Tiger attack leaves magician in hospital ( 2003-10-05 17:20) (Agencies)
Las Vegas - Roy Horn, one half of the illusionist team
Siegfried & Roy, was hospitalized in critical condition Saturday, a day
after one of his tigers mauled him during their nightly show, biting him in the
neck and dragging him off stage.
Siegfried (L) and
Roy posing with Pride, a white lion. Roy Horn, 59-years-old, was mauled
and critically injured by a white tiger while performing onstage at the
Mirage Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada. [AP/file]
Horn underwent surgery late Friday at University Medical Center after
suffering an injury to the left side of his neck.
He was on a ventilator late Saturday, heavily medicated but able to respond
to voices and touch, said MGM Mirage Resort CEO Bobby Baldwin.
"We are guarded, optimistic," Baldwin said. "We are pleased the news isn't
worse than it is."
Hospital officials would not provide any more information, but the mood was
somber among the host of Las Vegas notables who went to see the magician.
"I'm pretty much on a vigil," said Bernie Yuman, the duo's longtime manager.
Alan Feldman, an MGM Mirage spokesman, said Saturday that it will likely take
two or three days before the full extent of Horn's injuries is known.
Horn and longtime partner Siegfried Fischbacher have been a Las Vegas Strip
staple for years, performing their magic show to sold-out crowds at The Mirage
hotel-casino. The shows, with their signature white tigers and lions, are among
the best known and most expensive on the Strip.
"For more than four decades, I have had the great privilege of standing at
the side of this remarkable man, and I will continue to do so during this very
challenging time," Fischbacher said in a statement Saturday.
Halfway into Friday night's performance, Horn appeared alone on stage
with the tiger and told the crowd the animal was making its debut in the show —
a claim hotel officials said was part of the act.
The tiger, which weighs about 600 pounds, then lunged at Horn, who tried
to beat the animal off with a microphone.
"I knew he was in trouble right away. I was horrified," said Diane
Weightman, who was in the audience. "I wanted to jump on stage and help him. I
didn't know what to do."
Andy Cushman, also in the audience, said Horn "looked like a rag doll" as
the tiger dragged him off the stage.
Feldman said stage crew members used fire extinguishers to distract the
animal and free Roy.
After the attack, Fischbacher appeared on stage and told the 1,500
audience members the performance was canceled, Cushman said.
Feldman said late Saturday the show was "closed indefinitely." He said
267 show employees met at the Mirage hotel-casino, where hotel managers
encouraged them to find new jobs.
The tiger involved in the attack, a 7-year-old male named Montecore, was
quarantined at the hotel, officials said. Feldman said the animal had been used
in the show for several years.
Horn, who turned 59 on Friday, had never been injured during a show before.
"Not a scratch, not by an animal," Yuman said.
The illusionists signed a lifetime contract with The Mirage in 2001. The
German-born pair perform six shows a week, 44 weeks per year and have been
onstage in Las Vegas for more than 35 years.
Siegfried and Roy were at sea, working on an ocean liner, when they met in
1957. Siegfried performed the magic tricks, while Roy was his assistant. After
suggesting they try to make a cheetah disappear, Roy smuggled one of the animals
from a German zoo and used it as part of their act, according to the duo's
official Web site.
The pair traveled around Europe, performing for five years before they got
their break in a Monte Carlo casino. An agent in the audience, impressed by
their show, invited them to Las Vegas. Siegfried and Roy made their debut at the
Tropicana hotel-casino in 1967.