Having starved himself and been frozen in ice, United States magician David Blaine now plans to spend seven days submerged in a water-filled container in New York. The latest stunt by the renowned illusionist will seem him enter a 2.,m high acrylic sphere on May 1 and remain submerged for a week.
A mask and air line will keep him alive, while food will be provided in the form of liquid nutrition through a tube.
At the end of the seven days, Blaine (33) will remove his air supply and attempt to hold his breath longer than the current world record of eight minutes and 58 seconds, before finally climbing out of the human aquarium.
During the stunt, fans will be encouraged to touch the sphere and offer words of support, Blaine spokesperson Pat Smith told Agence France-Presse.
The magician will be hoping for a better public reaction than he received for his last major “performance” — a 44-day fast during which he was suspended above London’s River Thames in a glass box.
Detractors came up with increasingly inventive ways to taunt or unsettle Blaine, such as using a remote-control model helicopter to dangle a cheeseburger in front of the starving magician. Others drove golf balls off Tower Bridge, threw eggs, used a home-made catapult to shoot paint bombs at the box, banged drums to keep him awake at night or merely shouted abuse.
Smith insisted there would be no similar scenes at New York’s Lincoln Centre.
“This is his home town. Anytime he’s done anything in New York, the reaction has been overwhelmingly positive,” Smith said. “New Yorkers are cool about this kind of thing.”
Previous stunts include being encased in ice for nearly 62 hours and spending 35 hours on a 30m-high pillar that was only 56cm wide. — AFP