The Garrick Theatre
The Theatre Where Houdini Collapsed on stage and died at Grace Hospital A week later

Harry
Houdini: Master of illusion and escape
By Vivian M. Baulch
/ The Detroit News
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Houdini
told many fanciflul tales about his childhood. In reality, the son of poor
immigrants learned to fend for himself at a very early age. |
Possibly the most famous
performer of the early 20th century, Harry Houdini was born Erich Weiss on
Details of his early life are sketchy, obscured for the most part by Houdini's
conflicting and fanciful tales of his youth. But it is known that Erich left
home at the age of 12, and later rejoined his family in
As a master of illusion, Houdini knew how to trick his audience. One of his
greatest tricks was turning his jump from the old
In November 1906, Houdini came to
On
Handcuff
King Jumps Manacled From Bridge
Handcuff
King Houdini Performs Remarkable Feat and Comes Out Safely
Had
a Rope Tied Around his Waist and Tied to Bridge to Safeguard Against Accidents
Tied to a
lifeline a hundred and thirteen feet long, handcuffed with two of the best and
latest model handcuffs in the possession of the Detroit police department,
nerved by the confidence of a lion in his own powers ... Houdini, the wonder
worker at the Temple Theater, leaped from the draw span of the Belle Isle Bridge
at 1 o'clock this afternoon, freed himself from the handcuffs while under water,
then swam to a waiting lifeboat, passed over the unlocked and open cuffs and
clambered aboard.
|
Houdini,
the "Handcuff King" |
But Houdini and his
publicists greatly embellished the story. They told a tale of Houdini jumping
into a hole cut into the ice of a frozen river. After freeing himself from his
chains, the story goes, Houdini found himself swept by the current far away from
hole in the ice. According to this myth, Houdini swam around looking for the
hole, breathing air trapped between the water and the covering ice.
In fact, the
Whatever the reality, Houdini's tall tale is the one known by most people. A
1952 movie about Houdini, used the tale to great dramatic effect, with Tony
Curtis swimming about under the ice for eight suspense-filled minutes. Houdini
would have been pleased with the illusion.
Almost 20 years after his 1906 exploit, Houdini returned to
Before coming to
Whitehead delivered at least four very severe body blows before he was stopped.
At first, Houdini ignored the pain. He performed four, two-and-a-half-hour shows
before closing in
His distraught wife, Bess, telegraphed ahead to
|
Houdini's
act often included his wife, Bess. |
Dr.
Charles S. Kennedy later said:
"His appendix had ruptured and his system was filled with staphylococcus
germs. The rupture apparently occurred the day before. But the amazing part of
it was that Houdini had been able to perform his act at the Garrick. He was a
perfect physical specimen, one of the strongest men I had ever examined."
After the show at the Garrick, Houdini was admitted to old
"He fully understood the gravity of his condition," said Dr. Kennedy,
"and accepted it gracefully. He was a perfect gentleman and patient."
Houdini told Dr. Kennedy about his disbelief in spiritualism and about the
promise he had made to try to communicate with his friends after his death.
"I am nothing but a fake," he said, "while you (Dr. Kennedy) do
great things for your fellow man."
But there was little Dr. Kennedy could do for Houdini, who died on Oct. 31,
1926, at 1:26 p.m., age 52, calling the name of Col. Robert Ingersoll, an
agnostic lecturer.
"It is the only case of traumatic appendicitis I had ever seen in my
lifetime," Dr. Kennedy said, "but the logic of the thing seemed to
indicate that Mr. Houdini died of appendicitis, the direct result of the
injury."
Houdini had waged a personal crusade to expose any fake spiritualist he came
upon. But he made the secret code pact with his wife, Bess, that if he died, she
would be able to know by the code if he really contacted her from the
"beyond."
On
According to the story:
"Please,
everyone, keep both feet flat on the floor."
Mrs. Houdini appeared to be asleep. A convulsive twitching started the talk with
the control spirit guide, "Fletcher."
"Hello, Hello, Fletcher, This man is coming now...' he says, "Hello,
Bess, my sweetheart. He says it is the code you and he used in the mind reading
act."
"First of all he says the word Rosabelle.' Do you remember all that it
stands for?"
"Oh, yes," the plaintive little figure on the couch answered. She
courageously sang the words of the song, "Rosabelle! Sweet Rosabelle, I
love you more than I can tell; Over me, you've cast a spell I love you, my sweet
Rosabelle"
Fletcher went on: "He is smiling now. He is showing me a picture with two curtains...I draw the curtain so ... then the secret code of ten words: l. Pray, 2. Answer, 3. Talk, 4. Then, 5. Tell, 6. Will, 7. Hurry, 8. Listen, 9. Look, 10. Hear.
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Houdini's
wife, Bess, tried to contact the performer for 10 years after his death
in 1926. |
In
the code, each numeral represents a letter of the alphabet: A is 1, B is 2, C is
3 and so on. Beyond 10, the numbers would be doubled. Worked out, the first word
answer is B, tell is 3, pray answer is L, look is I, answer is V, and tell is E:
"BELIEVE".
"The message that I want to give to my wife is: 'Believe, Rosabelle,
Believe!' Is that right?", the control asked.
"Yes, it is right," Mrs. Houdini answered.
But Mrs. Houdini later said she was ill during the seance, When she recovered,
she said she no longer believed the message came from Harry. She said the secret
code may have been known by others and was therefore suspect.
Other seances were attempted on the Halloween anniversary of his death. But Bess
gave up in 1936. She said ten years was long enough to wait for any man.
Besides, she said, the secret code had been revealed making further seances
pointless.
Mrs. Houdini died