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This process was then reversed, and the assistant released unharmed. Goldin sawed through the middle of the box, inserting metal sheets to cover the cut ends, and then pushed the two halves a little way apart. Goldin's assistant lay in a box from which her feet, head and hands protruded. Later in 1921, Horace Goldin, a magician working in the United States, presented the first version which might look familiar to modern audiences. In the public performance the role of victim was taken by principal assistant, Betty Barker. According to Jim Steinmeyer the woman who participated in the December 1920 demonstration was Jan Glenrose, who was Selbit's main assistant at that time and who was also the partner of magician Fred Culpitt.
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The question of who was the first woman to be sawn in half has received much less publicity than the question of which magician first presented the illusion. The impression that she could not evade the saw was created by the confined space in the box and by ropes tied to her hands, feet, and neck, which were held throughout the illusion by spectators from the audience.
![lady houdini lady houdini](https://i0.wp.com/brightsidenewspapernews.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/BSF2018-Lady-Houdini.jpg)
Selbit's assistant was locked inside a closed wooden crate and could not be seen. His trick, which he billed as "Sawing Through A Woman", was significantly different from what a modern audience would expect. George's Hall, London, to try to persuade one of them to book his new act for public shows. In fact Selbit had previously performed the illusion in December 1920 before a select audience of promoters and theatrical agents at the St. Selbit on January 17th, 1921, at the Finsbury Park Empire theatre in London. It is generally accepted that the first public performance of a sawing illusion was achieved by British magician P.T. Wherever the idea originated, until the 1920s it remained just that, an idea for an effect rather than a practical application of a method. However this claim has not been substantiated. It was suggested during a court case in 1922 that the trick can be traced back to ancient Egypt. Modern magic inventor and historian Jim Steinmeyer has concluded that there was probably no real Torrini and the story was merely a way for Robert-Houdin to play with ideas. In his Memoirs, written in 1858, Robert-Houdin described a sawing illusion performed by a magician named Torrini. However it is more likely that the story is a fiction which has its roots in the writings of the famous French magician Jean Robert-Houdin. There remains a debate about the origin of sawing illusions, with some sources saying a magician named Torrini may have performed the first version in front of Pope Pius VII in 1809.