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Magician Aaron Radatz has his hands handcuffed behind his back as his assistants wrap him with chains and locks before placing him into the box behind him and lowered into the water Saturday at Wild Adventures.


Fireworks reflect off the water at Wild Adventures Saturday night for a Fourth of July celebration.


Published July 05, 2009 12:39 am -

Death-Defying Fourth of July
Wild Adventures celebration includes magician's escape act

By Johnna Pinholster

VALDOSTA — Death-defying feats and mile high fireworks entertained guests at Wild Adventures Saturday.

The All–American Weekend event, co-hosted by The Valdosta Daily Times, brought thousands out to the park.

Magician Aaron Radatz provided the thrills on Saturday by attempting to escape from a wooden box submerged underwater before the fireworks in a performance called “Freedom: An Underwater Escape.”

A large crowd gathered as Radatz, a Las Vegas entertainer, recreated the underwater escape first made famous by Harry Houdini more than 80 years ago.

Standing on a platform by the park’s lake, Radatz, dressed in a wet-suit, began the performance by being handcuffed.

With his hands securely behind his back, Radatz’s assistants locked a chain around his neck and then wrapped it around his arms and body.

Radatz said he does not perform this trick often because of its difficulty.

The wooden box Radatz was placed in has been on display at the park for two weeks, allowing people to check out its soundness and write on it.

As screams from adjacent roller coasters echoed across the lake, Radatz was padlocked into the wooden box.

Once inside, the chain attached to Radatz was fed through holes in the box, wrapped around the box and attached to it.

Inside the box, Radatz only had a paper-clip to help him undo the locks and handcuffs.

The master of ceremonies for the event, Chris Hart, asked Radatz if he had any final thoughts before being placed into the lake.

“Do not try this at home,” was Radatz’s reply.

Radatz, Hart said, has been preparing for this performance for two weeks and in a rehearsal run on Saturday morning escaped in two minutes and 10 seconds.

With the box firmly locked, a crane lifted the box more than 20 feet in the air and then lowered it into the water.



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