![]() But she had never been married and was childless.Spiritualists and their supporters were bitterly opposed to Houdini’s campaign. One woman he hired was provided messages by a crooked spiritualist from her dead husband and children. He would write frequently on the topic, even hiring spies to unmask spiritualists. ![]() But to Houdini, that past experience only cemented his own credibility. Some criticized Houdini for attacking spiritualism, as he and his wife had engaged in charlatan shows, selling tickets to communicate with the dead. But Houdini, coping with the death of his beloved mother, was turned off by spiritualism charlatans. World War I and the subsequent Spanish influenza epidemic contributed to a collective grief that made spiritualism appealing. At the time spiritualism was at its height, engendering the support of many prominent people, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who Houdini considered a friend. Houdini crusaded against spiritualism, the belief that the living can communicate with the dead. Houdini is restrained by German police in a 1908 circus poster Houdini became a wealthy man and he spent much of his money sponsoring magicians’ groups in the U.S. Houdini, on the other hand, saw himself as more than an entertainer, fashioning himself as a kind of public intellectual-although he had had little formal education. Houdini’s tricks were so sophisticated that some believed he was able to transcend the material world. His most infamous act was escaping from a milk can filled with water. In 1924 he was able to attract a crowd of 15,000 in Milwaukee, then about half the city’s population. He later toured Europe, performing his daring escapes. Returning to Wisconsin in 1897, Houdini challenged local law enforcement officers to lock him up, and the act became a hit. They remained partners in romance and in the entertainment business for Houdini’s entire life. Weiss then met another Coney Island performer, Wilhelmina Beatrice Rahner, or Bess for short, and they married when he was 20 and she was 18. ![]() He worked as a contortionist and then hooked up with a friend to form the “Brothers Houdini,” named for the famous French magician Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin. Houdini saw himself as a kind of public intellectual.Īt the age of 12, he ran away to the circus…only to return to his family in New York. And indeed, escapes would become his calling card: To “pull a Houdini,” or to miraculously escape an uncomfortable or dangerous situation, is still part of the American lexicon, even 90 years after his death. He was introduced to escape techniques when asked as a young boy to assist a local police officer unshackle a prisoner. The state was then a center for various circuses, and Houdini later said he was mesmerized by the atmosphere. Weiss’s Wisconsin roots played a role in his later life. The family then moved to Milwaukee, only to eventually land in New York in the rabbi’s search for work as a non-English speaking cleric. His father was an itinerant rabbi who settled in Appleton, Wisconsin, to minister to a small European Jewish community. He was born Erik Weisz, with his family’s name being changed in American entry forms to Weiss. Houdini, born March 24, 1874, came to the U.S. That’s been part of the profession since the days of the infamous Harry Houdini. As the New York Times recently reported, one of the hottest new magicians around works to dismantle illusions, trying to “break magic.” But Derek DelGaudio isn’t the first performer to try to upend the audience’s expectations. ![]() Item is packaged and shipped in a museum quality tube.What does it mean to be a magician? It’s a question that illusionists of all stripes have played with for decades. The lithograph is sequentially numbered in pencil in the lower left border, by a curator at S2 Editions.Ĭomes with a certificate of authenticity by S2 Art Group, Ltd. The signature of the chromist is also printed unobtrusively on this lithograph in order to distinguish it from the original Golden Age poster. This lithograph bears the trademark of the Ré Society, plus the blind stamped emblem of the S2 Editions Atelier. This piece was produced at S2 Editions Atelier, New York City, in 2000, under the guidance of the Ré Society, Ltd, and S2 Art company. It is a remastered, recreated, original work of art. The lithograph is pulled, on two separate sheets of paper, through an antique German Dufa printing press on Coventry smoot cotton paper. The now vintage 2-sheet was created to advertise Houdini's famous "Chinese Water Torture Cell' act, which he first performed in Berlin at the Circus Busch on September 21, 1912. Houdini Water Torture Cell is a hand pulled fine art lithograph by S2 Art, of the original 2-sheet poster.
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