"Pilot Lt. D. E. Thompson managed to keep his damaged plane from throttling into a nose dive, though he couldn’t control the plane’s movements, his propeller was smashed, and most of the upper wing had been ripped away. He successfully landed the plane, though upside down. The lower aircraft piloted by Lt. C. V. Pickup gently glided to a stop on a freshly plowed bean field."
At last Sunday's premiere of The Grim Game restoration, the sons of director Irvin Willat told me their father said the camera plane, which he was in, was also struck and "went down" with the others. This is the first I'd ever heard of the crash involving three planes.
CLICK HERE to read the full article at the L.A. Daily Mirror blog, which also includes some sensational photos from Photoplay of Houdini in Hollywood.
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Dorothy Dietrich and Dick Brookz
ReplyDeleteNice article.
They, in our opinion, clearly used your blog as a source and did not credit you.
Dorothy Dietrich and Dick Brookz
The Houdini Museum, Scranton, PA
The Only Building in the World Dedicated to Houdini
Soon to show Houdini's "The Grim Game"
Hey, that's what we're here for. Happy to see someone go beyond Wikipedia. And there appear to be a several sources used here. Not necessary to credit.
DeleteIt is highly possible that the camera plane while filming was “struck” with debris from the shattered wooden propellers of the other two planes that threw bits of wood, metal and fabric around the sky. And then landed (“went down with the others”). I know that the Camera plane landed in the bean field at 18th Street and San Vicente Boulevard where Christopher Pickup’s plane with Robert E. Kennedy went down. David E. Thompson’s plane came down at 26th Street and Santa Monica Canyon, where it flipped over on its back. BTW: All three planes took off from Cecil B. DeMille’s Mercury Field.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I think that makes a lot of sense.
DeleteThanks of the locations of where all the planes landed. Might be time for a little Grim Game tour of Santa Monica. :)