Johnny Carson referred to Dean Gunnarson as "That Crazy Canadian" on "The Tonight Show" after learning the 19 year old escape artist barely eluded death on October 30, 1983. This year, Dean desired to commemorate Harry Houdini's death by escaping from a submerged coffin. Before a crowd of 10,000 on the banks of the icy Red River at 2:30 p.m., Dean greeted his audience sporting a wet suit, with a coffin, chains and handcuffs in tow. Days before the event, Dean joked that this would be his "farewell performance." Little did he realize how close he would come to fulfilling his off-the-cuff jest.

Dean
was handcuffed, chained and laid into the coffin for his ceremonial burial/escape.
The lid was nailed shut and the entire coffin wrapped in chains. The coffin,
lifted by a
crane, hovered above the Red River and was at last lowered into what might have
become Dean's watery grave. Dean inhaled a final deep breath of air as the
coffin hit
the surface of the freezing river. Unexpectedly, the coffin did not submerge
as anticipated. Three quarters of the coffin filled with water, forming an
air pocket around
Dean's head. Wasting precious air and time, Dean felt it prudent to take another
breath to ensure his success. As Dean emptied his lungs of all air, the crane
lurched and
freezing water completely flooded the coffin's interior. Dean sucked in as much
air as he could in those few seconds available to him before he was completely
submerged.
Immediately, Dean realized he would not have enough air to complete the escape. His belief in never panicking under any circumstances was tested at this moment. Fear would mean death. While Dean has no qualms about challenging the Grim Reaper, he had no desire to succumb to Death that day. Dean lifted his hands to his goggles and entered a meditative state, knowing that eventually he would be pulled up from the river. He slipped farther and farther away from a state of consciousness, and entered a void.
Three and a half minutes passed. There were those in the audience who now held their
breath in fear. They sensed something was amiss. The coffin was brought to the
surface. Half a minute ticked by as the chains were removed and lid pried off. Dean
was pulled from the coffin -- his skin was blue and not a breath was detected. He had
been without air for more than four minutes and was thusly asphyxiated. Paramedics
quickly administered oxygen as they loaded Dean onto an ambulance and whisked him
away to the Health Sciences Centre. Inside the ambulance, Dean regained a
semblance of consciousness before falling asleep.
While
the escape did not proceed as intended, Dean was very grateful for
being given the opportunity to learn. Aside from technique and cautionary
process,
Dean gained a
respect for the environment and a respect for life that he might not have otherwise
been gifted with had he succeeded. Dean discovered that in a life
threatening predicament,
he would not panic. Dean concluded he was given another chance at life and from
that moment forward, vowed to become the Greatest Escape Artist of
all time. After all, for
Dean, what should a coffin symbolize but an escape from death and a rebirth into
a new
life?
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