Previously,
I posted an excerpt from The Miracle Mongers and Their Methods, A Complete
Exposé (published by Dutton, New York, NY, USA, 1922) penned under Harry
Houdini’s name, entitled (my title) “The Strange Case of Ling Look”. Further to
a response sent to me by reader Lucy Bond, there are some interesting issues
surrounding the tale which call Houdini’s veracity into question.
The
story, as you may recall, was a fairly romantic one concerning the music-hall
performer “Ling Look” being called to his grave by his brother “Yamadeva”, who
pre-deceased him a day or so earlier by rupturing an artery in a
poorly-conceived challenge at a Shanghai bowling alley. No doubt the retelling
of the tale was supposed to elicit a frisson of spookiness in the readers and,
left at that, it’s all well and good. But take a look at this:
This
is from a British newspaper dated 1881. As you can see, it clearly states that
a fire magician “the Great Chinese Salamander Ling Look”, “Lord of Fire, Cannon
and Sword”, is performing a week-long stint in Brighton, every evening at
8.00pm. Not bad for a fellow who was buried four years previously at Happy
Valley in Hong Kong! As it turned out, this particular gig wasn’t going to be a
good one either:
Apparently,
during the cannon act, a young man accidentally had his head blown off. This
resulted in some court appearances including Ling Look’s wife Caroline. (Did
she know that he was dead when she married him, I wonder?)
Which
leaves us with the question of what is actually going on here?
Of
course, the first thing that most HPL fans will acknowledge, is that Houdini
was known for hiring ghost-writers to draft tracts to which he would put his
name. The well-known incident for Mythos fans is the short story “Beneath the
Pyramids”, aka. “Imprisoned with the Pharaohs”, which HPL wrote and which was
published in “Weird Tales” magazine in 1925. So from the word ‘go’ the question
of authorship has to be raised.
Second,
as he states in ‘his’ retelling, he had no firsthand connexion to the events;
he says that promoter Dean Kellar told him all at a meeting in Atlantic City in
1908, and that he heard the story again (as told by Kellar) at a dinner for the
Society of American Magicians in 1917. Kellar was in charge of the troupe that
had performed in Shanghai, of which Ling Look and his brother Yamadeva were a
part. As far as travelling shows are concerned, losing two headlining acts in
swift succession must have been devastating, so perhaps relating this tale was
Kellar’s way of winning something back from a disastrous tour, as well as
adding a cachet of mystery to his stable of performers?
Next,
we have to ask ourselves exactly which Ling Look was it who died in 1877, and
which one ended up before a judge on charges of manslaughter in 1881? Again
‘Houdini’s’ report tells us that “Ling Look” was the stage name of a fire
magician from Budapest whose real name was Dave Gueter. Dressing up as a
Chinese magician was a way of ensuring some anonymity for the performer as well
as allowing certain tricks involving the disappearance and re-appearance of the
magician to be facilitated (one performer in heavy make-up looked much the same
as another from the audience’s perspective). The Orientalist fantasies of the Mystic
East could be employed to render the act exotic for a western crowd of the
gaslight era. In short, the Chinese aspect of the performer and his act was
just a shtick, a gimmick to allow him to show off his skills.
Those
skills are what Houdini dissects in the book The Miracle Mongers and Their
Methods, A Complete Exposé: he rigorously details all of the acts –
particularly fiery stage acts – of which he has heard or which he has witnessed
personally. It’s clear from his explanations, that fire magicians across the
ages have taken the same basic principles and worked them up into acts that
have in turn been adopted and adapted by later performers, with varying degrees
of notoriety and success. From this, we can infer that the stage persona of “Ling
Look” did not die with Dave Gueter; someone else took over the role. Probably
someone to whom Dean Kellar sold the rights: like I said, Mr. Kellar was most
likely looking for a way to make up some lost ground after that disastrous
Shanghai tour!
The
legacy left behind by Ling Look (whoever he was!) and others of his ilk is an
effective and exciting trope which is easily adapted for those whose
Cthulhu-gaming involves the music-hall rowdiness and illegality of Victorian
London. The notion of the sinister Chinese stage magician gave us Sax Rohmer’s
‘Fu Manchu’ and has been effectively utilised in such vehicles as “The Seven
Faces of Dr. Lao” (George Pal, 1964), “The Illusionist” (Neil Burger, 2006) and
the Doctor Who story, “The Talons of Weng Chiang” (David Maloney, 1977).
My
thanks again to Lucy Bond for drawing my attention to this fascinating bit of
historical detective-work. She recommends that anyone interested in doing some
more research into the music-hall scene should check out this book: British
Music Hall – an Illustrated History by Richard Anthony Baker. I know I’ll be
looking for a copy!
THE LING-LOOK YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT WAS THE YOUNGER BROTHER OF THE TRAGIC LING-LOOK AND YAMADEVA, WHO WERE BURIED IN HAPPY VALLEY CEMETERY IN HONG KONG IN 1877. GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT PLEASE, BEFORE GIVING OPINION!!
ReplyDeletePerhaps you missed the point, but this is a report of *other people's* handling of the information, not my research of the facts. The point I'm trying to highlight is that these same facts are confused by the adoption of stage names (even racial identities) in the haphazard and ill-reported world of vaudeville entertainment. It's what has been recorded - not "facts", and certainly not even my "opinion". Next time try to read more closely, be polite, and keep your all-caps spray opinion to yourself.
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