Indian magician feared drowned in Houdini-like river stunt

Divers search river for Chanchal Lahiri as he fails to surface in escapology stunt

Indian stuntman Chanchal Lahiri, known by his stage name Jadugar Mandrake, is prepared for being lowered into the Ganges river, while tied up with steel chains and ropes, in Kolkata. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images
Indian stuntman Chanchal Lahiri, known by his stage name Jadugar Mandrake, is prepared for being lowered into the Ganges river, while tied up with steel chains and ropes, in Kolkata. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images

Indian divers in Kolkata are searching for the body of a magician who is feared to have drowned when a Houdini-like stunt in a river went wrong.

Chanchal Lahiri, 42, known by his stage name of Mandrake, went missing on Sunday after a ferry took him towards the broadest part of the River Hooghly in Kolkata at around noon. There, he was lowered by crane into the muddy waters with chains and ropes. Mr Lahiri was inside a small, padlocked cage. His arms and legs were apparently tied and he was blindfolded.

“If I can open it up then it will be magic, but if I can’t it will be tragic,” he told the crowd.

His family and onlookers waited on the boat for him to surface. Other spectators watched from the shore, expecting a spectacle of the kind made famous by the legendary American escape artist Harry Houdini, but he failed to reappear.

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Police say there were no security arrangements in place in case the stunt failed.

Sumit Kharbanda, president of the Indian Brotherhood of Magicians in New Delhi, said that Lahiri had performed the same stunt successfully at least a dozen times.

He was reportedly almost attacked by a mob in 2013 when he performed the same stunt and spectators believed he had cheated.

“He used to practise in swimming pools and rivers,” said Mr Kharbanda. “All magic has to be perfect and it takes a lot of practice but even with practice, things can go wrong. This was a very dangerous performance. I don’t know if it was a breathing issue or just not being able to undo the locks.” –Guardian News and Media