To remove a straitjacket with both back and crotch-straps, it is not necessary to be able to
dislocate one's shoulders in order to gain the slack necessary to pull an arm out of the sleeves. The necessity of this ability was fictitiously created by
Harry Houdini and his brother
Hardeen to try to lessen the amount of the competition. Houdini later in his career published his technical handling of the escape in a newspaper. Escape artists around the world commonly continue this rumor to "spice up" the escape. Without dislocating the shoulder, it is sometimes possible to get more room by pulling at the inside of the arms as they are being strapped or by keeping an elbow held outward to gain slack in the sleeves when the arm is relaxed. Another way to gain slack is to take and hold a deep breath while the jacket is being done up. It is possible for one person to put a willing volunteer into a straitjacket, but it generally takes at least two people to straitjacket a struggling person. For a jacket without a front strap, the most common way to escape is to hoist the arms over the head before undoing the crotch strap and at last the strap at the back of the neck. This allows the jacket to simply be peeled off upward over the head. The straitjacket escape was popularized by Houdini, who "discovered" it. Houdini first did it behind a curtain, forcing the audience to listen to thumps while watching a billowing curtain for many minutes. He found the trick went over better when the audience could see his struggles. In a few of his later and more popular acts, he performed the straitjacket escape while hung upside down from a crane, and also did the same when placed in a sealed milk can which was filled. Houdini's (and many other
illusionists) acts showed the straitjacket in action in a variety of ways.
Notable escapes Straitjacket escape is one of the most sensational and famous magicians' tricks; it was a staple in illusionist
Harry Houdini's act. Thus, new world records for straitjacket escape are constantly being attempted, in various ways and with various degrees of difficulty added. Some of the more newsworthy attempts and successes include: • On the 1980s weekly television show ''
Dick Clark's Live Wednesday'',
Steve "Mr. Escape" Baker successfully escaped from two straitjackets while hanging upside down over the stage. • On
Mindfreak,
Criss Angel set a world record when he escaped from two straitjackets at once while hanging from a crane over
Bourbon Street in New Orleans. • On October 8, 2007, American Cliff Gerstman escaped from a straitjacket while floating in zero gravity. The escape was performed in an airplane flown by
Zero G Inc. and sponsored by
Northrop Grumman. This was the world's first zero gravity straitjacket escape and took 40 seconds to complete. • On September 4, 2010, on the Fox News channel show
Fox & Friends, Alexanderia the Great set a record for an extreme straitjacket escape. She escaped a regulation straitjacket secured with 50 feet of 1/4 inch chain and 10 padlocks in 2:37. • On July 23, 2013, Alexanderia the Great performed an underwater straitjacket escape in a small bullet-proof clear tank in full view for ''
America's Got Talent'', live on stage at
Radio City Music Hall. • The official "Fastest Escape from a Regulated Posey Straitjacket" is 2.84 seconds, set by Danilo Audiello at the Studio Fleming Medicina Generale,
Foggia, Italy, on 11 August 2014. ==References==