait and hit him three
times. Houdini went on with his show and several others but became ill not long
after. His appendix had burst as a result of the punches. He died 9 days
later... on Halloween.
At his funeral one of the pall bearers allegedly
remarked to a fellow pall bearer as they were carrying Houdini's casket, "Do
you
think he is still inside?"
Houdini
also became famous as a debunker of fake spiritualists. Being a master
illusionist himself he easily recognized the tell-tale signs of imposter mediums
who claimed they could contact the spirit world but were nothing more than
greedy charlatans. After Harry Houdini’s death Bess held séances every
Halloween for the next ten years in an attempt to contact her husband on the
other side, hoping to receive a message including a secret code they had devised
before Houdini’s death. She never did hear the message. (Maybe she should have
asked Professor Trelawney to come to one of her séances.)
Many books have been written about
Harry Houdini (and I’m sure Hermione has read them all) and in 1953 muggle Tony
Curtis portrayed the famous escape artist in the rather romanticized motion
picture “Houdini.” Tony Curtis’s then wife, Janet Leigh, played Bess Houdini.
This film is available on VHS for those interested.
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Photo copyright Paramount Pictures Corp.
All rights reserved
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