“Ling Look, one of the best
of contemporary fire performers, was with Dean Harry Kellar when the latter
made his famous trip around the world in 1877. Look combined fire-eating and
sword-swallowing in a rather startling manner. His best effect was the
swallowing of a red-hot sword. Another thriller consisted in fastening a long
sword to the stock of a musket; when he had swallowed about half the length of
the blade, he discharged the gun and the recoil drove the sword suddenly down
his throat to the very hilt. Although Look always appeared in a Chinese
make-up, Dean Kellar told me that he thought his right name was Dave Gueter,
and that he was born in Buda Pesth.
"Yamadeva, a brother of Ling
Look, was also with the Kellar Company, doing cabinet manifestations and rope
escapes. Both brothers died in China during this engagement, and a strange incident
occurred in connection with their deaths. Just before they were to sail from
Shanghai on the P. & O. steamer Khiva for Hong Kong, Yamadeva and Kellar
visited the bowling alley of The Hermitage, a pleasure resort on the Bubbling
Well Road. They were watching a husky sea captain, who was using a huge ball
and making a ‘double spare’ at every roll, when Yamadeva suddenly remarked, ‘I
can handle one as heavy as that big loafer can.’ Suiting the action to the
word, he seized one of the largest balls and drove it down the alley with all
his might; but he had misjudged his own strength, and he paid for the foolhardy
act with his life, for he had no sooner delivered the ball than he grasped his
side and moaned with pain. He had hardly sufficient strength to get back to the
ship, where he went immediately to bed and died shortly afterward. An
examination showed that he had ruptured an artery. Kellar and Ling Look had
much difficulty in persuading the captain to take the body to Hong Kong, but he
finally consented. On the way down the Yang Tse Kiang River, Look was greatly
depressed; but all at once he became strangely excited, and said that his
brother was not dead, for he had just heard the peculiar whistle with which
they had always called each other. The whistle was several times repeated, and
was heard by all on board. Finally the captain, convinced that something was
wrong, had the lid removed from the coffin, but the body of Yamadeva gave no
indication of life, and all save Ling Look decided that they must have been
mistaken.
"Poor Ling Look, however,
sobbingly said to Kellar, ‘I shall never leave Hong Kong alive. My brother has
called me to join him.’ This prediction was fulfilled, for shortly after their
arrival in Hong Kong he underwent an operation for a liver trouble, and died
under the knife. The brothers were buried in Happy Valley, Hong Kong, in the
year 1877.
"All this was related to me at
the Marlborough-Blenheim, Atlantic City, in June, 1908, by Kellar himself, and
portions of it were repeated in 1917 when Dean Kellar sat by me at the Society
of American Magicians' dinner.”
Harry Houdini, The Miracle
Mongers – An Exposé
But... I've read in the actual newspapers of the era that Ling Look was arrested in Brighton in 1881 after an accident in the theatre involving a boy getting his head blown off in a cannon stunt.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.photohistory-sussex.co.uk/BothamCannonAd81.jpg
http://www.photohistory-sussex.co.uk/BothamBenjamin.htm (pan down to the bit that says: TRAGEDY AT THE OXFORD THEATRE OF VARIETIES)
I've read the same story with the same dates in the Sussex Advertiser, and in Richard Baker's book about the Music Halls;
http://www.amazon.co.uk/British-Music-Hall-Illustrated-History/dp/0750936851
So, who was telling the truth, here? It's a great story, but could it have been about one of the other 'Chinese' magicians of the age?
Fans of Lovecraft know that he ghost-wrote a short story for Houdini - "Under the Pyramids" (aka. "Imprisoned with the Pharaohs") published in Weird Tales magazine, May-July 1924. Given that, it's likely that this piece I've excerpted wasn't written by Houdini either. Alternatively, the stage name (and the routine) of Ling Look could have been traded, copied, or simply misremembered by those in question. Nevertheless, thanks for the insights - I'll try and work them into a follow-up later on!
DeleteFor what it's worth, in the original text of the Miracle Mongers, Houdini (or whoever ghost wrote for him) claims that 2 years after these events, Kellar investigated a rumor of a living Ling Look in London, and found a third Gueter brother masquerading as the original Ling Look, performing a similar act. Perhaps that's who was arrested?
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