THE SCIENCE BEHIND HISTORY'S MOST ICONIC ILLUSIONIST"HOUDINI'S LAST SECRETS"PREMIERES SUNDAY, JANUARY 6 AT 10PM ON SCIENCE CHANNEL
Magicians, past and present, marvel at the death-defying performances of the legendary Harry Houdini. His breathtaking escapes and astonishing illusions have never been equaled, or fully understood. With the help of skilled engineers, accomplished illusionists, and a member of his own bloodline, a new Science Channel series looks to uncover the methods to Houdini's magic and madness. HOUDINI'S LAST SECRETS, a four-part series, premieres Sunday, January 6 at 10 p.m. ET/PT.
Catching a speeding bullet, being buried alive, submerging himself in a water torture cell. How did the world's greatest showman pull off such death-defying stunts? His talents allowed him to become one of, if not the biggest celebrity in the world. Those same unique skills, along with the company that he kept, led some to believe that he was an informant for the top U.S. and European spy agencies during World War I. Helping piece together clues and testing out his most daring stunts are Houdini's grand-nephew George Hardeen, magician and daredevil Lee Terbosic, and master stunt builder Steve Wolf. With access to the master illusionist's personal scrapbooks, letters, and pictures, they look to uncover the science of Houdini's stunts as well as the myths behind his legend.
"Harry Houdini is the definition of mind-blowing," said Marc Etkind, General Manager of Science Channel. "He was clearly ahead of his time when it came to using engineering to accomplish his stunts, so much so that his methods continue to be debated by today's master magicians. It's no wonder that just the name Houdini still stirs the imagination of people, nearly a century after his death."
Each episode will be centered around one of Houdini's most daring stunts. The premiere looks at Houdini's famous water torture cell escape to unmask the potential methods he may have used, and what the dangers involved could have been. He performed this feat many times in Washington D.C., where President Woodrow Wilson was rumored to often sneak over to watch Houdini. Other episodes focus on The Siberian Transport stunt, catching a bullet, and his escape from being buried alive.
HOUDINI'S LAST SECRETS is produced by Megalomedia for Science Channel. Executive producers for Megalomedia are Jonathan Zowaradan and David Barsky. Wyatt Channell is executive producer for Science Channel.
So it looks like Houdini's Last Secrets will be the first big Houdini event of 2019. I can't wait!
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Awesome - Cant wait to see the show on TV. George is such a nice man too!
ReplyDeleteWow, this is so exciting! Congratulations on getting to shoot a segment for the series (with George Hardeen, no less!). I can't wait either (and I LOVE that mini WTC!!)
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see this!
ReplyDeleteWow looking forward to seeing this!
ReplyDeleteJack
Can't wait... and she still looks good!
ReplyDeleteWhat I consider one of the last secrets of HH is the mystery of how he managed to figure out how to open prison cell locks. I don't believe those types of locks were something you could just purchase, collect, and study like handcuffs.
ReplyDeleteScience is now running promos for the series that pitches it as exposing Houdini's secrets. The producer called to reassured me (again) that they are NOT exposing any secrets. The network is doing their own thing promotion-wise. I know I didn't expose anything (unless I slipped up without realizing it).
ReplyDelete