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David Blaine - a book of magic
David Blaine
Villard Books (2002)
In Collection
#3557
0*
Biography & Autobiography / Entertainment & Performing Arts, Blaine, David, Body, Mind & Spirit / Magick Studies, Magic tricks
Hardcover 9780375505737
English
Blaine, David: Mysterious Stranger
©2002 Villard Publishing, NY
Hardcover, w/dj, 224 pages
ISBN 0-375-50573-3

Comments:

Contents (Chapters from book ToC):

1 For Those Who Believe
8 Discovery of Magic
22 The Three Magi
40 Secrets of Cards
54 Confidence
76 Playing the Part of a Magician
90 The Main Ain't Right
104 Primitive Mysteries
128 Ehrick Weiss
153 The Premature Burial
170 Frozen in Time
192 Vertigo
Product Details
LoC Classification GV1547 .B646 2002
LoC Control Number 2002071382
Dewey 793.8
Cover Price $17.00
No. of Pages 214
Height x Width 9.4 x 7.5  inch
Personal Details
Read It Yes
Links Library of Congress
Notes
David Blaine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blaine in 2008
Born David Blaine White
April 4, 1973 (age 47)
Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.

Occupation
Magicianillusionistendurance artist

Years active 1997–present
Partner(s) Alizée Guinochet (2008–2014)
Children 1

Website Official website Edit this at Wikidata
David Blaine White (born April 4, 1973) is an American illusionist, endurance artist, and extreme performer. He is best known for his high-profile feats of endurance and has set and broken several world records.

Blaine innovated the way magic is shown on television by focusing on spectator reactions. His idea was to turn the camera around on the people watching instead of the performer, to make the audience watch the audience. The New York Times noted that "he's taken a craft that's been around for hundreds of years and done something unique and fresh with it."[1] According to the New York Daily News, "Blaine can lay claim to his own brand of wizardry. The magic he offers operates on an uncommonly personal level."[2] Penn Jillette called Blaine's first television special, Street Magic, "the biggest breakthrough (in television magic) done in our lifetime" for changing the perspective of television viewers toward those seeing the trick live.[3]

Along with his television specials, Blaine has also made special guest appearance in several talk shows including The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[4][5]


Contents
1 Early life
2 Stunts and specials
2.1 Street Magic and Magic Man
2.2 Buried Alive
2.3 Frozen in Time
2.4 Vertigo
2.5 Mysterious Stranger
2.6 Above the Below
2.7 Drowned Alive
2.8 Revolution
2.9 Guinness World Records
2.10 Dive of Death
2.11 What Is Magic?
2.12 Electrified: One Million Volts Always On
2.13 Real or Magic
2.14 Beyond Magic
2.15 The Magic Way
2.16 Private appearances
3 Philanthropy and charity work
4 Personal life
4.1 Sexual assault allegations
5 See also
6 References
7 External links
Early life
Blaine was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Patrice Maureen White (1946–1995),[6] a school teacher, and William Perez, a veteran of the Vietnam War. His father was of half Puerto Rican and half Italian descent, and his mother was of Russian Jewish ancestry.[7] When Blaine was four years old, he saw a magician performing magic on the subway. This sparked a lifelong interest for him.[8] He was raised by his single mother and attended many schools in Brooklyn. When he was 10 years old, his mother married John Bukalo and they moved to Little Falls, New Jersey,[9] where he attended Passaic Valley Regional High School.[10] When Blaine was 17 years old, he moved to Manhattan, New York.[11]

Stunts and specials
Street Magic and Magic Man
On May 19, 1997, Blaine's first television special, David Blaine: Street Magic aired on ABC.[12] "It really, really does break new ground," said Penn Jillette of Penn and Teller.[13] When asked about his performance style, Blaine explained, "I'd like to bring magic back to the place it used to be 100 years ago."'[14] Time commented, "His deceptively low-key, ultracool manner leaves spectators more amazed than if he'd razzle-dazzled."[15]

In Magic Man, Blaine is shown traveling across the country, entertaining unsuspecting pedestrians in Atlantic City, Compton, Dallas, the Mojave Desert, New York City, and San Francisco, recorded by a small crew with handheld cameras. Jon Racherbaumer commented: "Make no mistake about it, the focus of this show, boys and girls, is not Blaine. It is really about theatrical proxemics; about the show-within-a-show and the spontaneous, visceral reactions of people being astonished."[16] USA Today called Blaine the "hottest name in magic right now".[17]

Buried Alive
On April 5, 1999, Blaine was entombed in an underground plastic box underneath a 3-ton water-filled tank for seven days, across from Trump Place on 68th St. and Riverside Drive, as part of a stunt titled "Buried Alive". According to CNN, "Blaine's only communication to the outside world was by a hand buzzer, which could have alerted an around-the-clock emergency crew standing by." BBC News reported that the plastic coffin had six inches (150 millimetres) of headroom and two inches (51 millimetres) on each side. During the endurance stunt Blaine did not eat and drank only two to three US tablespoons (30 to 44 millilitres) of water a day.[18]

An estimated 75,000 people visited the site, including Marie Blood, Harry Houdini's niece, who said, "My uncle did some amazing things, but he could not have done this."[19] On the final day of the stunt, April 12, hundreds of news teams were stationed at the site for the coffin-opening. A team of construction workers removed a portion of the 75 cubic feet (2.1 m3) of gravel surrounding the 6-foot (1.8-metre) deep coffin before a crane lifted the water tank.[20] Blaine emerged and told the crowd, "I saw something very prophetic ... a vision of every race, every religion, every age group banding together, and that made all this worthwhile."[18] BBC News stated, "The 26-year-old magician has outdone his hero, Harry Houdini, who had planned a similar feat but died in 1926 before he could perform it."[21]

Frozen in Time
On November 27, 2000, Blaine performed a stunt called Frozen in Time, where he attempted and failed to stand in a large block of ice located in Times Square, New York City for 72 hours.[22] It was covered on a TV special. He was lightly dressed and appeared to be shivering even before the blocks of ice were placed around him. A tube supplied him with air and water, while his urine was removed with another tube. He was encased in the box of ice for 63 hours, 42 minutes, and 15 seconds before being removed with chain saws. The ice was transparent and resting on an elevated platform to show that he was actually inside the ice the entire time. He was removed from the ice and taken to a hospital due to fears he might be going into shock.[23] The New York Times reported, "The magician who emerged from the increasingly unstable ice box seemed a shadow of the confident, robust, shirtless fellow who entered two days before."[24] Blaine later said it took a month to fully recover and that he had no plans to attempt a stunt of this difficulty in the future.[25] In 2010, a magician from Israel named Hezi Dean broke Blaine's record when he was encased in a block of ice for 66 hours.[26]

Vertigo
On May 22, 2002, a crane lifted Blaine onto a 100 feet (30 metres) high and 22 inches (0.56 metres) wide pillar in Bryant Park, New York City. He was not harnessed to the pillar, although there were two retractable handles on either side of him to grasp in the event of harsh weather.[27] He remained on the pillar for 35 hours. He ended the feat by jumping down onto a landing platform made out of a 12 feet (3.7 metres) high pile of cardboard boxes and suffered a mild concussion.[28] He later said during his 2010 TED Talk that he had suffered from severe hallucinations in the final hours of this stunt, causing the buildings and structures around him to look like animal heads.[29][better source needed]

Mysterious Stranger
Mysterious Stranger: A Book of Magic by David Blaine was published on October 29, 2002.[30] The book is an autobiography and armchair treasure hunt with instructions on performing magic tricks. The treasure hunt was created by game designer Cliff Johnson and solved by Sherri Skanes on March 20, 2004.[31]

Above the Below
On September 5, 2003, Blaine began an endurance stunt in which he was sealed inside a transparent Plexiglas case. The case was suspended 30 feet (9.1 metres) in the air next to Potters Fields Park on the south bank of the River Thames in London, and measured 3 feet (0.9 metres) by 7 feet (2.1 metres) by 7 feet (2.1 metres). A webcam was installed inside the case so that viewers could observe his progress. The stunt lasted 44 days, during which Blaine drank 1.2 US gallons (4.5 litres) of water per day and did not eat.[32]

The stunt was the subject of public interest and media attention, The Times reported that "1,614 articles in the British press have made reference to the exploit."[33] Then US president George W. Bush referred to Blaine’s stunt in a speech at the Whitehall Palace in London, saying, "The last noted American to visit London stayed in a glass box dangling over the Thames. A few might have been happy to provide similar arrangements for me."[34] A number of spectators threw food and other items towards the box, including eggs, paint-filled balloons and golf balls, according to The Times.[33] A hamburger was flown up to the box by a remote-controlled helicopter as a taunt.[35] The Evening Standard reported that one man was arrested for attempting to cut the cable supplying water to Blaine's box.[36][37]

On September 25, BBC News reported that "if his endurance test is real rather than an elaborate illusion", then Blaine's claim of tasting pear drops indicates he is advancing through the first stage of starvation.[38] A medical doctor said that the taste is caused by ketones, which are produced when the body burns fat reserves.

The stunt ended on October 19, and Blaine emerged saying "I love you all!" and was subsequently hospitalized. The New England Journal of Medicine published a paper that documented his 44-day fast and stated his re-feeding was perhaps the most dangerous part of the stunt.[39] The study reported, "He lost 24.5 kg (54 lb)‍—‌25 percent of his original body weight‍—‌and his body mass index dropped from 29.0 to 21.6. His appearance and body-mass index after his fast would not by themselves have alerted us to the risks of refeeding. Despite cautious management, he had hypophosphatemia and fluid retention, important elements of the refeeding syndrome."[40]

Drowned Alive
On May 1, 2006, Blaine began his Drowned Alive stunt, which lasted seven days and involved a submersion in an 8 feet (2.4 m) diameter, water-filled sphere containing isotonic saline in front of the Lincoln Center in New York City. At the end of the stunt, Blaine attempted to free himself from handcuffs and chains after exiting the sphere.[41] After the stunt, Blaine entered into an agreement with researchers at Yale University to monitor him in order to study the human physiological reaction to prolonged submersion.[42]

Revolution
On November 21, 2006, Blaine began his Revolution stunt, where he was shackled to a rotating gyroscope without food or water, intending to escape within 16 hours. Blaine completed the stunt 52 hours later.[43]

Guinness World Records
Blaine appeared on the April 30, 2008 episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show to attempt to break the Guinness World Record for oxygen assisted static apnea, following his failure to break the then-current record of unassisted static apnea in his previous attempt Drowned Alive.[44] The previous record was set by Peter Colat of Switzerland on February 10, 2008.[45]

Before entering the 1,800-US-gallon (6.8-cubic-metre) water tank, Blaine spent 23 minutes inhaling pure oxygen.[46] Blaine held his breath for 17 minutes 4-1/2 seconds, surpassing Colat's previous mark of 16 minutes 32 seconds.[46] This record[47] stood for almost four and a half months, until surpassed by Tom Sietas on September 19, 2008.

Dive of Death

Donald Trump with Blaine announcing Blaine's next event in the atrium of the Trump Tower
On September 18, 2008, Donald Trump and Blaine announced his latest feat, The Upside Down Man, in which he planned to hang upside down without a safety net for 60 hours. On September 22, Blaine began his stunt Dive of Death, hanging over Wollman Rink in Central Park and interacting with fans by lowering himself upside down. He pulled himself up to drink fluid and restore normal circulation. Reportedly, Blaine risked blindness and other maladies in the stunt.[48] He was criticized when, only hours into the endurance challenge, he was seen standing on a waiting crane platform, not upside down as expected.[49] During the stunt, he came down once an hour for a medical check and to use the bathroom.[50]

What Is Magic?
In this 42-minute television special from 2010, Blaine performed an illusion of catching a .22 caliber bullet fired from a rifle into a small metal cup in his mouth. The special also features 2008 footage of Blaine in New Orleans performing for people affected by hurricane Katrina.

Electrified: One Million Volts Always On
On October 5, 2012, Blaine began performing a 72-hour endurance stunt called Electrified: One Million Volts Always On atop a 22-foot high pillar on Pier 54 in New York City, which was streamed live on YouTube.[51] During the stunt, Blaine stood on the pillar surrounded by seven Tesla coils producing an electric discharge of one million volts or more continuously. The coils were directed at Blaine for the entirety of the endurance stunt, during which he did not eat or sleep. He wore 34 pounds (15 kilograms) of gear, including a chainmail Faraday suit, designed to prevent electrical current from traveling through the body.[52] John Belcher, a physics professor from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, reportedly said, "He has a conducting suit, all the current is going through the suit, nothing through his body. There is no danger in this that I see."[52]

At night, Blaine shivered uncontrollably from the inclement weather. The New York Times published an article describing the science behind Blaine’s stunt.[53] Members of the public were able to control the pattern of electric current by accessing screens,[54] and musicians Pharrell Williams[55] and Andrew W.K.[56] performed solos on a keyboard which controlled the electric discharge.

The event concluded on October 8, 2012 at 8:44 pm. Blaine was able to walk away with assistance, and was transported to a hospital for a medical check.[57] Blaine donated two of the Tesla coils to the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City, New Jersey to be exhibited on permanent display.[58]

Real or Magic
Blaine starred in a 90-minute ABC television special, David Blaine: Real or Magic, on November 19, 2013.[59] The special, directed by Matthew Akers, featured Blaine performing magic for celebrities and public figures.[60] Real or Magic achieved a 2.5 rating in the 18–49 age bracket, and posted the best numbers in the 9:30–11:00 pm time slot for ABC's 2013 season.[61]

Beyond Magic
This 42-minute television special aired on November 15, 2016 on ABC. Like his previous special, Blaine is featured performing magic for various public figures. Also featured in this special is a magic trick where Blaine seemingly catches a .22 caliber bullet in a small metal cup in his mouth. Improving on the previous version of this trick featured in David Blaine: What Is Magic?, the bullet catch trick was performed live on stage in front of 20,000 people (in August 2015), and Blaine fired the gun himself.

The Magic Way
On April 1, 2020, Blaine starred in David Blaine: The Magic Way, airing on ABC.[62] The special consisted of various close-up magic acts, performing card tricks through video chat (due to the COVID-19 pandemic), performing in-person for many famous athletes, actors, and other celebrities as well as ordinary citizens. The special also includes performances by Blaine's daughter.

Private appearances
Blaine has performed for US presidents from Bill Clinton to George W. Bush to Barack Obama in the Oval Office, as well as a number of international leaders and prominent figures such as Henry Kissinger, Michael Bloomberg, Stephen Hawking, Michael Jackson, and Muhammad Ali.[citation needed]

Philanthropy and charity work
Blaine makes an annual visit to perform at children's hospitals and burn units in the US and elsewhere, including Spofford, Bridges, Horizon, and Crossroads. He has performed at Hole in the Wall Gang Camp, a summer camp for children diagnosed with serious illnesses, and led 100 children on a shopping spree funded by Target and selected by The Salvation Army.[citation needed]

In November 2006, Blaine performed a stunt in New York’s Times Square in support of The Salvation Army. After 52 hours Blaine escaped from the shackles that had held him in a spinning gyroscope suspended above the ground. Blaine said this stunt was particularly important to him since The Salvation Army had provided him with clothing while he was growing up.[63]

On January 15, 2010, Blaine returned to Times Square to perform "Magic for Haiti", a performance lasting 72 hours which raised nearly US$100,000 for Haiti earthquake relief.[64]

Blaine also donated two $1 Million Tesla Coils to Liberty Science Center after performing a massive electricity stunt.[65]

Personal life
Blaine has one half-brother, Michael Bukalo. Blaine and Alizée Guinochet have one daughter, Dessa, who was born on January 27, 2011.[66][67] At the time that Guinochet went into labor, there was a blizzard where they lived in New York. No cars were on the road, so Blaine had to hail a snowplow, which transported the couple to the hospital.[68]

Sexual assault allegations
In October 2017, following a report published in The Daily Beast in the wake of the Me Too movement, British news outlets reported that London's Metropolitan Police had asked Blaine to travel to the UK for interview under caution regarding allegations by former model Natasha Prince that Blaine had raped her at a house in Chelsea, West London, in 2004. Speaking through his lawyer, Blaine "vehemently denies" the allegations and confirmed that he would "fully co-operate" with a police inquiry. Detectives later declined to take further action after investigating her claim.[69][70]

In April 2019, Blaine was investigated by the New York City Police Department over allegations he sexually assaulted at least two women. One of the alleged victims claimed she was attacked by Blaine inside his Manhattan apartment in 1998.[71][70]


See also
Biography portal
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Hunger artist
"Super Best Friends"

References
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Magic special turns out to be both Archived November 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Daily News (New York), May 19, 1997
""What Will Magic Be Like in the Future?", Big Think. July 8, 2010, Accessed February 4, 2017.
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Finn, Holly. "Through the Plexiglass darkly: David Blaine exposes Britain's nasty underbelly", The Times, September 25, 2003, p. 20.
Behrens, David. "THE ARTr OF WONDER / From performing death-defying stunts to launching readers of his new book on an old-fashioned treasure hunt, David Blaine delights in surprises", Newsday, November 7, 2002. Accessed September 18, 2007. "Later, they moved to Little Falls, New Jersey, where he attended Passaic Valley High School in Little Falls."
"David Blaine: the Man, the Magician". Magic Directory. Archived from the original on May 4, 2009. Retrieved September 7, 2009.
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External links

David Blaine
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Data from Wikidata
Official website Edit this at Wikidata
David Blaine on IMDb
David Blaine at TED