B&W IN COLOR

B&W IN COLOR Photo restoration and recolorization can breath new life into old black and white photographs.

Using a variety of graphic design tools and techniques, we can recolor and restore your photos of family, friends and more!

Happy Birthday to Bruce Lee! Born 83 years old today in San Francisco, California.小龙生日快乐 ❤️❤️❤️❤️🐉❤️❤️❤️❤️
28/11/2023

Happy Birthday to Bruce Lee! Born 83 years old today in San Francisco, California.
小龙生日快乐 ❤️❤️❤️❤️🐉❤️❤️❤️❤️

Using photos of existing statues of Caesar from his lifetime; carefully adding skin, tone, eyes and hair. Here's Gaius J...
15/03/2023

Using photos of existing statues of Caesar from his lifetime; carefully adding skin, tone, eyes and hair. Here's Gaius Julius Caesar at ages 15, and shortly before his death at 55.
"Cave idus Martias." Beware the Ides of March... " As Julius Caesar is warned by a fortune teller in William Shakespeares play. March 15th, 44 BC, that is to say 44 years before the birth of Christ, Gaius Julius Caesar whom is without a doubt the most powerful man in the world, disregards the protection of his Pretorian Guard and enters the halls of the Roman Senate. What happens to him, and the subsequent domino effect after changes the course of human history forever.

Before Monday and what will surely be a gratuitous celebration of BS, as an Italian American I would like to pay tribute...
09/10/2022

Before Monday and what will surely be a gratuitous celebration of BS, as an Italian American I would like to pay tribute to a the great war leader, Geranimo. Who while himself was never a chief, led many war parties into battle and came away alive. One of the most successful war leaders of the apache, usually leading between 30 and 50 man into battle.
Geronimo was born to the Bedonkohe band of the Apache near Turkey Creek, a tributary of the Gila River in the modern-day state of New Mexico, then part of Mexico, though the Apache disputed Mexico's claim. His grandfather, Mahko, had been chief of the Bedonkohe Apache. He had three brothers and four sisters.

This picture is taken shortly after surrendering to General Miles on September 4, 1886, at Skeleton Canyon, Arizona. Though he did not want to surrender, he was overwhelmed.

When Geronimo surrendered, he had in his possession a Wi******er Model 1876 lever-action rifle with a silver-washed barrel and receiver, bearing Serial Number 109450. It is on display at the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York. Additionally, he had a C**t Single Action Army revolver with a nickel finish and ivory stocks bearing Serial Number 89524, and a Sheffield Bowie knife with a dagger type blade and a stag handle made by George Wostenholm in an elaborate silver-studded holster and cartridge belt. The revolver, rig, and knife are on display at the Fort Sill museum.

His parents raised him according to Apache traditions. After the death of his father, his mother took him to live with the Tchihende, and he grew up with them. Geronimo married a woman named Alope, from the Nedni-Chiricahua band of Apache, when he was 17; they had three children. She was the first of nine wives.

"The Indians always tried to live peaceably with the white soldiers and settlers. One day during the time that the soldiers were stationed at Apache Pass I made a treaty with the post. This was done by shaking hands and promising to be brothers. Cochise and Mangus-Colorado did likewise. I do not know the name of the officer in command, but this was the first regiment that ever came to Apache Pass. This treaty was made about a year before we were attacked in a tent, as above related. In a few days after the attack at Apache Pass we organized in the mountains and returned to fight the soldiers."

Geronimo's Story of His Life, Coming of the White Men", 1909

Bruce Lee (Chinese: 李小龍; born Lee Jun-fan, 李振藩; November 27, 1940 – July 20, 1973)Passes away 52 years ago today. May hi...
20/07/2022

Bruce Lee (Chinese: 李小龍; born Lee Jun-fan, 李振藩; November 27, 1940 – July 20, 1973)
Passes away 52 years ago today. May his life and legacy continue to inspire countless millions to pursue philosophy, martial arts and acting.
Here are a few quotes from the young master:

“Not being tense but ready.
Not thinking but not dreaming.
Not being set but flexible.
Liberation from the uneasy sense of confinement.
It is being wholly and quietly alive, aware and alert, ready for whatever may come.”

“The doubters said,
"Man can not fly,"
The doers said,
"Maybe, but we'll try,"
And finally soared
In the morning glow
While non-believers
Watched from below.”

“Forget about winning and losing; forget about pride and pain. Let your opponent graze your skin and you smash into his flesh; let him smash into your flesh and you fracture his bones; let him fracture your bones and you take his life! Do not be concerned with escaping safely- lay your life before him!!”
― Bruce Lee

Happy Independence Day! On this day, we believe it's important to remember the very first man who gave his life for Amer...
04/07/2022

Happy Independence Day!
On this day, we believe it's important to remember the very first man who gave his life for America.

Crispus Attucks, a slave who freed himself from bo***ge and was later shot by the British during The Boston Massacre, becoming the first person to die for America.

History:
On the evening of March 5, 1770, British troops fired into a crowd of angry American colonists in Boston who had taunted and violently harassed them. Five colonists were killed. The event, which became known as the Boston Massacre, helped fuel the outrage against British rule—and spurred on the American Revolution.

Among those killed by the British, the first victim was a middle-aged sailor and rope-maker of mixed African American and American Indian descent named Crispus Attucks, accounts suggest. Attucks has been celebrated not just as one of the first martyrs in what became the fight for American independence, but also as a symbol of African Americans’ struggle for freedom and equality.

Among those killed by the British, the first victim was a middle-aged sailor and rope-maker of mixed African American and American Indian descent named Crispus Attucks, accounts suggest. Attucks has been celebrated not just as one of the first martyrs in what became the fight for American independence, but also as a symbol of African Americans’ struggle for freedom and equality.

Despite Attucks’ fame, relatively little information about him has survived. Based upon various sources, including historians’ accounts, news coverage and the transcript from the 1770 murder trial of the British soldiers involved in the confrontation.

According to the New England Historical Society, Attucks is believed to have been born sometime around 1723 in the vicinity of Framingham, Massachusetts, possibly in Natick, a “praying Indian town” established to provide a safe haven where local natives who had been converted to Christianity could live without fear of being attacked by colonists.

His father was an enslaved African and his mother was a native woman who was a member of the Wampanoag tribe. She may have been descended from John Attucks, who was hanged for treason during King Philip’s War, a native rebellion against the English settlers, in 1675-1676. According to Frederic Kidder’s 1870 history of the massacre, Attucks’ family lived in an old cellar.

Attucks seems to have spent most of his early life enslaved by a man named William Browne in Framingham. But when he was 27, Attucks ran away. In a newspaper advertisement published in 1750, Browne announced the escape of a “Molatto fellow” named Crispus, and described him as 6'2" with short, curly hair. He was also apparently knock-kneed. Attucks was wearing a bearskin coat, buckskin breeches and a checked shirt when he fled. Browne offered a reward of 10 British pounds plus expenses for his capture and return. But Attucks was never apprehended. As Neil L. York details in his book The Boston Massacre: A History with Documents, Attucks initially was identified in coroners’ documents as “Michael Johnson,” and may possibly have used that alias to avoid detection.

After his escape, Attucks made his way to Boston, where according to the New England Historical Society, he became a sailor, one of the few trades open to a non-white person. (Around the time of the American Revolution, one-fifth of the 100,000 sailors employed on American ships were African American.) Attucks worked on whaling ships, and when he wasn’t at sea, he found work as a rope-maker. On the night that he died, Attucks had just returned from the Bahamas, and was on his way to North Carolina.

Attucks was about six inches taller than the average American man of the Revolutionary War era, and testimony at the trial of the British soldiers indicted for his death depicted him as having a robust physique. John Adams, the future U.S. president who acted as one of the soldiers’ defense attorneys, used Attucks’ musculature—and his mixed-race lineage—in an effort to justify the British troops’ fear of him. Adams described Attucks as “a stout mulatto fellow, whose very looks was enough to terrify any person,” according to the trial transcript.

As Douglas R. Egerton writes in his book Death Or Liberty: African Americans and Revolutionary America, Great Britain paid its soldiers so poorly that many of them found it necessary to take part-time jobs when they were off-duty. Competition from the influx of troops threatened to depress the wages of American workers such as Attucks. Additionally, as an experienced seaman, Attucks faced the danger of being seized by one of the British press gangs that Parliament authorized to forcibly draft sailors into the Royal Navy. His ire toward the British apparently was intense.

According to Egerton’s book, on the evening of the massacre, Attucks was drinking at a pub with other seamen at a local tavern when a British soldier wandered in and inquired about part-time employment. Attucks was among the patrons who cursed the soldier and harassed him until he fled the establishment.

“Nobody was talking about American independence in March 1770,” Egerton says. “And so while we know so little about Attucks, my guess is that as a mariner, he was far more concerned with basic economic survival than making any ideological gesture.”

He was a tough, fearless street fighter.
According to testimony at the soldiers’ trial, Attucks was at the front of the mob that went to confront the British soldiers. His brazen defiance took considerable courage, since he had escaped slavery, he faced the risk of being arrested and returned to servitude.

“The prudent thing to do for a man like Attucks was to back away from that confrontation, but he did not,” Egerton says. Instead, according to trial testimony, Attucks brandished two wood sticks, one of which he gave to a witness named Patrick Keaton. Another witness, an enslaved man named Andrew, described Attucks—“this stout man”—stepping into the fray and swinging his stick at Captain Thomas Preston, and then knocking away a soldier’s gun and hitting him in the face or head. According to Andrew, Attucks grabbed the solder’s bayonet in his other hand and then yelled for the crowed to “kill the dogs, knock them over,” just moments before the soldier regained control of his gun and shot him.

One of the musket balls that hit Attucks apparently didn’t do too much damage, but the other, which tore an inch-wide hole in his chest, inflicted lethal injuries, according to the transcript of the British soldiers’ trial. A contemporary newspaper account described the shot as “goring the right side of his lungs, and a great part of the liver most horribly.”

Though some accounts describe him as being killed instantly, he may have lingered for at least a short time after. A witness named Robert Goddard, whose testimony is included in Kidder’s book, said that he helped Attucks into a house. “After we got him in there, I saw him give one gasp,” Goddard recalled.

In death, Attucks was afforded honors that no person of color—particularly one who had escaped slavery—probably had ever received before in America. As Egerton notes, Samuel Adams organized a procession to transport Attucks’ casket to Boston’s Faneuil Hall, where Attucks lay in state for three days before the victims’ public funeral. According to historians William Bruce Wheeler and Lorri Glover, an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 people—more than half of Boston’s population—joined in the procession that carried the caskets of Attucks and the other victims to the graveyard.

According to Eric Hinderaker’s book "Boston’s Massacre", Attucks became a symbol in the 1840s for African American activists in the abolitionist movement, who promoted him as an example of a Black citizen and a patriot, and that image stuck. As civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote in 1964, Black schoolchildren “know that the first American to shed blood in the revolution that freed his country from British oppression was a Black seaman named Crispus Attucks.”

Today, schools and public parks are named after Attucks, and his face has appeared on a commemorative silver dollar, but first and foremost, he should be known as a the first man to die for a country that would later be named America.

Happy Independence Day!
And remember to respect each other, and to show love to those around you.
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

Happy Independence Day! On this day, we believe it's important to remember the very first man who gave his life for Amer...
04/07/2022

Happy Independence Day!
On this day, we believe it's important to remember the very first man who gave his life for America.

Crispus Attucks, a slave who freed himself from bo***ge and was later shot by the British during The Boston Massacre, becoming the first person to die for America.

History:
On the evening of March 5, 1770, British troops fired into a crowd of angry American colonists in Boston who had taunted and violently harassed them. Five colonists were killed. The event, which became known as the Boston Massacre, helped fuel the outrage against British rule—and spurred on the American Revolution.

Among those killed by the British, the first victim was a middle-aged sailor and rope-maker of mixed African American and American Indian descent named Crispus Attucks, accounts suggest. Attucks has been celebrated not just as one of the first martyrs in what became the fight for American independence, but also as a symbol of African Americans’ struggle for freedom and equality.

Among those killed by the British, the first victim was a middle-aged sailor and rope-maker of mixed African American and American Indian descent named Crispus Attucks, accounts suggest. Attucks has been celebrated not just as one of the first martyrs in what became the fight for American independence, but also as a symbol of African Americans’ struggle for freedom and equality.

Despite Attucks’ fame, relatively little information about him has survived. Based upon various sources, including historians’ accounts, news coverage and the transcript from the 1770 murder trial of the British soldiers involved in the confrontation.

According to the New England Historical Society, Attucks is believed to have been born sometime around 1723 in the vicinity of Framingham, Massachusetts, possibly in Natick, a “praying Indian town” established to provide a safe haven where local natives who had been converted to Christianity could live without fear of being attacked by colonists.

His father was an enslaved African and his mother was a native woman who was a member of the Wampanoag tribe. She may have been descended from John Attucks, who was hanged for treason during King Philip’s War, a native rebellion against the English settlers, in 1675-1676. According to Frederic Kidder’s 1870 history of the massacre, Attucks’ family lived in an old cellar.

Attucks seems to have spent most of his early life enslaved by a man named William Browne in Framingham. But when he was 27, Attucks ran away. In a newspaper advertisement published in 1750, Browne announced the escape of a “Molatto fellow” named Crispus, and described him as 6'2" with short, curly hair. He was also apparently knock-kneed. Attucks was wearing a bearskin coat, buckskin breeches and a checked shirt when he fled. Browne offered a reward of 10 British pounds plus expenses for his capture and return. But Attucks was never apprehended. As Neil L. York details in his book The Boston Massacre: A History with Documents, Attucks initially was identified in coroners’ documents as “Michael Johnson,” and may possibly have used that alias to avoid detection.

After his escape, Attucks made his way to Boston, where according to the New England Historical Society, he became a sailor, one of the few trades open to a non-white person. (Around the time of the American Revolution, one-fifth of the 100,000 sailors employed on American ships were African American.) Attucks worked on whaling ships, and when he wasn’t at sea, he found work as a rope-maker. On the night that he died, Attucks had just returned from the Bahamas, and was on his way to North Carolina.

Attucks was about six inches taller than the average American man of the Revolutionary War era, and testimony at the trial of the British soldiers indicted for his death depicted him as having a robust physique. John Adams, the future U.S. president who acted as one of the soldiers’ defense attorneys, used Attucks’ musculature—and his mixed-race lineage—in an effort to justify the British troops’ fear of him. Adams described Attucks as “a stout mulatto fellow, whose very looks was enough to terrify any person,” according to the trial transcript.

As Douglas R. Egerton writes in his book Death Or Liberty: African Americans and Revolutionary America, Great Britain paid its soldiers so poorly that many of them found it necessary to take part-time jobs when they were off-duty. Competition from the influx of troops threatened to depress the wages of American workers such as Attucks. Additionally, as an experienced seaman, Attucks faced the danger of being seized by one of the British press gangs that Parliament authorized to forcibly draft sailors into the Royal Navy. His ire toward the British apparently was intense.

According to Egerton’s book, on the evening of the massacre, Attucks was drinking at a pub with other seamen at a local tavern when a British soldier wandered in and inquired about part-time employment. Attucks was among the patrons who cursed the soldier and harassed him until he fled the establishment.

“Nobody was talking about American independence in March 1770,” Egerton says. “And so while we know so little about Attucks, my guess is that as a mariner, he was far more concerned with basic economic survival than making any ideological gesture.”

He was a tough, fearless street fighter.
According to testimony at the soldiers’ trial, Attucks was at the front of the mob that went to confront the British soldiers. His brazen defiance took considerable courage, since he had escaped slavery, he faced the risk of being arrested and returned to servitude.

“The prudent thing to do for a man like Attucks was to back away from that confrontation, but he did not,” Egerton says. Instead, according to trial testimony, Attucks brandished two wood sticks, one of which he gave to a witness named Patrick Keaton. Another witness, an enslaved man named Andrew, described Attucks—“this stout man”—stepping into the fray and swinging his stick at Captain Thomas Preston, and then knocking away a soldier’s gun and hitting him in the face or head. According to Andrew, Attucks grabbed the solder’s bayonet in his other hand and then yelled for the crowed to “kill the dogs, knock them over,” just moments before the soldier regained control of his gun and shot him.

One of the musket balls that hit Attucks apparently didn’t do too much damage, but the other, which tore an inch-wide hole in his chest, inflicted lethal injuries, according to the transcript of the British soldiers’ trial. A contemporary newspaper account described the shot as “goring the right side of his lungs, and a great part of the liver most horribly.”

Though some accounts describe him as being killed instantly, he may have lingered for at least a short time after. A witness named Robert Goddard, whose testimony is included in Kidder’s book, said that he helped Attucks into a house. “After we got him in there, I saw him give one gasp,” Goddard recalled.

In death, Attucks was afforded honors that no person of color—particularly one who had escaped slavery—probably had ever received before in America. As Egerton notes, Samuel Adams organized a procession to transport Attucks’ casket to Boston’s Faneuil Hall, where Attucks lay in state for three days before the victims’ public funeral. According to historians William Bruce Wheeler and Lorri Glover, an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 people—more than half of Boston’s population—joined in the procession that carried the caskets of Attucks and the other victims to the graveyard.

According to Eric Hinderaker’s book "Boston’s Massacre", Attucks became a symbol in the 1840s for African American activists in the abolitionist movement, who promoted him as an example of a Black citizen and a patriot, and that image stuck. As civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote in 1964, Black schoolchildren “know that the first American to shed blood in the revolution that freed his country from British oppression was a Black seaman named Crispus Attucks.”

Today, schools and public parks are named after Attucks, and his face has appeared on a commemorative silver dollar, but first and foremost, he should be known as a the first man to die for a country that would later be named America.

Happy Independence Day!
And remember to respect each other, regardless of your heritage,
and to show love to those around you. Freedom should become shared.
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

(Editors Note: In the original photo, Crispus Attucks was featured a smiling, and while I respect the work done in the original portrait, I simply do not believe that he would have smiled whilst being shot to death. In the time it's taken to make this, I altered his expression to a "angry, yet resolved" because I believe it better expresses the nature of rebellion in the face of adversity). I am also African and Native American, and have lived in Boston for a great many years.
Happy Independence Day.

Augustus Caesar (Princeps Emporator di Roma).The first Emperor of Rome. I took a bust of Augustus and slowly brought it ...
22/01/2022

Augustus Caesar (Princeps Emporator di Roma).
The first Emperor of Rome.
I took a bust of Augustus and slowly brought it to life.
Feel free to zoom in on the finished work for greater detail.
Ancient Rome is one of my favorite subjects and while many people associate the name "Caesar" with Gauis Julius Caesar, who was an uncle to Octavian (later "Augustus") and himself a fascinating figure, it was Augustus who brought the first long peace to the Roman empire. His reign began at age 19 and lasted until his death at 78. In the 49 years he ruled, Rome was at the greatest height of power in its long history. Augustus died in Greece, shortly before his birthday. He was quite festive and celebrating in true Roman aristocrat style, speaking Greek instead of Roman and forcing his Roman friends to dress in the Greek fashion, and his Greek friends to dress as Romans. His last words were spoken on his death bed and quite poetic: knowing of his fate, and that he'd been a better politician than a General, he was surrounded by friends and said "Acta est fabula, plaudite."
"The drama has been acted out, applaud."

-(Suetonius, Divus Augustus [Life of Augustus], 99)

This usually translates as "The play is over, applaud" as well as:
"Have I played the part well? Then applaud as I exit."
Though many scholars interpret these words as:
"Now that I have played my part, all clap your hands..."

Augustus was referring to the regal authority he had put on as emperor. However, those words originated from a theatrical tag in a Greek-language comedy, so it may not be historically reliable.

However, the public record of this final words were:

"Marmoream se relinquere, quam latericiam accepisset."
"Of marble, he should leave, which he had received the brick-kiln."
(Suetonius, Div. Aug., 28)

This is usually translated as:
"Behold, I found Rome a city of bricks and left it a city of marble..."

Betty White! May she stay as restless and wonderful in the afterworld as she was here.Betty Marion White was born in Oak...
31/12/2021

Betty White!
May she stay as restless and wonderful in the afterworld as she was here.

Betty Marion White was born in Oak Park, Illinois, on January 17, 1922. She has stated that Betty is her legal name and not a shortened version of Elizabeth. She is the only child of Christine Tess (née Cachikis; 1899–1985), a homemaker, and Horace Logan White (1899–1963), a lighting company executive. Her paternal grandfather was Danish and her maternal grandfather was Greek, with her other roots being English and Welsh (both of her grandmothers were Canadian).

White's family moved to Alhambra, California, and later to Los Angeles, during the Great Depression. To make extra money, her father would build radios and sell them wherever he could. Since it was the height of the Depression, and hardly anyone had a sizable income, he would trade the radios in exchange for other goods, including dogs on some occasions.

She attended Horace Mann School Beverly Hills and Beverly Hills High School, famously used as a filming location for popular titles such as Clueless and It's a Wonderful Life, where she was a member of the 1939 graduating class. Her interest in wildlife was sparked by family vacations to the High Sierras. She aspired to become a forest ranger, but was unable to accomplish this dream because women were not allowed to serve as rangers. Instead, White pursued an interest in writing. She wrote and played the lead in a graduation play at Horace Mann School and discovered her interest in performing. Inspired by her idols, Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy, she decided to pursue a career as an actress.

With a career spanning 79 years, Betty has charmed her way into the hearts of millions of fans across the world. At the tender age of 98 years, she still makes us laugh to this day!

Here she is pictured in 1940 and the late 1950's

Rest in eternal love and peace!

Color and restoration by B&W IN COLOR.

Three iterations of William Shakespeares three most well-known portraits.I took the originals and used digital programs ...
17/12/2021

Three iterations of William Shakespeares three most well-known portraits.
I took the originals and used digital programs such as Adobe photoshop, Light Room and various other tools to bring life to these 500 year portraits of the world's most famous bard. If you click on each one to enlarge them, you can see much more vivid details in the skin, hair and eyes, which I carefully colored and shaded digitally.
The first is The Cobbe Portrait (1610) followed by The Droeshout Portrait, also known as The Droeshout engraving, and finally The Chandos Portrait, which is Shakespeares most well-known portrait. Please do feel free to let me know what you think in the comments.

"December 7, 1941 a date which will live in infamy... "Following Hawaiian tradition, sailors honor men killed during the...
08/12/2021

"December 7, 1941 a date which will live in infamy... "
Following Hawaiian tradition, sailors honor men killed during the December 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Naval Air Station Kaneohe, Oahu. The casualties had been buried on December 8. This ceremony took place sometime during the following months.
While it has been many decades since the tragic events which occurred that morning,
it is important that we remember it, so we too may honor those who gave risked and their lives in service, and that it may never happen again.

Harry Houdini, who died on Halloween night, 1926.Fascinated with magic from a young age, Harry Houdini began performing ...
31/10/2021

Harry Houdini, who died on Halloween night, 1926.

Fascinated with magic from a young age, Harry Houdini began performing and drew attention for his daring feats of escape. In 1893, he married Wilhelmina Rahner, who became his onstage partner as well. Houdini continued performing escape acts until his death, on October 31, 1926, in Detroit, Michigan.

Houdini was born Erich Weisz on March 24, 1874, in Budapest, Hungary. One of seven children born to a Jewish rabbi and his wife, Weisz moved with his family as a child to Appleton, Wisconsin, where he later claimed he was born. When he was 13, Weisz moved with his father to New York City, taking on odd jobs and living in a boarding house before the rest of the family joined them. It was there that he became interested in trapeze arts.

In 1894, Weisz launched his career as a professional magician and renamed himself Harry Houdini, the first name being a derivative of his childhood nickname, "Ehrie," and the last an homage to the great French magician Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin. (Although he later wrote The Unmasking of Robert-Houdin, a study that set out to debunk Houdin’s skill.) Though his magic met with little success, he soon drew attention for his feats of escape using handcuffs. In 1893, he married fellow performer Wilhelmina Beatrice Rahner, who would serve as Houdini's lifelong stage assistant under the name Beatrice "Bess" Houdini.

In 1899, Houdini's act caught the attention of Martin Beck, an entertainment manager who soon got him booked at some of the best vaudeville venues in the country, followed by a tour of Europe. Houdini's feats would involve the local police, who would strip search him, place him in shackles and lock him in their jails. The show was a huge sensation, and he soon became the highest-paid performer in American vaudeville.

Houdini continued his act in the United States in the early 1900s, constantly upping the ante from handcuffs and straightjackets to locked, water-filled tanks and nailed packing crates. He was able to escape because of both his uncanny strength and his equally uncanny ability to pick locks. In 1912, his act reached its pinnacle, the Chinese Water Torture Cell, which would be the hallmark of his career. In it, Houdini was suspended by his feet and lowered upside-down in a locked glass cabinet filled with water, requiring him to hold his breath for more than three minutes to escape. The performance was so daring and such a crowd-pleaser that it remained in his act until his death in 1926.

Houdini's wealth allowed him to indulge in other passions, such as aviation and film. He purchased his first plane in 1909 and set out to become the first person to man a controlled power flight over Australia in 1910. While he did it after a few failed attempts, it later was revealed that Houdini was likely beaten to the punch by just a few months by a Capt. Colin Defries, who made a short flight in December 1909.

Houdini also launched a movie career, releasing his first film in 1901, Merveilleux Exploits du Célébre Houdini Paris, which documented his escapes. He starred in several subsequent films, including The Master Mystery, The Grim Game and Terror Island. In New York, he started his own production company, Houdini Picture Corporation, and a film lab called The Film Development Corporation, but neither was a success. In 1923, Houdini became president of Martinka & Co., America's oldest magic company.

Houdini's publishing career didn't end with his literary takedown of Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin, either, as he later wrote Miracle Mongers and Their Methods (1920) and A Magician Among the Spirits (1924).

As president of the Society of American Magicians, Houdini was a vigorous campaigner against fraudulent psychic mediums. Most notably, he debunked renowned medium Mina Crandon, better known as Margery. This act turned him against former friend Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who believed deeply in spiritualism and Margery's sight. Despite his activism against spiritual charlatanism, Houdini and his wife did in fact experiment with otherworldly spiritualism when they decided that the first of them to die would try to communicate from beyond the grave with the survivor. Before her 1943 death, Bess Houdini declared the experiment a failure.

Harry Houdini died of peritonitis, secondary to a ruptured appendix, at 1:26 p.m. on October 31, 1926, in Room 401 at Detroit's Grace Hospital, aged 52. In his final days, he believed that he would recover, but his last words before dying were reportedly, "I'm tired of fighting... I do not want to fight anymore..."[30]

Witnesses to an incident at Houdini's dressing room in the Princess Theatre in Montreal speculated that Houdini's death was caused by Jocelyn Gordon Whitehead (November 25, 1895 – July 5, 1954), who repeatedly struck Houdini's abdomen.

The accounts of the witnesses, students named Jacques Price and Sam Smilovitz (sometimes called Jack Price and Sam Smiley), generally corroborated one another. Price said that Whitehead asked Houdini "if he believed in the miracles of the Bible" and "whether it was true that punches in the stomach did not hurt him". Houdini offered a casual reply that his stomach could endure a lot. Whitehead then delivered "some very hammer-like blows below the belt". Houdini was reclining on a couch at the time, having broken his ankle while performing several days earlier. Price said that Houdini winced at each blow and stopped Whitehead suddenly in the midst of a punch, gesturing that he had had enough, and adding that he had had no opportunity to prepare himself against the blows, as he did not expect Whitehead to strike him so suddenly and forcefully. Had his ankle not been broken, he would have risen from the couch into a better position to brace himself.

Throughout the evening, Houdini performed in great pain. He was unable to sleep and remained in constant pain for the next two days, but did not seek medical help. When he finally saw a doctor, he was found to have a fever of 102 °F (39 °C) and acute appendicitis, and was advised to have immediate surgery. He ignored the advice and decided to go on with the show. When Houdini arrived at the Garrick Theater in Detroit, Michigan, on October 24, 1926, for what would be his last performance, he had a fever of 104 °F (40 °C). Despite the diagnosis, Houdini took the stage. He was reported to have passed out during the show, but was revived and continued. Afterwards, he was hospitalized at Detroit's Grace Hospital.]

It is unclear whether the dressing room incident caused Houdini's eventual death, as the relationship between blunt trauma and appendicitis is uncertain. One theory suggests that Houdini was unaware that he was suffering from appendicitis, and might have been aware had he not received blows to the abdomen.

After taking statements from Price and Smilovitz, Houdini's insurance company concluded that the death was due to the dressing-room incident and paid double indemnity.

To this day, Houdini remains the most famous magician in history and his name is synonymous with escape artistry and magic.

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