Halloween weekend we visited the traveling exhibition at San
Francisco’s Contemporary Jewish Museum called Houdini: Art and Magic. The
exhibition is on from October 2, 2011 until January 16, 2012 and well worth a visit.
Harry Houdini (1874-1926) was a Hungarian-born American magician noted
for his sensational escape acts. Handcuffs, shackles, straitjackets, milk cans,
and packing trunks – nothing could hold the famed vaudevillian who became one
of the 20th century’s most legendary performers. With a talent for
self-promotion and provocation, this immigrant son of a poor Hungarian rabbi
rocketed to international fame and grabbed front-page headlines with his
gripping theatrical presentations and heart-stopping outdoor spectacles.
Apparently, he also knew the sex appeal of a shirtless picture or a tight, form-fitting outfit that displayed his compactly muscled physique.
Apparently, he also knew the sex appeal of a shirtless picture or a tight, form-fitting outfit that displayed his compactly muscled physique.
Curator Brooke Kamin Rapaport is quoted that Houdini's success "was a source of enormous pride for the Jewish community. He achieved mainstream acceptance despite anti-Semitic and anti-immigrant attitudes, and his escape from the confinement of handcuffs, chains, packing crates, trunks and boxes had particular resonance for those who sought liberation from political, ethnic, or religious oppression."
Oh.Em.Gee.
ReplyDeleteHoudini was a childhood crush of mine; I had a hardbound Readers Digest book called "How is it Done?" as a "free gift" for a year-long subscription. Houdini's magic was part of the book and I knew then - I was different.
Thanks for this, guys!
This is great.
ReplyDeleteI'm fascinated by Houdini’s ability to overcome adversity through his performances.
ReplyDelete