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Baddest Motherfuckers Ever: Harry “The Handcuff King” Houdini
There have been a great many badass, blow-up-your-sorry-ass-with-a-fireball wizards throughout the ages, from the limp-wristed, Harry Potter-esque Merlin to psychotic Russian demagogue Rasputin to the Antichrist Aleister Crowley. None of them, however, possessed a combination of characteristics so diverse that they were essentially a combination of Bruce Lee, David Blaine, Evel Kneivel, lunatic carny extraordinaire Frank “Cannonball” Richards, and the entire cast of Mythbusters. That bizarre distinction is the sole mantle of the greatest escape artist and all-around baddest motherfucker in history, Harry Houdini.
I realize that when one thinks of wizards and magicians, they’re thinking of some slack-jawed bitch who would get his ass kicked by a cardboard cutout of a Warhammer dwarf. Clerics fall into the same category in my book- if there’s no melee weapon employed, they can get fucked, and that twig Harry Potter waves about like he’s fucking Lord of the Dance wouldn’t even make a decent stabbing weapon. All of this shit flies out the window when Houdini walks into the room, however, because that man was harder than underground Greek gay porn and in better shape than just about anyone you know.
You’re skeptical. That’s fine- I was dubious until I discovered that Houdini could jump off a bridge into an icy river cuffed and weighted down by 35 pounds of chains, then swim to shore completely unharmed. That is some shit that would have made Teddy Roosevelt stop in his tracks in wonderment in spite of the fact that Roosevelt swam the Potomac every morning bare-assed. Like our greatest President, Houdini was also a serious fucking problem for anyone who wanted to scrap, as Houdini was a badass boxer and train jiu-jitsu for an hour each day.
Most people credit Houdini’s success as the world’s greatest escapologist to his Dean Karnazes-esque superfitness. At a time when most Americans and Brits busied themselves being skinnier than a dope fiend ten years into their habit, Houdini exercised like it was his penance for having been Ivan the Terrible in a past life. The result was a prolific series of competitions and athletic feats even the über-athlete Jim Thorpe would have considered fucking insane.
“As a teenager in New York City, Houdini was a member of several athletic organizations, competing in bicycle races, foot races, and boxing matches. He would plunge into the fast-moving East River to get his swimming fix, and running a ten-mile circuit in Central Park was an effortless feat for him. He tried out for the U.S. Olympic swim team as a teen (he didn’t make the cut), by 17 he was already an amateur boxer, and by the time he turned 18, he had beaten Sidney Thomas, a British racing champion, in a 20-mile race” (Flicker).
All of this was achieved with “vigorous self-training, to enable me to do remarkable things with my body, to make not one muscle or a group of muscles, but every muscle, a responsive worker, quick and sure…” (McKay).
I realize you might be calling bullshit in the same way any thinking person screams “bullshit” internally upon hearing Trump brag about any business-related successes, since Houdini allegedly died from a single punch to the stomach… or did he? We’ll cover that later, but in the meantime be aware that Houdini was roundly considered to be a badass boxer. In his single pro fight, Houdini beat the fucking brakes off the future bantamweight champion of the world in an unsanctioned bout on a barge in the East River- that is how they got down before the Queensbury rules were adopted. Pulitzer Prize-winning superjournalist and author Ken Silverman remarked at one point that Houdini himself thought he would have taken the title instead of his vanquished opponent if his career hadn’t been derailed by an illness, and that is believable, given how he trained- his “practice sessions were so constant, so all-consuming that he would frequently forget to eat and bathe; his wife Bess had to remind him to change his underwear” (Ibid).
Everyone reading this article is likely of the opinion that they train harder than anyone they know- I know I fucking am. Houdini makes me look like a punk prison bitch by comparison to his routine, however. The dude almost never slept more than four hours a night, and even then would awaken at random and scribble notes in a notebook like he had the world’s worst case of hypergraphia every time he had an idea. His daily routine, though, is what makes us all look like giant bitches:
“Savoring the serene atmosphere, Harry turned his attention inward. He felt completely alive and awake, though he had slept only four hours. His mind was perfectly clear. He sensed his blood circulating, and detected a steady vibration running throughout his body. He slowly inhaled the fresh morning air, feeling its energy entering through his heels and pores, circulating up his spine, over the top of his head and, exhaling, through his tongue, heart, lungs, solar plexus, down the front of his body and back down to his feet. He focused on this for a few minutes, then went back inside and drank a glass of mineral water.
Closing the bedroom door, he padded silently into the grand parlor, cartwheeled onto the large blue-and-yellow carpet and walked on his hands back and forth across the room. He’d walked on his hands daily since he was nine years old, when he billed himself “Harry, Prince of the Air,” and had played local carnivals as an acrobatic contortionist whose specialty was bending backward and picking up needles with his eyelids.
After an hour of gymnastics, he again stood still. Letting his sweat dry, he cooled down by quietly imitating the breathing patterns of the heron, the deer and the turtle. Then he went into the bathroom, filled the alabaster bathtub with cold water and drowned himself. Drawing mind and energy inward, intentionally slowing his internal functions, he held his breath, submerged, for five-and-a-half minutes.
Drying off with a towel, he returned to the rug and practiced ju-jitsu for an hour, feeling each movement coiling through his bare feet, spiraling up through his joints and emerging in the hands. He devoted the next forty-five minutes to hands and fingers exclusively — rolling silver dollars clockwise and counterclockwise over his knuckles, palming and producing poker-sized playing cards with both sides of both hands.
Sitting in the large armchair for fifteen minutes, he tied and untied knots with his toes, without looking, while mentally counting backwards from three hundred by threes.
He spent the next fifteen minutes exercising his internal organs. As he had learned from early apprenticeship with Thardo the Poison Eater, he threaded a small potato onto a string and gently swallowed it. When it had settled in his empty stomach, he walked around the room, on his feet this time, and then sat down and performed ambidextrous tears and switches with folded pieces of paper, while looking straight ahead and quietly reciting “Kubla Khan,” “Casey at the Bat,” and “The Song of Hiawatha.” After he had both moved and spoken normally for a quarter of an hour, he carefully began to work his peristaltic muscles and gently refluxed the potato back up his gullet and into his hand.
It was not yet eight o’clock when he finished, feeling supercharged, and as though he had already lived an entire day while the rest of the world was asleep” (Saltman “Routine”).
If that doesn’t impress the living shit out of you, I highly doubt you’re able to be impressed, because you’re just a corpse staring at the screen with no comprehension of what you’ve read. In the event that you’re unfamiliar with Maxick and Monte Saldo, they were a pair of short guys who were 150lbs-ish, ripped to the fucking bone, and so strong that the Redditors screeching “manlet!” at their monitors right now would have died simply from impugning the badassery of the two. In any event, these guys invented what was called Maxalding, which was a system of isometric exercises that would give practitioners a level of muscular control the likes of which you cannot conceive- they could literally flex one half of their abs and leave the other abs completely relaxed, or suck them into a vacuum (as the guy above is doing). Frankly, we could all stand to practice the shit, because it likely accounted for a considerable portion of both of their superhuman strength, and it was part of Houdini’s secret to success.
“He had control of every single muscle in his body,” Hirschfeld continued. “Even this little ring of muscles right in the center of his palms. He had really inordinate control of the muscles of his body. I mean, he would show me how he could swell his wrists, you know, before they put handcuffs on them. I’m sure there was more to it than that, but he did have complete control. He used to take his hand and show me little muscles in the center of his hand that he could pop up. He could put his hand down flat and pick up a dime or a quarter. I used to try to practice that, but I could never see any muscles in the center of my hand. It was really remarkable” (Saltman “Routine”).
And it wasn’t just that he had control of every muscle in his body than most people have control of their fork while stuffing their fat faces, or that he could outrace the best runners or outbox world champions, or even the fact that he did an hour of jujitsu a day at a time when hardly anyone in America could place Japan on a map (not unlike today, I suppose)- Houdini had a nearly superhuman ability to endure pain. In an odd coincidence, one of the most renown sports team doctors is also the world’s biggest magic collector, and his name was Dr. Robert J. Albo (he died in 2011). Just prior to his death, Albo was interviewed about the escape-artist extraordinaire and he said this of Houdini: “Soldiers run across battlefields and get shot and not even know it until afterwards due to the adrenaline rush. Athletes are much the same,” said Albo. He compared the situation to Houdini’s ability to ignore pain: “He had learned to live with pain” (Chapman 126-127).
The man was a genuine lunatic when it came to pain- whether he was a masochist, a self-mutilator, or just a man who hated to fucking lose so much he’d endure anything is up for debate, but the man was in it to win it. “Houdini would accept nearly any challenge thrown at him. Audience members would bring all manner of handcuffs, locks, and chains to his shows and groups would come up with bizarre tests of his prowess, like asking to chain him to a lit cannon” (McKay). This meant he’d have to endure shit like cuffs so tight he couldn’t bend his wrists and they’d cut off circulation to his hands and pinch his skin. He’d be tied so tightly with ropes a chick from HogTied.com would be screaming her safe word because she couldn’t feel her extremities and would fear they’d go necrotic, but Houdini just toughed it the fuck out and would emerge from his restraints an hour later out of breath, with bloodshot eyes, and covered in bruises. Zero fucks were given- all that mattered was being the best.
In one show, Houdini’s ankle snapped while being loaded into a water torture cell. Not only did he tell the doc to fuck off and refuse the hospital, but the man did the escape on a broken ankle… and then made his own split and leg brace out of whatever was handy and kept touring. In another, a bunch of dickhead longshoremen apparently got a little busy with kidney punches while loading him into a canvas bag (seems like people actually had to work to be famous back in the day, rather than just being a vapid cunt who posts stupid pictures of themselves with digital dog ears and shit). Thereafter, Houdini found himself pissing blood, and his ever put-upon doctor issued more directions to Houdini that he spurned harder than sobriety by Tara Reid.
“It is my duty to inform you that by continuing your present regimen you would be committing suicide. You must reconcile yourself to the fact that your strenuous days are over…If you continue at present, you will be dead within the year,” the doctor gravely intoned. “You don’t know me,” Houdini replied with a shrug. He took two weeks off and then went back at it with his usual aplomb. For the next 15 years, the magician sent the doctor photos and news clippings of his dangerous exploits along with a note: “Still alive and going strong” (McKay).
You have to love that man’s zero fucks given attitude and his dedication to being the best, no matter what. He refused to be outdone- if he’d heard a tall tale about Paul Bunyan escaping armed lumberjacks while chained and shackled Houdini would have attempted it while afflicted with dysentery just to up the difficulty. It didn’t matter what the stunt had to be- Houdini was always out to leave his audience stunned at the superhuman shit he had done. Tragically, the combination of his unerring drive to be the best and his staunch determination to ignore the advice of anyone bearing a caduceus were his undoing. At the end of his shows, Houdini had a habit of showing off his wrought iron abs by inviting people in the audience to punch him in the stomach… which usually left them with bruised knuckles. Due to his practice of muscle control, he could bot swell and flex his abs (which I’m sure he used to violently strike the puncher by flexing out at the point of impact), so he apparently took more pleasure in this feat than a NAMBLA member does in walking past a schoolyard at lunchtime. Though certain Houdini experts refuse to believe it (and apparently violently dispute it), Houdini stated to his friends after one show, “I let a college kid punch me in the stomach and he caught me wrong and it’s killing me” (Saltman “Stomach”). Unbeknownst to Houdini, he had burst his appendix, and in spite of a 104 degree fever continued performing for several more days. By the time he finally relented and went to the hospital for surgery, it was too late, and he died of peritonitis.
After that biography, some of you might still be wondering why I decided to include Houdini amongst guys like Bruce Lee and Ken Patera, George Hackenschmidt and Bruno Sammartino. It’s the will that makes the lifter- not the program, not the diet, not their upbringing or the political system in which they live. It is nothing more than the will to fucking win, and that is the reason Harry Houdini is one of the baddest motherfuckers to ever live.
Chapman, Mike. Wrestling Tough. Champaign: Human Kinetics, 2005.
Flicker, Jonah. Your wimpy workout has nothing on Houdini’s bizarre training regimen. Studio @ Gizmodo. 18 Aug 2014. Web. 8 Oct 2017. http://studioatgizmodo.kinja.com/your-wimpy-workout-has-nothing-on-houdinis-bizarre-trai-1613321041
McKay, Brett and Kate. Lessons in manliness from Harry Houdini. Art of Manliness. 20 Dec 2010. Web. 8 Oct 2017. http://www.artofmanliness.com/2010/12/20/lessons-in-manliness-from-harry-houdini/
Saltman, David. Houdini’s iron stomach. The Houdini File. 27 Jun 2013. Web. 8 Oct 2017. http://www.houdinifile.com/2013/06/houdinis-iron-stomach.html
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27 responses to “Baddest Motherfuckers Ever: Harry “The Handcuff King” Houdini”
Far better an article than I thought it would be.
Ha! Glad I could throw a surprise your way.
One of the best bme articles for a number of reasons
one of the best bme articles for a number of reasons
Good stuff! Did you ever write on Ken Patera? No one ever mentions his accomplishments.
http://chaosandpain.blogspot.co.uk/2010/08/baddest-motherfuckers-ever-18-ken-i.html?m=1
Yup! See above.
For most of us, Jamie's perspective works well, keep at it, dig deeper, try harder, you will get better. I wouldn't say it works in top level bodybuilding, but in general, it's good stuff.
What do you think need to change for that? you have my interest piqued.
In one sense you are right, if you really want it, you will do what it takes. So win or die trying.
What I was thinking though is that great drive is not enough without the material prerequisites, but as I say, if you have the will, then you will get the material prerequisites sorted.
Excellent!👌👌💪💪💪🤘🤘🤘💯💯
A strong reminder that there are many ways to be harder than you are now.
Mother. Fucking. Badass.
Can't say I was ever perticularily interested in Houdini, but this was a great article, Jamie. Very interesting.
In general, I like how the BMEs feature guys that are sometimes only loosely connected to the weightlifting theme of the blog and instead just hard as nails fuckers haha
In my own opinion, lifting is a great pursuit and if done correctly, i.e. at least sometimes heavy, can be somewhat dangerous, but it still doesn't compare to other pursuits that are much more dangerous, like serious martial arts training. Despite what the the Instagram fags "squat everyday" "at war with the weights" would like to believe haha
Hahaha. Exactly- the #grind people have no idea how incredibly dull they are, and how mundane the shit they do actually is.
The only reason I don't use people who don't lift is that I think it kind of loses its appeal… and would look like I'm ripping off the dude who does Badass of the Week. There are plenty of hardasses who don't lift I'd like to write about- you can't imagine how much research I've done on Otto Skorzeny to find out if he even did calisthenics, haha.
Regarding Skorzeny, it depends on what you would consider exercising – the man was certainly in good shape, even later ib life. The Nazi cunts encouraged boxing as a sports practice to toughen up the SS boys, so there's a chance he did that, too. He most certainly fenced, probably as a student in a student fencing club (called 'Burschenschaft'), because the scars on his cheek are typical fencing injuries, commonly known as 'Schmiss'.
I've even gone so far as to try to look up SS combatives programs and their PT regimen. Thus far, nothing much. He was definitely a fencer- all Prussian nobles were insofar as I understand it. I'll keep looking.
Nazi "cunt"? We got a sjw in the house here?
No mention of time that Houdini spent in the court of the Tsar of Russia, being effectively their court magician until he was succeeded by the famous Rasputin.
Or to the rumour that, at this time, he was actually spying on the Tsar, as a direct personal agent for Ted Roosevelt. Or maybe the British. Or both.
There was a lot of stuff I could have thrown in there, like the fact that debunking palmistry and seances and the like, but that just didn't fit into the narrative.
Awesome as always. Will you publish another post with book recomendations?
I would also be interested in that
Definitely.
"If that doesn't impress the living shit out of you, I highly doubt you're able to be impressed"
Well i am able to be impressed, but let me get this straight – his 'workout' consisted of some deep breathing, followed by walking on his hands a bit, having a bath, doing some jiu jitsu by himself, fiddling with a coin, then tying knots with his toes?
Not impressed. If we were talking about Steven Hawking doing all that crap, i guess i'd be impressed, but not very much.
I know next to nothing about Houdini but I would have guessed it was all fakery, smoke and mirrors to make a few coins, something akin to the "wrestling" of Hulk Hogan and the like.
When Houdini was on his deathbed, he told the surgeon who had operated on him that he wished he had become a doctor. The doctor, Dr. Kennedy, could hardly believe what he had heard. He told Houdini, "You've entertained millions and I am just an ordinary surgeon." Houdini told him, "but what you do is real, while I, in almost every respect, am a fake."
His original name was Eric Weisz.
An example
One of Houdini's earliest acts was for him to advertise that he could escape from any handcuffs the audience or the local police could provide. His handcuff act impressed theater manager Martin Beck, and in 1899, he gave Houdini his first big break to tour vaudeville stages.
The Secret:
There was no single secret to Houdini's handcuff escapes. The illusionist studied locks all his life and had an encyclopedic knowledge of handcuffs. He looked at the cuffs and knew what kind of key he needed. He then concealed the needed key on his person. Later in his career, Houdini invented a belt made of flexible steel that rotated on ball bearings with the flick of his elbow. The belt had several compartments with a variety of keys and picks to use.
Some cuffs didn't require a key. He revealed in 1902 that some cuffs opened by banging them against a hard surface. When he came to a town, he'd often research the cuffs used by the local police. In his bookHandcuff Secrets, he demonstrated that a loop of string could pull the screw out of a cuff's lock.
Sometimes, Houdini had to free himself from so-called freak handcuffs, one-of-a-kind cuffs with only one key to open it. In that case, he insisted on testing the key first. While he fiddled with the cuffs, an assistant headed backstage and searched Houdini's huge collection of keys for one that looked similar to the freak key. The assistant handed the fake key to Houdini, who then returned the fake key to the owner while he palmed the real one.
Houdini wasn't above using specialized handcuffs. When he performed his famous bridge jumps into rivers with his hands cuffed, he often used "jumpcuffs." These cuffs had a weak interior spring and would pass inspection. Once Houdini hit the water, a flick of the wrist opened the cuffs.
Only twice was he nearly flummoxed by handcuffs. The first time was in Blackburn, England at the hands exercise trainer and future writer William Hope Hodgson. Hodgson trussed Houdini up so enthusiastically that it took Houdini an hour and 40 minutes to free himself, complete with bloody welts.
The second time was in London, where the Daily Mirror took up Houdini's challenge. A Mirror reporter searched and found a Birmingham blacksmith who had spent five years making cuffs that were allegedly impossible to pick. The "Mirror Cuff" featured a set of nesting Bramah locks. It took Houdini an hour and 10 minutes to free himself. Some experts speculate that the entire Mirror Cuff performance was set up by Houdini, and he had a duplicate key the whole time. They claim that he took 70 minutes to unlock the "Mirror Cuffs" for dramatic effect.
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