Houdini Movie Lots

An episode 10 Master Mystery Poster sold yesterday (7/25/2020) at Heritage auctions for $43,200 which included Buyer’s Premium.

Also, yesterday (7/25/2020) , there were some great Houdini Movie Lots (390, 397, 398, 398A, 404, 405, 406, 410, 418, 419, 432, and 434) from The Magic Collection of Jim Rawlins and others that sold at Potter & Potter. Click here for prices realized.

While I have many of these items already, I had my eyes on Lot 398A (which had 2 items I had never seen before) and Lot 404.

Lot 398A

Houdini, Harry (Ehrich Weisz). Houdini “The Grim Game” Airplane Photographs. Circa 1919.  Uncommon group of five possibly unpublished photographs of Houdini and others on the set of “The Grim Game,” one of Houdini’s films.  One photo shows Houdini standing next to the Curtiss “Jenny” camera airplane piloted by Al Wilson; Lt. David E. Thomson, pilot; Robert Kennedy, Houdini’s stunt double; and Lt. Christopher Pickup, pilot of second airplane. Other photos show various images of pilots, cameraman, director, and co-star Ann Forrest. During the filming of a sequence, the planes collided in mid-air but managed to land safely, in what was likely the first airplane collision ever filmed. The damage to the one of the airplane’s wings is clearly visible in three of the photos. Very good.

Notes: Three of the five photographs have been published before. For example pages 94, 95 and 97 of “Locklear: The Man Who Walked on Wings.”  But two of the photographs, AFAIK, haven’t been published before.

Lot 404:

Houdini, Harry (Ehrich Weisz). Houdini Mastery Mystery Invitation. [New York], 1918. Brown ink on cream stock, listing the names of each character and actor playing the role, including Houdini as “Quentin Locke,” and being a “special invitation performance given at the Strand Theatre” on Nov. 7, 1918. 8 ¼ x 5 7/8”. Central folds.

Notes:  A broadside from my personal collection gave Newspaper reviews for this special performance at the Strand Theatre on Nov 7, 1918.

Congrats to the winners.  BTW: I won Lot 404, which will complement my Master Mystery broadside nicely.

Mirror Cuff “exposed Jan 1920” and “locked in safe until mid 1930s ”.

Added a couple of new items to my collection while researching the Mirror Cuff:

  • “Uncrowning the Handcuff King” by Joseph P. Wilson, January 1920 issue of Illustrated World Magazine
  • “Unlocking Adventure” by Charles Courtney (1942)

Both are discussed in Chapter Eight, “The Mirror Handcuff Mystery”, of Patrick Culliton’s book, “the Key” and offer key insights into the Mirror Cuff Challenge.

  • Joseph P. Wilson’s theory on how Houdini Escaped the Mirror Cuff
  • Locksmith, Charles Courtney had come upon a Mirror Cuff inside Houdini’s private safe after the magician’s death and offered to open them, but Bessie inferred that only Houdini was allowed to unlock them

Culliton asks the question, “Could it be that Bessie Houdini was preventing Courtney from discovering that beyond that single Brahma lock lay the “false works” that Wilson described in his article?”

Joseph P. Wilson’s theory on how Houdini escaped the Mirror Cuff, is also discussed in the chapter, “How He Did It (Theory Two)” of Joe Posnanski’s  book, “The Life and Afterlife of Harry Houdini”.  Posnanski’s says “Wilson did not get it right”, since his claim was built around the premise that the Mirror Cuffs were gaffed and the one’s in David Copperfield’s collection are not. Well the Tatler Cuff may have been gaffed.

Here is the related snippet from Courtney:

Mrs. Houdini…asking me to unlock her husband’s safe, the one he used in his act.  In the safe, he had told her, was something to treasure but no one had been able to open the lock. On my next trip [1935] to the West, I paid her a visit in Hollywood. This gentle, tiny woman was living in a small home [2435 Laurel Canyon Blvd] surrounded by her keepsakes and sharing her home with a half-dozen elderly actresses who had no work. Her two chief concerns were a small two- or three pound monkey [named Satan], a pet that she carried everywhere perched on her shoulder, and portrait of Houdini under which an oil lamp burned perpetually. The lock on the chest was a trick one, I knew, so I asked Mrs. Houdini very carefully just how  her husband opened it.

“Houdini never touched it,” she told me. “He just passed his hands over it and it opened.” I went around the corner to the hardware store, returned in a few minutes and passed my hands over the lock. It opened immediately.  The elderly actresses crowded around and asked me how I learned the trick, but my only magic was a small magnet that clicked with another in the shackle of the lock. On the floor of the chest lay the beautiful silver [?] handcuffs that the city of London had once presented to the magician.  They were fastened with one of the finest Bramah locks that I have seen.  It would have been interesting to open them, but Mrs. Houdini shook her head.

I must never let anyone touch the lock. You may have the safe for your collection; Houdini would have wished it. But these handcuffs–he promised that if he can pierce the veil of death, he will unlock them. Then I shall know that he has returned to me.”

The Billboard August 3, 1935 mentions the following:

THE LATE HOUDINI’S trick of opening a closed safe by passing his hands over it was exposed last week by Charles Courtney, president of the Master Locksmiths Association of America. Mrs. Houdini had sent her late husbands private safe to Courtney’s shop at 530 West 125th street, New York.  There were some papers she needed and Courtney managed to open the safe in the usual way, turning the dial.  Later he tried to open it as Houdini did and discovered that a magnet passed over the surface caught a hidden tripper and connected with the dial.

The Billboard September 7, 1935 tells the story this way:

CHARLES COURTNEY, master locksmith, is in San Diego, Calif, on his way from New York to Honolulu where he hopes to open the vaults of a submerged treasure ship. Before leaving New York on his present venture, Mrs. Harry Houdini telegraphed him from Hollywood asking that he open a safe in New York which formerly belonged to her husband. Houdini had closed the safe for the last time and the secret of the combination was lost after his death. He and Courtney had been great friends. Courtney opened the safe and presented the contents to Mrs. Houdini. Besides documents, the significance of which Courtney refused to reveal, he found a pair of silver [?] handcuffs presented to Houdini by the city of London.

So a Mirror Cuff [?] was hidden in a safe for a number of years until Courtney opened the safe in the mid-1930’s [1935].

Bonus:

According to the February 1934 Linking Ring article, “With the Old Masters” by William W Durbin, President I.B.M., Kenton Ohio:

Today, I have in my possession, presented to me by Mrs. Houdini, the handcuffs which were made by Birmingham blacksmith and who took five years in making same, which Houdini got out of in the London Hippodrome after he worked for almost seventy minutes to release himself…I have never been able to find any magician or other person who can open and close these handcuffs.

I echo Chris Gower’s theory on Handcuffs.org:

So perhaps, Durbin was given the original Mirror Cuff [aka Tatler Cuff].

Chris also mentions:

I do not believe the two cuffs that are now in David Copperfield’s collection [DC Cuff and Solid Silver Replica] have ever been split up especially as we know both were offered to The Daily Mirror in the early 1970’s and were subsequently sold or auctioned together when I think Radner/Muller bought them.

The David Copperfield Mirror Cuff (aka DC Cuff) interlocked with another pair of cuffs made its first public reappearance [the day Thurston died] in an April 13, 1936 newspaper, where it was mentioned that the keys to the handcuffs have been hidden where no one can find them.

The DC Cuff interlocked with another pair of cuffs was also on the table at the October 31, 1936 séance.

The long key (for the DC Cuff)  made its first appearance in the photo [most likely taken in the late 1930s] of Bess with all of her keepsakes on the table. This also shows the Solid Silver Replica and DC Cuff together for the first time.

The Solid Silver Replica (without the DC Cuff), can be seen for the first time in the photo [1938] of Vincent Hinson, younger brother of Harry Houdini Hinson.

The London Express, March 18, 1904 reported:

and after two and half minutes “click, click, click” was heard. The committee thought that Houdini had freed himself, but it was only the beginning of the end, for the Handcuff King had only broken free from the first lock. There were twenty others to conquer before he could get his hands free.

So, I personally believe, Houdini engineered the entire challenge, was first out of the Tatler Cuffs in two and half minutes, and the rest was showmanship.  After the challenge, the Tatler Cuff vanishes [later given to Durbin] and the unbeatable David Copperfield Cuff appears [later found in a safe].

Where is the original Mirror Cuff given to Durbin?

W.W. Durbin died on Feb 4, 1937 at the age of 70. According to Magicpedia:

William W. Durbin (1866-1937) was a politician, magician and owner of the the American Egyptian Hall Theater and Museum from Ohio. He was elected the first elected president of the International Brotherhood of Magicians and was editor for their Linking Ring magazine (1927 until 1937)…He claims he was offered by Kellar to be his successor before it was given to Thurston…Durbin created a tiny Egyptian Hall theater in his home, launched the first magic convention and was an avid, if careless, collector of magic memorabilia. His collection (which he started in 1895) became the nucleus of the Egyptian Hall Museum collection, later [moved to Nashville Tennessee and] stewarded by magic historian David Price, in 1953. After David’s death, his son, Dave Price III, a circus enthusiast and former magician took over the museum and eventually sold the contents to Mike Caveney and George Daily. Caveney retained the rights to the Egyptian Hall Museum name.

I did a quick search on Handcuffs.org for other references to Durbin and found the following April 29, 2009 thread started by John Bushey:

The third installment of the Jay Marshall estate is being held today. They have a pair of Hamburg 8’s with rectangular keyhole and are advertising them as Houdini’s.  Jay included a note on where he obtained them (Bennett) and was told they were Houdini’s. After checking with a few friends they can be dated to Houdini’s lifetime via a 1923 photo, but not with Houdini in them but another escape artist [Kolar].

The thread included a Kolar/Durbin photo (from Kevin Connolly’s collection) which showed Kolar in numerous handcuffs with the following annotation:  With Best Wishes to W.W. Durbin From the Great Kolar 1/5/24

What does all this mean?  Not sure, but there still could be hope Houdini’s Tatler Cuff still exists (possibly in the States).

Related:

Is Houdini being locked into the Tatler Cuff or David Copperfield Mirror Cuff?

I am the current owner of this page from the March 23, 1904 Tatler magazine that caused so much discussion on the Forum at Handcuffs.Org in 2014.

Prior to this page surfacing, there was the Mirror Cuff (aka DC Cuff) with its long key and the Solid Silver Replica, both in David Copperfield’s collection.

And now added to the mix, is the Tatler Cuff with a short key, which could very well be the original cuff he escaped from.

Handcuffs.Org forum pointed out that the Solid Silver Replica looks like (it was modeled after) the Tatler Cuff in the photo not the DC Cuff.  That was shown by the direction of the middle hinge and the “foot” on the catch.

The original key used in the famous photo taken at the London Hippodrome in the presence of London Newspapers is short, but is that the Tatler Cuff or DC cuff being locked on his wrists?

To help possibly answer that question, let’s looks at another subtle difference (not previously pointed out) between the DC Cuff and the Tatler/Solid Silver Cuffs.

The outermost point of the convex curved bow in the closed/locked position of the DC cuffs appears to be inside of a 90 degrees angle from the keyhole end cap, where the Tatler/Solid Silver Cuffs appears to line up more closely to a 90 degrees angle. And the outermost concave part of the curved bow on the Tatler/Solid Silver Cuffs appears to be more curved (or curve in more) than the DC Cuff.  (Assumption: Tatler when locked lines ups with Solid Silver Cuff).

 

To my eye, the keyhole knob is facing up in the famous photo and the outermost convex point of the curved bow appears to be at a 90 degrees angle or more. And the outermost concave part of the curved bow appears to curve in quite a bit. Also notice the small key, which resembles the Tatler key.

So he escaped from the Tatler Cuff, a matching Solid Silver Manacle was presented, and the DC Cuff was shown to locksmiths and used for the reward after.

Thoughts on my circumstantial evidence.

Related:

Boys Cinema Feb 19 1921 v3 n63

Boys Cinema ran every week from Dec 1919 (n1) to May 1940 (n1063). Houdini appeared in 1920, 1921, 1922, and 1923 issues:

  1. Jan 17, 1920. v1 n6. “Houdini the Handcuff King”  cover & p26.  (HHCE Collection)
  2. Feb 21, 1920. v1 n11. “Houdini”  p12+.  (HHCE Collection)
  3. Jan 8, 1921. v3 n57. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  4. Feb 5, 1921. v3 n61. photo p26.  (HHCE Collection)
  5. Feb 19, 1921. v3 n63. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  6. May 7, 1921. v3 n74. “The Grim Game”  p14. (HHCE Collection)
  7. May 14, 1921. v3 n75. “Terror Island”  cover & p2+.  (HHCE Collection)
  8. June 25, 1921. v4 n81. “The Grim Game”  p14+. (HHCE Collection)
  9. July 30, 1921. v4 n86.  “The Marvelous Houdini” (photo feature)  p14+.  (HHCE Collection)
  10. March 4, 1922. v5 n117. Houdini card on cover.  (HHCE Collection)
  11. March 25, 1922. v5 n120. Houdini cover with Famous Heroes Card # 4 insert. (Missing)
  12. Jan 13, 1923. v6 n162. “Houdini In The Man From Beyond”  p14+.  (Arthur Moses Collection)

This week I share Houdini’s appearance in Boys Cinema Feb 19, 1921. v3 from my personal collection.

Question: Was this photo of Houdini and actor Theodore Roberts taken when he was on the west coast making The Grim Game or Terror Island?

Clue: Lila Lee, Island

Answer: The Grim Game

Lila Lee, Gloria Swanson, Tom Meighan and Thomas Roberts were making the Cecil B. DeMIlle film, “Male and Female” (the big picture production of the famous Barrie play, “Admiral Crichton“), at Lasky Studios around the same time. In June 1919 they filmed shipwreck scenes at Santa Cruz Island; Elaborate sets built to add realism to the location, in addition strengthening the illusion of tropical verdure. [June 21, 1919 LAT]

 

Related:

 

Boys Cinema Feb 5 1921 v3 n61

Boys Cinema ran every week from Dec 1919 (n1) to May 1940 (n1063). Houdini appeared in 1920, 1921, 1922, and 1923 issues:

  1. Jan 17, 1920. v1 n6. “Houdini the Handcuff King”  cover & p26.  (HHCE Collection)
  2. Feb 21, 1920. v1 n11. “Houdini”  p12+.  (HHCE Collection)
  3. Jan 8, 1921. v3 n57. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  4. Feb 5, 1921. v3 n61. photo  p26. (HHCE Collection)
  5. Feb 19, 1921. v3 n63. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  6. May 7, 1921. v3 n74. “The Grim Game”  p14. (HHCE Collection)
  7. May 14, 1921. v3 n75. “Terror Island”  cover & p2+.  (HHCE Collection)
  8. June 25, 1921. v4 n81. “The Grim Game”  p14+. (HHCE Collection)
  9. July 30, 1921. v4 n86.  “The Marvelous Houdini” (photo feature)  p14+.  (HHCE Collection)
  10. March 4, 1922. v5 n117. Houdini card on cover.  (HHCE Collection)
  11. March 25, 1922. v5 n120. Houdini cover with Famous Heroes Card # 4 insert. (Missing)
  12. Jan 13, 1923. v6 n162. “Houdini In The Man From Beyond”  p14+.  (Arthur Moses Collection)

This week I share Houdini’s appearance in Boys Cinema Feb 5, 1921. v3 n61 from my personal collection.  Houdini was one of the sixty-four famous film stars in the Goggles competition that ran for 8 weeks, with the answers that showed up in the May 14, 1921 v3 n75.

He showed up in Set No. 3.

Boys Cinema Jan 8 1921 v3 n57

Boys Cinema ran every week from Dec 1919 (n1) to May 1940 (n1063). Houdini appeared in 1920, 1921, 1922, and 1923 issues:

  1. Jan 17, 1920. v1 n6. “Houdini the Handcuff King”  cover & p26.  (HHCE Collection)
  2. Feb 21, 1920. v1 n11. “Houdini”  p12+.  (HHCE Collection)
  3. Jan 8, 1921. v3 n57. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  4. Feb 5, 1921. v3 n61. photo   (HHCE Collection)
  5. Feb 19, 1921. v3 n63. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  6. May 7, 1921. v3 n74. “The Grim Game”  p14. (HHCE Collection)
  7. May 14, 1921. v3 n75. “Terror Island”  cover & p2+.  (HHCE Collection)
  8. June 25, 1921. v4 n81. “The Grim Game”  p14+. (HHCE Collection)
  9. July 30, 1921. v4 n86.  “The Marvelous Houdini” (photo feature)  p14+.  (HHCE Collection)
  10. March 4, 1922. v5 n117. Houdini card on cover.  (HHCE Collection)
  11. March 25, 1922. v5 n120. Houdini cover with Famous Heroes Card # 4 insert. (Missing)
  12. Jan 13, 1923. v6 n162. “Houdini In The Man From Beyond”  p14+.  (Arthur Moses Collection)

This week I share Houdini’s appearance in Boys Cinema Jan 8, 1921. v3 n57 from my personal collection.

Related:

Boys Cinema Feb 21 1920 v1 n11

Boys Cinema ran every week from Dec 1919 (n1) to May 1940 (n1063). Houdini appeared in 1920, 1921, 1922, and 1923 issues:

  1. Jan 17, 1920. v1 n6. “Houdini the Handcuff King”  cover & p26.  (HHCE Collection)
  2. Feb 21, 1920. v1 n11. “Houdini”  p12+.  (HHCE Collection)
  3. Jan 8, 1921. v3 n57. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  4. Feb 5, 1921. v3 n61. photo   (HHCE Collection)
  5. Feb 19, 1921. v3 n63. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  6. May 7, 1921. v3 n74. “The Grim Game”  p14. (HHCE Collection)
  7. May 14, 1921. v3 n75. “Terror Island”  cover & p2+.  (HHCE Collection)
  8. June 25, 1921. v4 n81. “The Grim Game”  p14+. (HHCE Collection)
  9. July 30, 1921. v4 n86.  “The Marvelous Houdini” (photo feature)  p14+.  (HHCE Collection)
  10. March 4, 1922. v5 n117. Houdini card on cover.  (HHCE Collection)
  11. March 25, 1922. v5 n120. Houdini cover with Famous Heroes Card # 4 insert. (Missing)
  12. Jan 13, 1923. v6 n162. “Houdini In The Man From Beyond”  p14+.  (Arthur Moses Collection)

This week I share Houdini’s appearance in Boys Cinema Feb 21, 1920. v1 n11 from my personal collection. Learn about the fake crash staged in The Grim Game, the 6 week training and rehearsals required for one scene, Houdini being one of the first men to take up flying, and the risk he took throwing himself under a passing car.

Boys Cinema Jan 17 1920 v1 n6

Boys Cinema ran every week from Dec 1919 (n1) to May 1940 (n1063). Houdini appeared in 1920, 1921, 1922, and 1923 issues:

  1. Jan 17, 1920. v1 n6. “Houdini the Handcuff King”  cover & p26.  (HHCE Collection)
  2. Feb 21, 1920. v1 n11. “Houdini”  p12+.  (HHCE Collection)
  3. Jan 8, 1921. v3 n57. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  4. Feb 5, 1921. v3 n61. photo   (HHCE Collection)
  5. Feb 19, 1921. v3 n63. photo  p5. (HHCE Collection)
  6. May 7, 1921. v3 n74. “The Grim Game”  p14. (HHCE Collection)
  7. May 14, 1921. v3 n75. “Terror Island”  cover & p2+.  (HHCE Collection)
  8. June 25, 1921. v4 n81. “The Grim Game”  p14+. (HHCE Collection)
  9. July 30, 1921. v4 n86.  “The Marvelous Houdini” (photo feature)  p14+.  (HHCE Collection)
  10. March 4, 1922. v5 n117. Houdini card on cover.  (HHCE Collection)
  11. March 25, 1922. v5 n120. Houdini cover with Famous Heroes Card # 4 insert. (Missing)
  12. Jan 13, 1923. v6 n162. “Houdini In The Man From Beyond”  p14+.  (Arthur Moses Collection)

This week I share Houdini’s appearance in Boys Cinema Jan 17 1920 v1 n6 from my personal collection.

Some of his legendary feats (e.g., escaping from an European Prison Cell that the warden forgot to lock, breaking his own packing case escape record while filming the Master Mystery with a broken wrist, leaping handcuffed in freezing weather from Belle Island Bridge in Detroit, diving with Fiji natives for coins while handcuffed, being trapped under ice in Pittsburg) and his reason for going into pictures are told on this page.

Click to enlarge

Related:

3 new Houdini books from Arthur Moses

It’s a trifecta…these are now available on Amazon,  Amazon.uk,  Amazon.de,  Amazon.fr,  Amazon.es,  Amazon.it,  Amazon.jp,  Amazon.ca.

Our friend, Arthur Moses, an avid collector, historian, archivist & bibliographer on all things Houdini, adds this trifecta to his list of credits.

For the last few years I had only spoken about working on the German book. I’m very proud of how this turned out, it contains a complete reprint of the original 1908 German plus a never before published English translation along with some historical background.

But the surprise are the other two. These do not contain any “story” to them but are only reprints of the original rare Portuguese language editions of the German work. You’ll notice the titles are slightly different; one was originally 1911 and the other from circa 1920.

All 3 will have a great interest for both Houdini and Sherlock Holmes collectors. [Arthur Moses]

(1) Harry Houdini & Sherlock Holmes Together Again In 1908: “Auf Den Spuren Houdinis”

(2) Harry Houdini & Sherlock Holmes “Extraordinary Adventures of a Secret Police – The Missing Athlete”: Aventuras extraordinarias dum policia secreta – O athleta desapperecido (Portuguese Edition)

(3) Harry Houdini & Sherlock Holmes (Extraordinary Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – The Missing Athlete): Aventuras Extraordinarias De Sherlock Holmes – O Atleta Desaparecido (Portuguese Edition)

For more info, check out Arthur Moses Web-Page on these 3 books:

Related:

When did Houdini first meet Arthur Conan Doyle?

The New School Presents The Incredible Houdini

In 1974, Houdini’s film, The Grim Game, was shown publicly on March 1st, at The New School in New York:

And in 1977, you could take a course on Houdini at the New School:

Bonus:

Larry Weeks, would occasionally screen the film The Grim Game at magic conventions, S.A.M. assemblies and after S.A.M. broken wand ceremonies.

I believe the first magic convention he screened it at was in April 1964 at The Wizard’s Conclave in Plainfield NJ.  And the last one was at a September 1986 Magicians Convention in Allentown PA.

In the 80’s, the S.A.M. parent assembly in New York would screen it as part of “Houdini Night” produced by Larry Weeks.

And in 1986, after an S.A.M. broken wand ceremony conducted at Houdini’s grave at Machpelah Cemetery in New York, on October 31st, Larry Weeks gave a lecture on Houdini and showed “The Grim Game” at the Glendale Public Library in New York.