The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults is an infamous two-hour live American television special that was broadcast one time only in syndication on April 21, 1986.
Hosted by TV personality Geraldo Rivera, the special centered on the opening of a secret vault in the Lexington Hotel once owned by noted crime lord Al Capone, which turned out to be empty except for debris. The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults is available in its entirety on Geraldo's website.
Background
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Al Capone was born to Italian immigrant parents on January 17, 1899, in New York City. He moved to Chicago in 1919, and there he became a notable criminal figure and gangster. He played large parts in gambling, alcohol, and prostitution rackets. In 1925, after an assassination attempt on former head Johnny Torrio, Capone took control of the Chicago Outfit, of which he had served as the second in command. He was listed on the FBI's "Most Wanted" list, sold alcohol during the Prohibition era, planned the St. Valentine's Day massacre, and was eventually indicted and convicted of income tax evasion in 1931. In 1939, he was released from Alcatraz prison on humanitarian grounds, due to acutely advancing syphilis. He died on January 25, 1947 in his home in Palm Island, Florida from cardiac arrest after suffering a stroke a week after his 48th birthday.
Program
Capone had previously housed his headquarters at the nearby Metropole Hotel in Chicago, but in July 1928 moved to a suite at the Lexington Hotel, also in Chicago. Capone ran his various enterprises from this hotel until his arrest in 1931. A construction company in the 1980s planned a renovation of the Lexington Hotel and while surveying the building discovered a shooting range and a series of secret tunnels including one hidden behind Capone's medicine cabinet. These tunnels connected taverns and brothels to provide an elaborate potential escape route in case of a police raid. These discoveries led to further investigation of the hotel, notably by researcher Harold Rubin. Rumors said Capone had kept a very secret vault beneath the hotel to hold some of his wealth.
Geraldo Rivera had been fired from ABC in 1985 after criticizing the network for canceling a report on an alleged relationship between John F. Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe. He then hosted the special The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults which was broadcast live on April 21, 1986. The two-hour special (including commercials) was greatly hyped as potentially revealing great riches or dead bodies on live television. This included the presence of a medical examiner should bodies be found, and agents from the Internal Revenue Service to collect any of Capone's money that might be discovered.
When the vault was finally opened, the only things found inside were dirt and several empty bottles, including one Rivera claimed was for moonshine bathtub gin. After several attempts to dig further into the vault, Geraldo admitted defeat and voiced his disappointment to the viewers, apologizing as he thanked the excavation team for their efforts. Although it gathered criticism and became infamous for its disappointing ending, the program was the most-watched syndicated television special that year with an estimated audience of 30 million. After the show, Rivera was quoted as saying "Seems like we struck out". However, in his 1991 autobiography Exposing Myself, he wrote, regarding the event, "My career was not over, I knew, but had just begun. And all because of a silly, high-concept stunt that failed to deliver on its titillating promise."
Geraldo said on the April 20, 2016 edition of the Fox News Channel program The Five that he went right across the street and got "tequila drunk" after the special aired, then went back to his hotel room and put the "Do Not Disturb" sign on the door.
Legacy and popular culture
The program has been parodied in several films and television shows:
- On May 3, 1986, Monkee Micky Dolenz served as a guest VJ on MTV, and announced in exaggerated fashion that a secret door had been discovered inside MTV that would be opened for the first time in ages, and that viewers would see the possible treasures inside whatever room the door led to. When the door was later "forced" open, it merely led out to the street.
- Lampooned in the Hill Street Blues series finale episode "It Ain't Over Till It's Over," originally aired on May 12, 1987.
- Parodied in the Bloom County comic strip dated October 11, 1987. Featuring Binkley's anxiety closet in place of the vault and with a more humorous ending.
- The special was parodied in the 1989 comedy film UHF, in a scene where George Newman ("Weird Al" Yankovic), hosting his own talk show, "unlocked the mysteries of Al Capone's glove compartment." After prying open the compartment in Capone's car, on live television, George examines the contents and announces to the audience, "A-ha... road maps!"
- The 1990 television special Disorder in the Court, commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Three Stooges' first film appearance, begins with a prologue in which the host, Alan Thicke, announces with great fanfare that they are about to open a secret vault in the basement of a Hollywood studio containing long-lost footage of the Stooges. His monologue is interrupted by a nearby security guard, who quietly informs him that the "vault" is neither lost nor a secret and is being opened with a key. When Thicke opens the door of the "vault," he hallucinates that the Stooges (Larry, Moe and Curly) are still alive as animate skeletons. Then he wakes up and the whole "vault" episode is shown to have been a dream sequence.
- In an episode of the animated TV series The Real Ghostbusters, Peter Venkman ropes the Ghostbusters into appearing on a much-hyped TV special called "Live from Al Capone's Tomb!" Opening the tomb leads to a confrontation with Capone's ghost, but since none of it is captured on camera, none of the viewers believe the Ghostbusters' story.
- In the 1993 episode "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" of The Simpsons, Homer Simpson writes an incomplete song about the television special with the lyrics, "There was nothing in Al Capone's vault/But it wasn't Geraldo's fault!"
- In the 1997 movie Titanic, Brock Lovett, played by Bill Paxton, tries to broadcast his finding of the "Heart of the Ocean" jewel live. When the safe is opened and the diamond necklace found to be missing, his colleague remarks, "The same thing happened to Geraldo, and his career never recovered."
- The special is referenced in the 2017 film Sharknado 5: Global Swarming, in which an inventor played by Rivera himself attempts to retrieve a secret weapon from a vault aboard his zeppelin, only to find the vault is empty.
See also
Eaten Alive, a 2014 Discovery Channel special that drew comparisons and similar criticism when host Paul Rosalie was not "eaten alive" by an anaconda as hinted at in promotional material.
Notes
External links
- The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults on IMDb
- Al Capone's Vault on TV Acres. Retrieved July 8, 2006.
- Geraldo Rivera on the Museum of Broadcast Communications by Susan Murray. Retrieved July 8, 2006.
- The Lexington Hotel on Prairie Ghosts in 2003 by Troy Taylor. Retrieved July 8, 2006.
- Official Website