100 Year Anniversary – HHCE attends Screening on Terror Island plus more

On Friday May 17th, I took the Catalina Express out of San Pedro at 8:45 am to Catalina Island (Houdini’s Terror Island) to see the 100th year anniversary screening of “The Grim Game” sponsored by the Catalina Island Museum.

Despite rain the previous day, it turned out to be a gorgeous day to visit the Island. I walked to the Catalina Island Museum to see their new exhibits, including the permanent Houdini Terror Island Exhibit.

Jessica Zumberge (a curator at the Catalina Island Museum) was my tour guide.

The Terror Island exhibit showcases lobby cards (Mark Willoughby collection), a film ad from the Press Book (John Cox collection), article on boat rescue, locations of the film’s most important scenes, and a video of the overboard box escape from the film.

If you look at the 2018 image of Toyon Bay, you will see me in photo, where the natives are in the 1919 photo.

And I am also credited as the one who uncovered the video of the overboard box escape that is missing from the existing movie.  This footage is not available to view anywhere else, so visitors to the island get a rare treat.

I was then joined by fellow Houdini Nuts, Julie Perlin Lee (Executive Director at the Catalina Island Museum) and John Cox (Houdini Expert).

If you look at the old Catalina Map in the photo, you can see a beach called Pebbly Beach to the left of Julie and a beach called Banning Beach (now called Toyon Bay) to the right.  These were key film locations in the Terror Island Movie.

John Cox and I then went to the Blue Water Grill where we talked Houdini, before going to check out “Houdini Point” at Descano Beach.  This is where Houdini took part in a real-life nautical drama. A small vessel had been disabled and was in immediate danger of capsizing or smashing into the rocks off Sugar Loaf Point (I like Julie Perlin Lee’s idea to change the name to  “Houdini Point”).

We then made our way to Overlook Hall, to set up for the main event of the evening, the 100th anniversary screening of “The Grim Game”. Overlook Hall, originally built in 1929, has emerged as Catalina’s premier venue for special events.

It was standing room only.  John Cox who introduced the movie, tweeted:

It truly was a great night for a very special movie with music provided by Award Winning composer, Michael Mortilla. Below are photos from the event:

Hanging out with Michael Mortilla, John Cox, and Michael’s wife.

John Cox hanging out with guests, including Magician Lee Terbosic from Discovery Channel’s Houdini’s Last Secrets.

Hanging out with some of Catalina Island Museum’s amazing staff, Gail Fornasiere, Kellie Costello and Kevin Liebson.

Well it was now time to catch my 9:45 boat back home or was it? Half-way to the boat, my phone rings and I get an invitation to stay over with Perlin Lee Family for the Catalina Island Museum Silent Film Benefit, the next day.

What a treat! The brunch, dancers, speakers, movie and live orchestral music by Michael Mortilla & The Accompanists was incredible.  Bravo!

Below are a couple photos from this amazing event:

David & Julie Lee Perlin and Lee Terbosic & Girlfriend Jessie Marie dancing in the ballroom, plus John, Lee & Jessie in the Art Deco Avalon Casino Theater.

Special Thank You to Julie Lee Perlin and her family for making this trip extra special.

Related:

Celebrity Magician Dorothy Dietrich featured in Stories For Kids Who Dare To Be Different

True Tales of Amazing People Who Stood Up and Stood Out By Ben Brooks

Dorothy Dietrich, groundbreaking stage and television magician, escape artist, historian, and creator of The Houdini Museum, the only building in the world dedicated to Houdini, is one of the people chosen to be expounded on in Stories for Kids Who Dare to Be Different. She came to the fore as an innovative teenager sawing men in half, and doing dangerous magic stunts men shied away from, including the great Harry Houdini. She became the first woman in history to accomplish the Jinxed Bullet catch, “The stunt that scared Houdini,” and the only woman to escape 150 feet in the air tied in a Straitjacket attached to a burning rope for a Home Box Office Special that she starred in. NY Times article on Houdini “Miss Dietrich, on the strength of her televised stunts, could claim preeminence”

HoudiniOpoly.  Dorothy Dietrich recently designed a KickStarter success program The Largest Houdini project in KickStarter history and the largest successful Scranton, Pa project in history as well.
http://HoudiniOpoly.com

This follow-up to Ben Brooks’s New York Times bestselling Stories for Boys Who Dare to Be Different, offers more extraordinary true stories of amazing people who broke the mold and changed the world for the better. Others included in this diverse book of biographies are Hans Christian Andersen, Jack Johnson, Sally Ride, Andy Warhol, Andrea Bocelli, Joan of Arc, Andrew Carnegie, Peter Jackson, Simon Bolivar, and many more — heroes from all walks of life and from all over the world.

With the help of Quinton Winter’s striking full-color illustrations, the same author-illustrator team who collaborated on Stories for Boys…, offer a compilation of 76 famous and not-so-famous influencers of all genders from the past to the present day, every single one of them a rule-breaker and stereotype-smasher in his or her own way. The profiles offer a welcome narrative: one that celebrates resilience, individuality, expression, introverts, sensitivity and innovators.

Last fall, Stories for Boys Who Dare to Be Different came out to much acclaim and earned a spot on the New York Times bestseller list. But the author also received feedback from families who were looking for biography books for all kids, regardless of gender. This was the genesis for Stories for Kids Who Dare to Be Different. The resulting message? Be yourself, and your dreams might come true.

Stories for Kids Who Dare to Be Different: True Tales of Amazing People Who Stood Up and Stood Out can be purchased at Amazon.com (U.S.) and Amazon.co.uk (UK).

Related:

 

100 Year Anniversary – The Original Grim Game Story

In honor of the 100 Year anniversary of Houdini filming The Grim Game, thought I would share the Original Grim Story for comparison to what is depicted on film.

That is, I plan to compare the 24 page Synopsis (that was intended as a special guide for the scenario writer) and the actual scenario as depicted on the existing print.

I thought I would start by sharing the story from the existing print as described in the Exhibitor’s Press Book:

Next, I thought I would share a 1-page synopsis of the original story:

THE GRIM GAME by Arthur B. Reeve & John W. Grey

Sterling Steele, star crime reporter of a yellow journal owned by a man named Clifton Allison, is in love with Julie Cameron, the ward of the old recluse known as Moneybags Cameron. Because the old recluse disfavors his suit, Steele is forced to resort to stealthy means in order to see Julie. He opens a locked and bolted door to gain entrance to the Cameron house.  Old Cameron’s choice for Julie is Dr. Harvey Tyson, his personal physician. Tyson, the publisher Allision who is in desperate straits because his newspaper is failing and Richard Raver, Cameron’s lawyer, are close friends.

To bolster up the newspaper’s circulation, Steele proposes a plan. Dr. Tyson is to secretly order Natalie Nelson, a chorus girl, to act as Cameron’s nurse and take him on a trip to Maine. Then Steele will act as if he had done away with the old man, confess to the murder and the newspaper will increase its circulation by getting the scoop on the story.

Everything goes as planned, except it is discovered that Cameron has actually been murdered.  For a time it seems that Steele will be convicted on a charge of insanity and imprisoned in an asylum. He escapes from his prison cell, is captured and taken to an insane asylum, where he momentarily eludes his prisoners and runs to the roof. Again captured and bound with, a straight jacket, Steele manages to slip over the edge of the roof and while his captors are holding him by a rope, he slips from the jacket in mid-air and again escapes.

Natalie Nelson, who is none other than the sweetheart of Richard Raver, is tricked into going to a mountain lodge where she is set upon by a gang of desperadoes.  Allision, Julie, Tyson and Steele, followed by the police, proceed to the mountain lodge where the desperadoes attack Steele, tie him securely, and suspend him from a tree.  He extricates himself in time to go the rescue of Julie and Natalie, both of whom have been attacked and locked in a closet by a mysterious assailant. Steele battles with the assailant and reveals him to be Allison.  The police break in, Steele is cleared of the murder while Allison is held for it; Raver and Natalie are happily brought together and Steele is sentenced to life in matrimony with Julie.

Well, if you compare the pressbook story and the one-page synopsis, you will notice some differences. Mary Cameron was originally Julie Cameron; Harvey Hanford (HOUDINI) was originally Sterling Steele; Ethel Delmead was originally Natalie Nelson; the two old servants are not part of the original story, nor are any guard(s); HOUDINI is not Cameroon’s nephew in the original story; and there is no references to the Call or any aeroplanes in the original story.

At this point, I will share snippets of the original story for comparison:

Sterling Steel was the chief police reporter of “The Star”

At the home of Clifton Allison, owner of the Star, we find Allison, Richard Raver, his attorney, and and Dr. Tyson, who is also a well-know alienist, talking over the coffee and cigars.

Allison has called the other two together because, through friendship, Raver has succeeded in securing for him a promise of an endowment of half a million dollars for the foundation of the Allison School of Journalism. This fund is to be administered by Allison, with Raver and Tyson as trustees. Cameron has not yet made the gift but is about to do so.

While the meeting is taking place, Julie and Sterling are talking over their plans. Cameron awakes, hobbles out to the porch and discovers the two lovers. Julie is frightened and turns toward her lover when Cameron threatens to disinherit her if he sees Sterling again. Sterling leaves to keep an appointment with Allison to talk over a plan to increase the circulation of the Star.

When Sterling arrives, they stop the discussion and talk over plans for the paper. Because of his fight with Cameron, Steele has thought of a plan which will surely increase circulation. He knows the paper advocates the abandonment of capital punishment.

“What would be the effect,” he asks, “if a man accused himself of committing a crime and all the evidence pointed to his guilt? If, then, it was brought out that the crime was a frame-up that the man had not been murdered, then would not the Star gain great circulation over the sensational crime story and greater circulation and credit though proving the inadequacy of circumstantial evidence and scoring this point in its campaign against capital punishment.

The others listen as he expands the idea. He suggests that Cameron be made to disappear. He knows Tyson’s connection with Cameron, and tells Tyson to order Cameron away to a sanitarium in Maine. He tells them to have someone telephone the police. He will arrange to get caught and confess to making away with Cameron. He will say the body is buried in quick lime in the cellar of Cameron’s own house. The police investigate and they will find some of Cameron’s easily identified jewelry which Raver can supply in the quicklime. They will find blood on Steele’s cuffs, which will really be rabbit’s blood placed there by himself.

Now—each of the three has his own motives to fall in line with Sterling’s suggestion.  They all agree that, with Cameron out of the way, the manipulation of the half million will be easy. Tyson figures that this will give him a good opportunity to win Julie, during the old man’s absence. Raver also has his own private secret plan to double cross Allison and win the love of Natalie,

Allison suggests that in order to get Cameron to go away it might be a good plan to send a pretty nurse with him. He knows a girl who could fill the part admirably. She is Natalie Nelson of the chorus of Gamorrah Theatre.

He goes to the phone and calls a number which the others overhear, Steele does not pay much attention to it at the time, although later he remembers the incident. Raver hears it and smiles darkly to himself.

Cameron likes the nurse…Raver gets the check for the endowment and leaves Dr. Tyson with Cameron and Julie. Cameron tells Tyson to watch over Julie while he is gone and Tyson accepts the nomination gladly. While Julie packs her things to go to her Aunts Tyson is making unwelcome love to her and in the cellar we see Raver dropping some of Cameron’s jewels into the quick lime which had been delivered secretly.

Tyson tells Cameron he will send a cab to take him to the station that night. He leaves him his ticket and tells him to meet the nurse at the station where they will take a night train.

At the office of the Star Steel begins to act peculiarly. The city editor notices this as well as the reporters. Steele is playing his part and leaves the office nervously.

Some time later we see Natalie and Raver in Natalie’s apartment. Natalie looks at her watch, then calls the police as pre-arranged. She tells them she had reason to believe that there has been a murder committed at Cameron’s house.

The paper learns from the police blotter and the editor hunts for Steele.  Allison who is at the paper shows great surprise.  The editor phones Steele’s house.  The landlady answers and goes to call Steele. Steele is washing something from the sleeve of a shirt when she finds him.

Natalie, now alone in her apartment, receives a note which tells her to take the enclosed ticket and the night train for Staggcliff in the Adirondacks, as plans have changed. She will meet her patient there. The note is signed with Dr. Tyson’s name.  She crumples the note and leaves to catch her train.

Through the telephone call and an anonymous letter broadly hinting at Steele, he is suspected. The detectives catch him leaving his house. He is accused of the crime and the landlady now suspicious, remembers seeing him washing his cuffs of his shirt.

Steele is arrested. They find the shirt in his closet and it is taken as evidence.

At her Aunt’s house Julie sees the paper and is very pleased that her lover put his story over.

Out of curiosity she goes to her guardian’s house. Immediately the detectives detain her. They take her to the cellar where she finds a key which has been overlooked by them.

To the astounded Julie, Dr. Tyson now declares before the detectives that he has found traces of human remains in the quicklime.

Julie goes to the jail and tells Steele of the finding of actual human remains in quick lime.

Left in the lurch by everyone, Sterling now appeals to Julie. “Find Cameron and that nurse, “ he directs.

He also demands that the blood stains be analyzed. They are not human blood, he asserts.

Julie first goes to Allison, Tyson and Raver…denies everything.

After she goes, Allison demand the check from Raver and Raver refused to give it up. They quarrel and each is suspicious of the other.

We next see Natalie at the Adirondack Lodge. She has been made a prisoner by “Grumbler” Grimwood, a guide and game warden at the Lodge. Cameron has not shown up at the Lodge. He has really been murdered.

Julie in the city has already learned that her guardian is not at the appointed place in Maine. She realizes that he is dead and begins to believe more strongly in Dr. Tyson and to suspect her own lover.

She does not go to the jail anymore. Steele decided that he must break jail to see her.

Steele finds Julie and convinces her of his innocence. He then remembers the telephone number which Allison had called. He tells her to trace it.

While Steele is hiding, Julie locates the apartment of Natalie and uses the key which she found, thus discovering what key it is.  She finds the crumpled note signed by Dr. Tyson’s name and thus learns of Staggcliff.

The police follow her from the apartment to where Steele is hiding. Thus Steele is captured after Julie has told him of Adirondack Lodge and that she is going there. The police overhear this and Ravor, Tyson, and Allison hear of it as well, and that the police and Julie know.

We next see Allison, Raver, and Dr. Tyson each hurrying away. The police have begun to get suspicious. The blood on the shirt has been found to be rabbit’s blood, not human blood.

Julie arrives at Staggcliff, meets Natalie, who is a prisoner. She tells of entering her apartment and finding the note. Natalie asks her how she got in and Julie shows her the key.

While this is going on, we notice that Raver, Allison and Dr. Tyson, each independent of the other have arrived in the neighborhood of the lodge.

Natalie is about to tell something when a gloved hand comes in through the door and smothers the kerosene light. A man enters the darkened room and rushes to Natalie’s side. He sees Julie and turns on her savagely. This leaves Natalie to believe that Raver has been caught and she in turns rushes to Julie’s assistance and tries to protect her from the unknown assailant.

Steele alluding his pursuers, is now in the neighborhood of the Lodge. He comes upon an abandoned cabin, enters and provides himself with rubber boots which he steals from the cabin, because in freeing himself from the straightjacket and the rope he was forced to remove his shoes.

Following the corduroy road which leads to the lodge he is suddenly set upon by Grimwood and his men who have had orders to permit no one to enter the Lodge. They overpower Steels and do a spectacular stunt by suspending him from four saplings by ropes.

Steele releases himself, eludes Grimwood and the others and approaches the Lodge as Julie is battling with unknown assailant. He hears someone coming. Natalie is unconscious, having been struck down by him and he wickedly tosses Julie into a closet, locking the door.

The unknown assailant then seizes a bolo from the wall and hides under a cot.

Steele enters, strikes a match, lights the lamp and throws the burning match on the floor. It drops near the side of the cot and we see the match burn. A hand comes out from under the cot, puts the match out before it sets fire to the floor. Steele know now there is someone under the bed.

As the bolo swings viciously all we see is that it cuts through Steele’s boots.

Steele, however has swung himself to a rafter, leaving his boots on the floor. He hangs by his toes, reaches down and lifts the cot from over the man. He tosses it aside and pounces on the man whom we recognize as Allison.

A terrific fight continues between Allison and Steele.  Allison with the bolo is trying to kill his opponent. We next see the detectives who have forced Grimwood and his men to release Tyson and Raver whom they previously seized…They start for the Lodge.

Steele is just overcoming Allison when the detectives, with Raver and Dr. Tyson, followed by Grimwood and his men rush in, with asylum keepers.

Steele rushes to the closet door where Julie is a prisoner and by his strength bursts it down. Raver rushes over to Natalie who is now recovering consciousness.

As Steele frees Julie, Raver tells Natalie of Allison taking the check from him under force.

Natalie, asks Raver to show her his key to her apartment. He does so.

Natalie leaves Raver and rushes to the chief detective. She points toward Allison and accuses him of the crime.

As she is accusing Allison, Julie comes forward and produces the key which she found in the quick lime.

The detective demand that Allison produce the key to Natalie’s apartment, Natalie asserts that there are only two keys – one given by her to Raver, the other to Allison.

She accuses Allison of keeping her a prisoner at Staggcliff, a hunting lodge which he hired for the purpose. Grimwood confirms this.

Julie then shows Tyson the note and asks him to explain it. He swears the note is a forgery and Allison is again confronted.

Caught in the net, Allison is unable to produce the key and cannot deny hiring the Lodge and writing the Tyson note.

Although weakened from a wound he attempts to escape but is overpowered and made prisoner.

The detectives exonerate Steele as Allison breaks down and confesses. Turning to Steele he speaks:

“Circumstantial evidence implicated you – now it frees you.”

As the detectives handcuff Allison and lead him out followed by the crowd, Julie, now happy, turns toward her lover. “You have escaped the death sentence – to be sentenced for life”

H A P P Y  1 0 0  Y E A R  A N N I V E R S A R Y !

Credits

  • Synopsis Snippets courtesy of Paramount Files at Margaret Herrick Library

100 Year Anniversary – HHCE attends Screening at Sierra Madre Playhouse

On May 3rd, I had the pleasure of attending the Sold-Out 100 Year Anniversary screening of “The Grim Game” at the Sierra Madre Playhouse.

The Sierra Madre Playhouse in collaboration with Catalina Island Museum, knocked it out of the park.

Below our photos from the highly successful event:

Your’s truly, arriving at the Sold-Out event.

Tom Ogden (Comedy Magician) and John Cox (Houdini Expert) hanging out before John Cox introduced the movie.

Kevin Liebson, from Catalina Island Museum (Co-Sponsor of the event) talking up activities at the museum, which includes the permanent Houdini Exhibit and the up and coming showing of “The Grim Game”  on May 17th.

Michael Mortilla (Award Winning Composer), and I hanging out before he conducted the live piano accompaniment to “The Grim Game”.

Large Screen that Houdini’s best movie, “The Grim Game”, was projected on.

John Cox, Michael Mortilla and Kevin Liebson answering questions after the movie.

The speakers, movie and piano accompaniment, were incredible. Congratulations to all involved.  See you on Catalina Island, May 17th for the outdoor screening of “The Grim Game”.

Related:

Aquarium Challenge AKA Houdini Upside Down

Tomorrow marks the day that Houdini first performed the Water Torture Cell. It was April 29, 1911 that Houdini performed the escape in South Hampton, as part of a 1 act play with 2 scenes called Challenged or Houdini Upside Down.

So today, I thought I would share the actual challenge from the play:

Dear Sir,

We the undersigned members of the Eccentric Club, hereby challenge you to escape from the aquarium we have in the lounge-room at our clubhouse, into which we intend to place, you, under the following conditions:

First of all, we have constructed a lid or cover, to fit over this aquarium, which separates in the middle, as per drawing herewith:

This cover will be fitted with four locks, such as are used on traveling trunks, with long brass hasps. We intend locking your feet in this cover, after which we place around this cover a metal square so that, even if the locks were opened, you could not possibly release your feet.

On this metal square we will have rings placed and, after we have you securely locked into this cover, we will place two locks in these rings, fastened to a cable and, with the aid of derrick or winch, we will hoist you up into the air, turn you in an upside-down position, and place you over the aquarium.

We will then lower you down into the aquarium, head first. Excluding the possibility of your breathing when under water, we will proceed to lock the lid down to the aquarium at each corner, making use of our locks and as many of these as we see fit.

We will allow you make use of any covering or drapery you wish, and allow you in this way to conceal your methods of escape.

In the event of any accident occurring which will prevent your making your escape, we are not to be held responsible for this accident in any shape or form.

If you manage to release yourself and make your escape, we stand willing to pay the sum of L1,000 which we have deposited as a side-bet. You may attempt this feat either publicly or privately, as you see fit. We demand the right to select our own committee, and you can select a like number of gentlemen to represent you.

Trusting to hear from you, we remain

I find the description of the first Water Torture Cell and cover with a metal square placed around it very interesting.

I wonder what happened to this prototype?

Special Thanks to George Goebel for sharing the play with illustrations during our very special visit.

Note: The one act play and its two scenes can be read in its entirety in Patrick Culliton’s excellent books, Houdini’s Strange Tales (collection of fiction by the legendary Harry Houdini) and Houdini – the Key.

Bonus:A one of a kind broadside for this challenge sold at Potter & Potter Auction yesterday.

Chicago Footlights Theatre Magazines with Harry Houdini

I recently have come across two Chicago Footlights Theatre Magazines with Harry Houdini:

  • September 1903
  • June & July 1904

And thought I would share some snippets.

The first one is Volume 1, Number 3 for September 1903 that I found on eBay. It prints a letter Harry Houdini had written from Moscow, Russia on July 25, 1903.  The Houdini letter appears on page 8 and takes up about 2/3 of a column and is addressed “My Dear Old Pal”. The letter describes the great success “Harry Money Houdini” was having in Russia which he describes as “…the biggest sensation ever made in Russia”. Houdini also reports that he “… had sent more money home from this country in four months, than any other country in ten.”

 

A LETTER FROM MOSCOW, RUSSIA

Follow’s a letter from The Great Houdini. It speaks for itself. He is a wonderful little man and all America wishes him continued success.

Moscow, Russian, July 25, 1903

My Dear Old Pal: Seeing your life’s history in Clipper, also when you were captured and your released put me in mind that it would be proper to drop you a few lines, an as to let you know that we are still in the land of the living, and have managed to keep out of the clutches of the law even up to this late day.

Have made the biggest sensation ever made in Russia and have sent more money home from this country in four months, than from any country in ten.

Why, I do not know but nevertheless it may come in handy some day, when they will refuse to book Harry Money Houdini.

April 27th, I managed to break out of the M Siberian Transportation Cell, and that is what started the salary list rifling sky high. So you see that even though we are doing the old act, we are doing a new act getting money.

From what I hear from Chicago every once in a while, I hear that you are away up on top!

Am greatly pleased to hear of this, and trust that you will keep the good work up.

It may interest you know that I was speaking Russian like a Turk. When I return to America, I think I will open a small Education of Domestic School of Languages for I have had to speak my introductions in no less than eight languages.

Magical news is very scarce, so can’t tell you of anything that would interest you. Will share with kindest regards and best wishes to you and Mrs. In which my Mrs heartily praise, I remain as ever your friend.

H. HOUDINI

My bookings three months ahead so in case you had time drop me a line. Month of September, Circus Carre, Groningen Holland

Month of October, Central Theatre, Dresden Germany, after that we return to England

The second one is Volumes 1 & 2 for June & July 1904 that I found at the McCord Museum.

And the article on Harry Houdini appears on page 4 and takes up about 2/3 of a column. The article describes a man who became “successful” and yet “was not too busy to run all the way from New York to Chicago to see his friends and reward his benefactors of other times.”

HARRY HOUDINI

Houdini like a soft summer zephyr off the lake on a torrid day, blew into our sun burnt city, from over the seas, a few days ago, and did as much good, and was the cause of as much joy to many of his old acquaintances, as one should suspect a ministering seraph to do and for a suffering soul about to depart this earthy fever. Success is a mighty fine sensation. All of us can become accustomed to adversity, but few ever learn to bear upon them lightly the mantle of prosperity. Houdini is as natural in the role of a rich man all covered over with success and diamonds as he was in the poor struggling days when together we sold Hostetter’s almanacs for magic books in Mr. Hedge’s museum.

Harry has purchased with the good old coin he made by slipping out of handcuffs, $40,000 worth of New York municipal bonds at 4 per cent, and owns a large flat building in New York which yields him enough to buy ten dollars worth of ham and eggs at every meal for life, no matter how long the strike keeps up. Softly, — Harry sought and found all his old friends who treated him kindly in the bleak hours, and one particularly, who had slipped down the greasy way to uselessness — a good man, intelligent, and at one time a worthy, respectable citizen, but who tried to drink up all the whiskey in Chicago, — (he is too sincere and honest and old man to mention his name, —) Houdini found this old acquaintance who, with tears in his eyes, sobbed out his thanks as he was dressed up in new underwear, shoes, socks, ties, suit, hat, gloves, shirts, —everything,— was given a modest little roll to tide him over and because why, — because he had been kind one day to a hard working man who did tricks for a living and who meant  to succeed and did. All honor to him. We wish he had a bank full of money. Houdini who never called himself “great” but is. Remember the name, Harry Houdini, —an actor—a magician,—a success,—a man. Above all the man who was not too busy to run all the way from New York to Chicago to see his friends and reward his benefactors of other times. Remember his name Harry Houdini,—handcuff king.

Where was the Checker Flag Photo taken?

Kenneth Silverman published photo (above) of Houdini waving a checkered flag in some auto race [???] in his Notes to Houdini! on page 179.

So where was this photograph taken?

  • [A] Worcester, MA
  • [B] Montreal, Canada
  • [C] Detroit, MI
  • [D] None of the above

Let’s explore each of the possible answers.

[A] The caption under the photo in Silverman’s Notes reads as follows:

Inscribed on the back by N.J. Weiss, Houdini’s sister-in-law: “Worcester, Mass, King, driver, last picture of Harry, 1926″.

Well, Houdini performed in Worcester September of 1926, he did the Buried Alive on stage at Worcester Opera House (the week of 9/27), Submerged casket test at YMCA pool (9/28) and Sealed casket test at Summerfield’s (9/30).

So, was there an auto race in town? So far, I haven’t found any evidence. The New England Fair was in town, but it featured horse racing from 9/28 to 9/30.

However, I did find out via an October 7, 1934 photo (above), that the first name of the driver was Bob. [Source: Dirt Track Auto Racing, 1919-1941 A pictorial history by Don Radbruch]

[B] Per an Oct 19, 1926 letter (McCord Museum) addressed to Houdini at Princess Theatre, Montreal:

Would you be interested in an automobile “stunt” for a display ad, to be run by the manufacturer of the motor? It would probably simply mean a picture in [by] the car.

Well, Houdini performed in Montreal from October 18th to October 23rd, he got punched (10/22) in dressing room of theatre and left Montreal (10/23) on the 11 pm overnight train (where is appendix burst on the way) to Detroit.

So, was there an auto race in town?  No, apparently the only early racing was in 1917 and 1918 at Deslormiers Park in Montreal. [Source: Don Radbruch]

[C] Per December 2008 Genii Thread, Houdini’s Last Photograph:

The photo was given to niece Marie Blood by Bess Houdini [and] Marie was led to believe it was that final (show) date in Detroit.

Well, Houdini performed that final show, October 24, 1926 at the Garrick Theatre in Detroit. The show was supposed to start at 8:30pm, but didn’t start until about 9pm.

So, was there an auto race in town?  The answer is Yes.  According to the 1926 AAA Championship Car Season Schedule and results, The Detroit 100 was run on October 24th at the Michigan State Fairgrounds Speedway. But, would Houdini squeeze an appearance at an auto race in his condition before his evening show.

Or is it [D] none of the above. The car has Shenandoah printed on it.

According to Wikipedia:

Oh Shenandoah, the song appears to have originated with Canadian and American voyagers or fur traders traveling down the Missouri River in canoes

Shenandoah is a town in Virginia [hot spot for fairground auto races], but there was also a Shenandoah in other places like New York.

Well, Houdini was in New York from October 10th to October 17th. At the time, New York was also a hot spot for fairground auto races. So…?

Conclusion:

All of this said, we still don’t have the smoking gun.

But we did learn about a possible automobile “stunt”, the first name of the driver in the car, and that there was a auto race in Detroit on October 24th.

For now, we’ll have to go with [A] Worcester, MA, but would like to see some more evidence, besides the inscription on the back of the photo, supposedly written by N.J. Weiss, Houdini’s sister-in-law. I am not aware of a sister-in-law with that name; He had a brother, named Nathaniel Josef Weiss, who married a Sadie Glanz Weiss. Sadie divorced Nathan and married Houdini’s brother Leopold. So was it Nat [brother], Sadie [sister-in-law] or someone else related to Houdini who wrote the inscription on the  photo.

Thoughts?

Related:

Houdini News: Scared to Death; Legacy of Houdini; Masonic Magician; Hopewell professor and Houdini’s Mysterious Death

Our friends, Dorothy Dietrich and Dick Brookz, of the Houdini Museum in Scranton share the following Houdini News with us:

1) Dorothy Dietrich on Mysteries At The Museum:

  • Scared to Death episode airs again on the Travel Channel, Wednesday April 17th at 7pm | 6c

2) Dorothy Dietrich and Dick Brookz on Night-Light with Host Mark Eddy. They discuss the legacy of Houdini which includes his friendship with the T. Nelson Downs, the Daily Mirror Challenge, possible new info (to be revealed at a later date) on how Harry got his name and more.

 

3) A new Mason Blog with an article on Harry Houdini

4) Two part series about a Hopewell man’s (Professor William Dunlop Tait) connection to Harry Houdini. You may recall that Prof. Tait invited Houdini to Lecture on Fraudulent Mediums at McGill and commented that he Looked Deathly at Lecture.

Near Death Photo

In 2007, the above photo was listed on eBay with a starting price of $1,250 and ended with no bids. The auction described the photo as taken in a “University area in Canada” shortly before Houdini gave a lecture there.  But we know the photo is actually Houdini posing outside the White House in Washington D.C. [Source: WAH]

I recently saw this photo during my trip to the McCord Museum. So, technically, the photo is in the “University area in Canada”, lol.

In addition to its location, I can also add that this International Newsreel photo was used 10-25-26 with the caption, HOUDINI: NEAR DEATH:

 

So, one can see how you could be misled that this was his last photo.