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A family friend of a teenager who died suddenly of
a heart condition is today emulating a David Blaine stunt in his memory.
Mark Pedley sealed himself inside a seven foot
Perspex box at Porthill Cricket Club at 10.30pm yesterday and plans to stay
in there until 10.30pm tonight, all to raise money for a fund set up in
memory of Nathan Butler.
The cricket-mad 16-year-old died of a condition
called Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy at his home in Hassam Parade, Wolstanton,
in February. His family, friends and his former team mates at Porthill
want to build a new stand at the cricket ground as a permanent memorial to
Nathan, and have embarked on a number of fund-raising endeavours to make the
dream a reality.
Mark, aged 44, of Hassam Parade, Wolstanton, said:
"One night we were having a drink at the club and I decided do the 'old
David Blaine.'
"I'm just going to have liquids while in the box,
no food. I'll bring in a few bottles of water and maybe we'll be able
to sneak in a few pints. I hope to raise about £1,500. I've got
some sponsorship from some local companies and there will be collection
buckets going around as well. Hopefully with it being on television
we'll get a good crowd.
"A couple of years ago I went to American and
brought back these quite expensive magic tricks, which I showed to everyone,
and Nathan was really interested in that."
David Blaine spent 44 days inside a Perspex box
suspended above Potters Fiend Park in London in 2003, after a series of
similar endurance stunts in his native New York.
While the illusionist faced volleys of eggs, beer
cans and paint-filled balloons from less-than-respectful Londoners during
his time in captivity, Mark fears even harder and faster missiles may be
heading his way.
Mark added: "Our second team are playing
Moddershall today, so I'm sure there will be some of their players, and some
of ours, who will be looking to hit my box with some big sixes. The
box is made out of Perspex, which I'm told is seven times tougher than
glass, but we'll see if that's true. I thought it looked a bit like a
birdhouse, so I might get some birds trying to nest in it."
Nathan's dad Phil is a builder and used his
talents to design and construct the wood and Perspex box for Mark.
He said: "It's brilliant that they are raising
funds in Nathan's name. It just helps us to keep going. I'm sure
if Nathan were here he'd probably be the first one to try and hit the box
with a cricket ball."
Half of the money raised by the stunt will go to
the campaigning charity Cardiac Risk in the Young (Cry), which is looking to
fund research into the condition that claimed Nathan's life.
Nathan's mum Angela said: "It's nutty, but
fabulous. It is a tragic situation to be in, but this is something
that will put a smile on your face. I woke up this morning and I was
in floods of tears but then I came down here and saw Mark in his box, and
it's just how Nathan would have wanted it to be."
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