Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Brad Meltzer is out peddling the myth that Houdini was a spy


The last time we heard from Brad Meltzer was when he "investigated" whether Houdini was murdered on his show Decoded. Among the many, many untruths perpetuated in that episode was the allegation that Bess Houdini murdered her husband because he suppressed her own show business ambitions. It was preposterous and offensive, but typical of the conspiracy-laden pseudo-scholarship of "reality" TV which is Meltzer's specialty.

Now Meltzer is back with a new novel, The Escape Artist, in which he once again wraps Houdini with conspiracy. This time he's reviving the idea that the great magician worked as a spy. Now, I don't mind having Houdini doing spy work or even fighting vampires in fiction. And as with David Saltman's recent Houdini Unbound, which also features Houdini as a spy, I was going to do a post today recommending Meltzer's book as a fun new bit of Houdini fiction.

However, on Late Night with Seth Meyer, Meltzer said "it's true" that Houdini was a spy, and even trotted out the specific details that he was recruited into the Secret Service by John E. Wilkie in 1898. I expect he will continue to say this in promotional appearances, so I now feel compelled to a write a different kind of post to help clear the air about where this whole spy idea came from and why people like Meltzer continue to perpetuate it. I really hope this doesn't offend people I respect, but it's time I say here what I've been saying in private when this topic arises, so here it goes.

The notion that Houdini worked as a spy comes entirely from the 2006 biography The Secret Life of Houdini: The Making of America's First Superhero by William Kalush and Larry Sloman. Among some excellent new research, the book also resurrects long ago discarded Houdini mythology (ringing the bells of the Kremlin) and conspiracy theories (Houdini poisoned by his doctors). But the spy angle was new and was touted as the sensational revelation of the book. So was it?

It is true that Houdini was friendly with law enforcement and took a great interest in the methods and practises of criminals and con-men. He even penned a book on the subject in 1906 called The Right Way To Do Wrong. It's also true that he had a relationship with Superintendent William Melville of Scotland Yard, who did operate an early version of British Intelligence (formal intelligence agencies as we know them did not exist at this time). Houdini appears to have written Melville on two occasions when he was performing in Germany in 1900 and 1902, which Melville called "reports." If Houdini was indeed providing intelligence information, even just gossip, then technically this would classify him as a "spy." But two vague mentions of "reports" by someone with the initials "HH" isn't much, yet that's the entire factual foundation of the Houdini spy theory and industry.

Now, I don't know the authors hearts and minds, but I do know that the economics of writing non-fiction are not great (it's one of the reasons I've yet to produce a Houdini book myself). A sale to Hollywood is pretty much the only way a non-fiction work makes money for the author and publisher. So tickling Hollywood's buying bone can become a corrupting influence. There can be pressure to showcase a sensationalistic and cinematic angle, and turning Houdini into 007 certainly fit that bill, even if the facts were not really there to support it

So it's possible the authors felt compelled to enhanced the spy idea using broad speculation and generate fanciful scenarios in which Houdini interfaces with famous figures in intelligence, like Wilkie. Upon publication, most Houdini buffs largely rejected the spy theory as unfounded, and felt it undermined what should have been a great new Houdini biography. At the time, the authors said more evidence would come forward. It never did. But in 2009, the book sold to Summit Entertainment and a franchise of movies featuring Houdini as "part Indiana Jones and part Sherlock Holmes" were announced (they've yet to appear). So the publisher achieved their economic goal, but the Houdini world was left with a gigantic new piece of mythology to contend with.

Okay, I should stop here and say that I know and greatly respect Secret Life author Bill Kalush, as does everyone in the magic world. With his Conjuring Arts Research Center and Ask Alexander online archive, he has done extraordinary things for magic history and researchers. My own conspiracy theory is that he was led down this path by his writing partner and publisher Simon & Schuster. I also have a mad dream that one day Bill will write a wholly fact-based Houdini biography for a specialty magic publisher like Mike Caveney's Magic Words. If he did, I have no doubt it could be the finest and most accurate Houdini biography of them all.

Happily, the Houdini spy theory hasn't had the same traction as other myths. Yes, Hollywood now has their teeth into it, and even the 2010 Houdini Miniseries with Adrien Brody featured Houdini doing spy work. But reviews uniformly qualified this as speculative, and even the filmmakers admitted the spy portion of the story was dramatic fiction.

But now here comes Brad Meltzer, reviving this idea in his own work which, again, I don't object to in itself. But to go on Late Night and state unblinkingly that it is "true" shows Meltzer has not done his research or facts don't matter to him. And after what he did on Decoded, I suspect it's the latter. Meltzer trades in the world of pseudo-history and "fake news" -- a conspiracy theorist historian peddling half-truths and titillation. I'm sure the goal here, once again, is to sell a book to Hollywood, and I'm sure he will.

But that doesn't mean we have to buy any of it.

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8 comments:

  1. I agree. Meltzer is not a credible source on Houdini, his conspiracy theories are just wildly untrue lies and I'm sure he knows it. Disgusting, I hated his suggestion that Bess killed Houdini. Ridiculous .

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  2. This whole Houdini spying business was ridiculous from the very beginning. I'm not inclined to let Kalush off the hook by believing his writing partner and the publisher misled him. He knew what he wa$ doing.

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  3. BTW, if Meltzer would just qualify this, "It's said that..." "There's a theory that.." "Some claim that..." I would have no problems. It's the statement of fact that riles me.

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  4. Well done. Unfortunately, this sort of mythology spreads far faster than it ever did before, and the mere mention of such provocative notions is taken as fact by people who know little of Houdini and therefore never get an accurate appreciation of his true legacy. And look at the books that have been and continue to be written about scores of long-dead Hollywood celebrities, peddling unproven dreck in order to make a buck for authors without scruples.

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  5. Had a quick exchange with Meltzer himself and he told me the book itself does not deal with the Houdini spy theory, but is more about Houdini's own private "secret service" (his assistants and ghostbusters). That is indeed fact-based and pretty cool stuff. I know I pilloried him here, but it sound like the book itself could be enjoyable, so here a link to Amazon.

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    1. Meltzer was pilloried here, and deservedly so for going on Late Night With Seth Meyer and claiming that Houdini was a spy.

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  6. About those mysterious "HH" memos to Melville: there is a much more plausible explanation. See http://www.houdinifile.com/2018/03/king-of-cardsace-of-spies-separated-at.html

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    1. The one thing Kalush has is the earlier mention by Melville that he was a "guest of HH" at the Alhambra the day of the Scotland Yard/press preview, so that's helps him make the case that the later "HH" was also Houdini. But, yes, it might not have been Henry Hozier!

      It could also be Houdini was "reporting" on good restaurants in Berlin. :p

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