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Robert Marion "Doc" Cunningham (1873–1951), was an American illusionist, stunt performer, and showman whose stage names included Zante, Cunning the Jail Breaker, Cunning the Handcuff King, Doc Cunning, The Mental Miracle Man, and Cunning the Supermind.

Robert "Bob" Cunningham, as Cunning The Jail Breaker

Early career and Australasian tour

Robert (Bob) Marion "Doc" Cunningham was born in Provo, Utah, on 12 April 1873. [1] He began public performances as a magician under the name Zante, perhaps mimicking the stage name of another prominent Utah-born illusionist, Oscar Eliason, who had achieved considerable popularity in the US and Australasia as Dante the Great. By late 1899, after touring Montana, Idaho and California, Cunningham was being compared to Eliason, who had recently been accidentally killed during a highly successful Australian tour. Cunningham was even performing the same “ bullet catch” trick which had become one of Eliason's trademark acts. [2] On his first tour beyond North America, Cunningham showed his respect for Eliason by visiting his grave and meeting his widow, Edmunda (born Virginia Edmunda Hammer), between performances in Sydney in April 1902. [3] In Australia, advertisements for Cunningham's show declared him to be “America's greatest and most popular magician”, assisted by a company of “clever American vaudeville artists”. [4] But Cunningham made an unfortunate decision to open his Australian tour in New South Wales, just as Oscar Eliason's younger brother, Frank, was making a tour of the same state as “Dante the Marvellous”. Days before Cunningham's tour began, one reviewer had labelled Frank Eliason as the “king of modern magic”, noting that he had been performing before large audiences. [5] After less than a month, Cunningham left for New Zealand, blaming “especially slack” show business conditions in Australia for disappointing ticket sales. [3] In New Zealand, Cunningham was again promoted as “America's greatest magician” in programs featuring a company of vaudeville performers. Though he was rarely top-billed, there he won acclaim as he focused on sleight-of-hand tricks, touring for most of the rest of 1902. [6] [7] [8] [9]

Escape stunts and competition with Houdini

Soon after returning to the US from his Australasian tour, Cunningham began almost a decade of making escape stunts the focus of his performances, styling himself Cunning the Jail Breaker or Cunning the Handcuff King. His interest in escape acts had reportedly been sparked as a boy by his parents’ friendship with the county sheriff in Provo. Prior to his botched execution in 1879, convicted murderer Wallace Wilkerson had made a hole in the wall of the Provo Jail, and though he hadn't escaped, it had left a lasting impression on young Cunningham when he'd been allowed to crawl through it. [10] Numerous times while on tour in the US in the early 1900s, he would urge local police to use their best handcuffs and other devices to secure him, then confound them by setting himself free. The resulting publicity helped boost ticket sales for Cunningham's stage act, in which he freed himself after having been shackled and handcuffed inside a locked steel cage, all the locks and other restraints having been carefully checked by audience members, often police officers. [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] By early 1905, some reports were referring to Cunningham as a rival to the famous Harry Houdini (1874-1926) [19] In one incident at Hurtig and Seamon's Music Hall in Harlem in May 1905, Houdini's elder brother, William Weiss, emerged from the audience and handed Cunningham a pair of handcuffs, challenging him to put them on and take them off within seven minutes. After struggling to open them, Cunningham declared them “fixed” and wouldn't return them. In an ensuing scuffle, Weiss was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct. [20] [21] One of Cunningham's managers, J. M. Howard, would later recall “a great deal of professional rivalry” between his client and Houdini. “If either used a new publicity stunt, the other would soon adopt it,” he stated. However, according to Howard, Cunningham did not have the diving and swimming skills to match Houdini's ability to free himself from under water while handcuffed and leg shackled. [22]For several months in 1907, beginning in New York, Cunningham toured in a melodrama called “From Sing Sing to Liberty” by Harry Clay Blaney. [23] [24] According to one report, Cunningham's handcuff work was made “the feature of the play”. [25] In 1908 he toured Mexico, still focusing on escape acts, but also performing sleight-of-hand tricks. [26]

Transition to mentalism and competition with Alexander

Poster of Robert "Bob" Cunningham as Dr Cunning the "world's greatest psychic"

While continuing to perform escape acts, and using the stage name Cunning, from 1909 Cunningham began a transition in emphasis in his shows towards mentalism. It appears that during the first stage of this transition, the probable source of many of his new ideas was Oscar Eliason's widow, Edmunda. Between 1909 and 1912, Cunningham's main on-stage assistant was identified only as “Mademoiselle Edmunda”, the same name Eliason's wife had used when she worked with him. His new assistant was described as the “psychic wonder of the world”. [27] New acts that soon comprised a large part of Cunningham's show would mirror those commonly performed either by Eliason or his widow, including in her own shows after his death. These included making his assistant's body rise horizontally in mid-air with no apparent means of support, and demonstrations of purported “mind reading” and other mental powers. [28] [29] After parting from “Mademoiselle Edmunda”, for a time Cunningham went back mainly to escape acts but by 1916, he had resumed the move towards mentalism, appearing on the same programs as one of the best-known mentalists of the era, Claude Alexander Conlin (1880-1954), who performed as Alexander the Man Who Knows. Cunningham delivered a separate act, producing “spirit pictures”. [30] [31] He then went into competition with Alexander on tours of the US and Canada, often using the same “Man Who Knows” catchline in his promotional advertising. [32] Like Alexander, a so-called “Simla Séance” became part of his program. [33] And like Alexander, he invited questions from the audience, then used purported superior mental powers to answer them. [34] For a time, Cunningham still presented sleight-of-hand tricks and illusions, along with Simla Seances, but by 1920 he no longer performed escape tricks. Calling himself the Mental Miracle Man, and the Man Who Knows, his advertisements suggested he may be able to communicate with “departed spirits” and “actually look into the future”. He also answered questions on “business, love and matrimonial tangles”. [35] [36] By 1922, he was promoting himself as Dr Cunning, with his whole show devoted to his supposed psychic powers. [37] This show continued until late 1923. [38]

As a circus showman

From 1924 to 1926, “Doc” Cunningham was employed by the Al. G. Barnes Circus, a major show which toured across the US for most of the non-winter months. Cunningham was manager of the circus’ side-show and annex, and an announcer under the big-top in the main show. [39] [40] Cunningham would later use his experience with Al. G. Barnes to secure other circus-related work. For example, in 1934 he was the announcer at a July 4 fireworks pageant and circus in Los Angeles. [41]

As a sexologist

After another spell in vaudeville programs in the late 1920s as a “mental marvel”, [42] Cunningham reinvented himself yet again in the early 1930s, with a combined stage and screen program in which he was promoted as a “noted” sexologist, psychologist, and mentalist. He toured across several US states, showing movies advertised as being of sex education content to over age 16 audiences strictly divided by gender with “trained nurses in attendance”. Before the screening, Cunningham would deliver a “lecture”, then audience members would be invited to “ask him anything” about love, courtship, marriage, divorce and even financial matters. [43] The first movie in this program, called “Delicate Secrets of Life”, was advertised as “the most daring and sensational moving picture ever made”. [43] It was said to take viewers behind to scenes of European hospitals and show “a bloodless Caesarian birth”. [44] Similar footage of a Caesarian birth was promised when Cunningham toured with “The Confession of a Lost Girl”, promoted as the “first all talking sex picture”. [45] Advertisements for “Sins of Love” promised that the lecture by “Professor Cunning” would be “augmented with beautiful living human specimens” on the stage. [46]

Late career

Cunningham's willingness for versatility in his career never abated. After stopping touring and settling in California in the mid-1930s, he ran a miniature dog and pony show at schools, community fairs and shopping centres. [47] At Christmas time he would work as a professional Santa Claus. [48] Friend and fellow magician, Frank Herman, who worked alongside him in 1939 in Robinson's department store in Los Angeles, reported that Cunningham convinced children he really was Santa by using information relayed via earphones hidden under his cap and wig from a “Princess” who had spoken to them as they signed in. [47] Nevertheless, Cunningham spent the majority of his career in the world of magic, and won wide respect among his contemporaries. “We know that all magicians will join in a devout wish for his recovery,” reported the magazine, Genii, in October, 1944, following reports that he had suffered a stroke. “Doc is one of magic's greatest characters.” [49] A few months later, the Los Angeles Society of Magicians staged a testimonial dinner for Cunningham attended by about 200 people, including some of the top US performers. [10]

Family

Cunningham married Alice “Allie” Eva Dunn in Provo on 21 Sept 1892. [50] At first she travelled with him on tour, [51] [52] but as the family grew this became impractical. She filed for divorce at the time he was touring with “Mademoiselle Edmunda” on the grounds of “abandonment of minor children”. However, the matter was settled out of court and the divorce did not proceed. [53] When Cunningham died in Los Angeles in March 1951, at the age of 71, he was survived by his wife, two sons, two daughters, 12 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren [54]

References

  1. ^ "World War I Draft Registration Card for Bob Marion Cunningham". Retrieved 18 August 2020. (Subscription required.)
  2. ^ Deseret Evening News, 23 December 1899, page 35
  3. ^ a b Salt Lake Herald Republican, 2 November 1902, page 24
  4. ^ The Maitland Daily Mercury, 25 April 1902, page 1
  5. ^ The Temora Star, 5 April 1902, page 2
  6. ^ The New Zealand Herald, 20 May 1902, page 6
  7. ^ Evening Post, 27 May 1902, page 4
  8. ^ Manawatu Standard, 20 August 1902, page 2
  9. ^ Wairapa Daily Times, 10 September, 1902 page 3
  10. ^ a b Genii, the Conjurers’ Magazine, April 1945, page 294
  11. ^ The Butte Daily Post, 25 June 1904, page 11
  12. ^ The Ogden Standard, 4 July 1904, page 5
  13. ^ Salt Lake Telegram, 14 July 1904, page 3
  14. ^ The Evening Mail (California), 7 September, 1904 page 8
  15. ^ The Morning Astorian, 30 September 1904, page 8
  16. ^ Omaha Daily Bee, 12 February 1905, page 4
  17. ^ The Houston Post, 15 Nov 1906, page 11
  18. ^ The Kansas City Star, 21 Jan 1907, page 8
  19. ^ Omaha Daily Bee, 11 Feb 1905, page 7
  20. ^ The Sun (New York) 16 May, 1905, page 4
  21. ^ The New York Times, 16 May 1905, page 6
  22. ^ The Herald (Indiana), 3 April 1931, page 6
  23. ^ Times Union (Brooklyn), 27 July 1907, page 8
  24. ^ The News Journal (Delaware), 19 September 1907, page 6
  25. ^ The Crest Magician magazine, Vol. 1, November 1907 page 69
  26. ^ The Mexican Herald, 24 June 1908, page 2
  27. ^ The Post-Crescent, 19 August, 1909 page 3
  28. ^ The Galveston Daily News, 16 September, 1910, page 5
  29. ^ Brisbane Courier, 26 December 1900, page 6
  30. ^ The Bakersfield Californian, 18 February, 1916, page 3
  31. ^ Oakland Tribune, 8 March 1916, page 5
  32. ^ Calgary Herald 24 September, 1917, page 12
  33. ^ The Leader Post, 11 July 1918, page 9
  34. ^ Calgary Herald, 27 July 1918 page 8
  35. ^ The Wellington Daily News (Kansas), 4 November 1920, page 8
  36. ^ The Wichita Beacon (Kansas), 13 November 1920 page 8
  37. ^ Lincoln Journal Star, 10 November 1922, page 4
  38. ^ The Long Beach Telegram, 28 August, 1923, page 8
  39. ^ Season Route Books for Al. G. Barnes Circus 1924-6, Digital Library, Illinois State University
  40. ^ Bandwagon, Vol. 9, No. 6 (Nov-Dec), 1965
  41. ^ Los Angeles Times, 17 June 1934, page 15
  42. ^ The Capital Journal (Salem, Oregon), May 14, 1927, page 7
  43. ^ a b Pensacola News Journal, 20 March 1932, page 20
  44. ^ The Monroe News-Star, 11 April 1932, page 8
  45. ^ San Francisco Examiner, 27 January 1933, page 12
  46. ^ The Spokesman-Review, 26 March 1933, page 24
  47. ^ a b Circus Report 19 November 1979, Vol 8 No 47, pp 16-17
  48. ^ The Los Angeles Times, 28 Dec 1935, page 19
  49. ^ Genii, the Conjurers’ Magazine, October 1944
  50. ^ Utah Marriages, Select Marriage Records, 1887-1914, Utah State Archives and Records Service
  51. ^ Salt Lake Telegram, 30 July 1904, page 2
  52. ^ Deseret News, 21 Sept 1905, page 9
  53. ^ The Ogden Standard, 2 Aug 1911, page 8
  54. ^ Salt Lake Telegram, 31 March 1951, page 8