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David Blaine (born David Blaine White on April 4, 1973), is an American
illusionist and stunt performer born in Brooklyn, New York City. He made his
name as a performer of close-up magic, usually working on the streets.
Amongst magicians this is commonly known as street magic. His father is
Puerto Rican and his mother was an American Jew of Russian descent.
Blaine's act includes levitation, illusion and bringing apparently dead
flies back to life. This format, recorded by a small camera crew, provided
the basis for his breakthrough television special, "David Blaine: Street
Magic". He stayed with the format for David Blaine: Magic Man and David
Blaine: Mystifier.
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He later turned his attention to feats of endurance, including being buried
alive for seven days and spending 61 hours encased in ice. In 2002, Blaine
stood on a tiny platform at the top of a 100 foot high pole in Bryant Park
for 35 hours (see Vertigo below). In 2003, Blaine lived in a transparent
Perspex (Plexiglas) box for 44 days, without food (see Blaine's London stunt
below).
The show-business press often describe Blaine as a modern day Harry Houdini
and indeed Blaine himself has cited Houdini as one of his inspirations.
Blaine and his peers and influences
As a media figure he's been exceptionally well plotted by himself and his
advisers. While he name-checks Houdini as an influence he appears reluctant
to credit his precursors in the arena of live art and magic.
New York based fine artist and magician Jeff Sheridan is revered as the
father of modern street magic, authored a 1977 book titled Street Magic, was
the performer who inspired and actually taught the pre-teen Blaine after the
latter saw him perform in Central Park, was even approached by Blaine to
work with him; now toiling away on the magic lecture circuit and appearances
at variety shows in Germany. Italian body artist Franko B has been a major
presence in the world of live art since the late 1990s and is a past master
at coming up with quite challenging and controversial public actions
involving putting his life at risk – for example bleeding copiously during a
performance. Some-time friend of Blaine’s Uri Geller was himself a huge
public figure as a ‘mystical’ entertainer and personality from the 1970s
through into the early 1990s. Finally, in India there are any number of dare
devils/escape artists who think nothing of taking on public stunts which
carry a real risk of death or serious injury — this in front of massive
crowds.
Blaine however has no competitors yet in terms of his marketability and
financial success and his stature is such that he will likely continue being
credited for being a pioneer in mixing magic with live or performance art.
Frozen in Time
On Monday, November 27, 2000 Blaine began a stunt called 'Frozen in time'.
Blaine was frozen into a block of ice located in Times Square, New York. A
tube provided him with air and water, and a tube was provided for removal of
his urine. He was encased in ice for 61 hours, 40 minutes, and 15 seconds
before being removed. The block of ice was on a stand, with space between
the ground, and the ice was very visible. He was taken to the hospital
immediately after being removed because doctors feared he was going into
shock. He says he still could not walk normally a month after the stunt. A
TV special aired covering the stunt.
Vertigo
On Monday 22 May 2002 Blaine began a stunt he named 'Vertigo'. Blaine was
lifted by crane onto a 80 feet high pillar in Bryant Park, New York. He
remained on the pillar, which was 22 inches wide, for nearly 35 hours
without food or water or anything to lean on. Blaine appeared to be without
safety harnesses and had no safety nets underneath him for almost the
duration of the stunt. He ended the feat by jumping down onto a landing
platform made of a 12 foot high pile of cardboard boxes. He claimed to have
suffered a minor concussion from the jump because of the way his head hit
the boxes.[1].
Mysterious Stranger
On October 29, 2002, Blaine's book, Mysterious Stranger: A Book of Magic,
was published by Random House. Part autobiography, part magic history, the
book announced Blaine's $100,000 Challenge, a treasure hunt designed by
Cliff Johnson of The Fool's Errand fame. The Challenge was solved by Sherri
Skanes on March 20, 2004 after 16 months of hunting. (Read Solution.)
Blaine's London stunt: Above the Below
David Blaine suspended in front of City Hall, London (3 October 2003)On
September 5, 2003 in London, he commenced a 44-day feat in which he remained
sealed inside a transparent case suspended 30 feet in the air in Potters
Fields Park on the south bank of the River Thames, the green area between
City Hall and Tower Bridge. During this period he received no food (there
was however much speculation that he received glucose supplements, though
medical tests offered by the stunt organisers disproved this). One tube
carried water and electricity, while another carried away his urine. The
case, measuring 7ft by 7ft by 3ft, had a webcam installed so that viewers
could observe his progress.
The week prior to the stunt saw an enormous amount of publicity. Blaine
stood on top of one of the capsules of the London Eye whilst the giant wheel
carried out a full revolution. Later, when asked at a press conference at
the Savoy Hotel, to perform a magic trick, Blaine proceeded to cut off his
ear with a Swiss Army knife. Both stunts were quickly shown to be not all
they seemed. Blaine was attached to the Eye by a harness running to his leg.
The 'blood' pouring from Blaine's ear area was fake.
London mayor Ken Livingstone criticised the stunt, saying it was
disrespectful to IRA members who died in prison in the early 1980s whilst on
hunger strike. "Those people who remember the situation of the 10 hunger
strikers who starved to death and have ever met their relatives who visited
them in the final days will know it is an absolutely horrifying risk. It has
painful memories for a lot of people in society," he said. These remarks
were themselves criticised as disrespectful to the families of IRA bomb
victims.
Before it had even begun, the Guinness Book of Records had announced that
Blaine's stunt would not be included in a future edition of its book. It
said it did not wish to encourage fasting records and that in any case the
IRA hunger strikers Bobby Sands (who died after 66 days without food) and
Laurence McKeown (who went into a coma after 70 days and was then force-fed)
had already lasted longer unfed than Blaine intends.
The stunt was the subject of much press and media attention. However the
focus has not so much been Blaine's level of endurance, or on whether the
stunt was indeed what it appeared to be, but the antics of the crowds of
people who went to Tower Bridge to observe him. Whilst the vast majority of
the visitors were generally supportive, seeking little more than a wave from
the magician, a substantial minority were more mischievous or outright
hostile to Blaine's presence. Newspapers reported that eggs, lemons,
sausages, bacon, water bottles, beer cans, paint-filled balloons and golf
balls had all been thrown at the box. One man was arrested for climbing the
scaffolding supporting Blaine's box and attempting to cut the power and
water supply to the box. Brian Mung, a UK-based Flash developer, wrote an
online game where the objective was to shoot Blaine while he swung back and
forth in his box, taunting the player.
Blaine was treated to numerous displays of bare bottoms and breasts. A
hamburger was flown round the box by radio-controlled model helicopter. "You've
picked the wrong town to be hung in, Mr Blaine," wrote The Sunday Times. "What
is clear from the start is that Londoners are not taking Blaine quite as
seriously as he takes himself. ... Really, it makes you proud to be British."
Amongst the continuing antics, shows of support continued (see e.g. However
Sir John Stevens of the London Metropolitan Police confirmed that Blaine's
production will be asked to bear the extra costs of policing the area around
the stunt's location. Arrests due to the disruptive behaviour outlined above
and traffic jams on the Tower Bridge Road due to onlookers visiting Blaine
required extra police resources.
On September 20, the London Evening Standard reported that Blaine's
management company was "appalled" by various aspects of the crowd's
behaviour, and was considering ending the stunt early because of the bad
publicity. The report, whose sources were unattributed, was strangely at
odds with the reality that Blaine's stunt was a great success in terms of
publicity, and was perhaps itself just the result of a desire to print
something about Blaine, whose name was continuing to be a good newspaper-seller
at the time.
On September 25, Blaine reported to his webcam that he was feeling the taste
of pear drops on his tongue. Dr. Adam Carey, who performed a medical
examination of Blaine before he entered the box, said that the taste was
produced by ketones produced by the body burning fatty acids, which are
themselves produced from fat reserves via glycerol.
Channel 4 and BSkyB paid around £1m to Blaine's production company for the
right to televise the stunt. Sky broadcast views of the event live, 24 hours
per day, on an "interactive" channel. This also carried a "ticker"
displaying e-mail and SMS text messages from well-wishers. Channel 4 books'
publication of Blaine's autobiography in paperback coincided with the
beginning of the stunt.
Blaine emerged on schedule on October 19, murmuring "I love you all!". He
was quickly hospitalized. He was fed on liquid food until his body was
deemed ready for solids again.
Some people questioned whether Blaine had indeed starved himself, or had
been receiving liquid food from the tube supposedly only for water. This was
covered, for instance, on the American television news program, Countdown
with Keith Olbermann on cable channel MSNBC (October 20, 2003). The report
claimed that Blaine's people have said he lost 30 pounds, then 60 pounds,
and then 40 pounds. The program did not note that these figures were
estimates given when Blaine was in the box, where he could not be weighed.
The broadcast then displayed a shirtless photo of Blaine on September 19 and
a shirtless photo of Blaine on October 19, the last day of the stunt.
Blaine's weight appeared identical in both photos. In other photos Blaine
looks dramatically thinner and more gaunt coming out of the box than going
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DAVID BLAINE PICTURES |
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