It's a great story and a part of the Blackstone legacy, but did Houdini perform similar heroics 17 years earlier?
In the new monograph Houdini & Gysel, author Wayne Wissner quotes a letter to Houdini from Robert Gysel in which he states:
"Understand that you was [sic] some hero at the Keiths fire in Indianapolis on apl 4th, that thru your coolness saved the spectators from being terrorized, Good for You."
Now, in a wild coincidence (which happen to me frequently when it comes to HH), right after reading this passage in the Gysel book I logged onto eBay and saw this beautiful original program advertising Houdini at the Indianapolis B.F. Keith's Theater in March 1925. There's no date for the Gysel letter, but as this program says this would be Houdini's first appearance in Indianapolis in 10 years and the majority of the Gysel correspondence is from the 1920s, it appears this could very well be the week of the Keith's theater fire. (The program sold for $214.)
But the big question remains -- what exactly did Houdini do to "save the spectators from being terrorized"? I can't find any mention of this in any biography. I also tried to find news of a theater fire in Indianapolis on April 4, 1925, but turned up nothing.
I'll throw this one out to the Houdini detectives.
I think you meant to say Keith’s Theater in March 1925 as opposed to May 1925. The Gysel letter says April 4, 1925 and according to Koval’s Research Diary, he was at the Keith’s Theatre in Indianapolis from Mar 30 to Apr 4. Hopefully someone will find a news reference WRT a theatre fire.
ReplyDeleteAh, yes I did mean March, not May. Typo. Fixed. Thanks.
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