Cannes Film Festival

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Reuters Showcase

Movie Review

Movie Review

Arjun - The Warrior Prince: Hit-and-miss.  Full Article | Related Story 

No Show

No Show

Elton John cancels Vegas dates due to infection.  Full Article 

Oprah's Empire

Oprah's Empire

Oprah expands online with Huffington Post.  Full Article 

New Low

New Low

'American Idol' finale gets record low TV audience.  Full Article 

Tip of the Day

Tip of the Day

Use social media in your job search.  Full Article 

MJ Retrieved

MJ Retrieved

Michael Jackson's lost concert footage.  Video 

Maxim Hot 100

Maxim Hot 100

The world's most beautiful women as chosen by Maxim readers.   Slideshow 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device  Full Coverage 

Magician Blaine survives his "Dive of Death"

Magician David Blaine greets fans as he hangs upside down during a stunt in New York September 24, 2008. Blaine's ''Dive of Death'' wasn't, after all -- the magician and showman ended up alive on Wednesday night following his 60-hour stunt of hanging upside down in Central Park. REUTERS/Joshua Lott

Magician David Blaine greets fans as he hangs upside down during a stunt in New York September 24, 2008. Blaine's ''Dive of Death'' wasn't, after all -- the magician and showman ended up alive on Wednesday night following his 60-hour stunt of hanging upside down in Central Park.

Credit: Reuters/Joshua Lott

NEW YORK | Thu Sep 25, 2008 9:20am IST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - David Blaine's "Dive of Death" wasn't, after all -- the magician and showman ended up alive on Wednesday night following his 60-hour stunt of hanging upside down in Central Park.

Blaine, 35, had dangled from a cable attached to a large scaffold structure built high over the park's Wollman Rink since Monday, except for regular breaks for water and medical checks during which he was upright for periods of a few to several minutes each.

The spectacle ended during a nationally telecast two-hour television special which was filled out with taped footage of Blaine performing and interacting with fans across the country, and several "do not try this at home"-type disclaimers.

But Blaine had one more illusion for his fans. After ending his suspension, he plummeted some 13.4 metres from the top of the scaffold, swinging briefly from an attached cable. He then ascended and seemingly disappeared into the night sky high above the park.

Blaine said the hanging stunt got easier after the initial hours as his body adjusted, and he was strong enough to sign autographs, take pictures and even do card tricks while he was suspended.

The stunt was only the latest in a series of Blaine's public antics in New York. In November 2000 he spent 61 hours inside a block of ice in Times Square, and two years ago he lived for a week underwater in an acrylic sphere in front of Lincoln Center. In 2002, he stood atop a 27 metre pillar erected behind the New York Public Library for 35 hours.

Blaine also lived for 44 days inside a transparent box suspended over the Thames River in London in fall 2003.

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.