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“Ladies and gentlemen, children of all ages…” The spectacle and allure of the circus has entertained young and old for generations. This year, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey has added a magical theme, with a young magician at the helm of the Greatest Show on Earth.
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Fred Robinson’s prowess with a pack of cards has become legendary; the British magician was a master at sleights and gambling moves. Here, he is remembered by a friend, a student, and in letters from Fred himself, in which he puzzles over the complexities of misdirection.
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| “That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” Nietzsche’s words have been taken to heart by Aaron Crow. This silent mentalist from Belgium has turned his personal fears into dramatic stage presentations that make his audiences shiver — and sometimes himself, as well. |
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| David Roth, Mike Gallo, and Michael Rubinstein have presented the New York Coin Seminar to pass along coin magic techniques both modern and historic. An attendee gives us a taste of what the event is like, while the three leaders each provide a coin effect especially for MAGIC. |
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| For three decades, Steve Trash has been working his magic to help educate people about the environment. Continuing to tour in his shows, and with a new Green Magic Set coming out, he finds that global interest in taking care of the Earth has finally caught up with him. |
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News on the serious injury to David Copperfield’s assistant during The Fan illusion, the rundown on the second Magic Week on The Late Late Show, an update on big changes at the Magic Castle, the Le Grand David company celebrate 2,500 performances in style, what Neil Patrick Harris has planned for the Castle Award Night, how Mike Michaels magically proposed, remembrances of Bob Dee, John Cooper, and Larry White, plus “Who’s Where” and more.
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Twenty products are covered this month by Michael Claxton, Peter Duffie, Jason England, Gabe Fajuri, Brad Henderson, John Lovick, and guest reviewer John Thompson.
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Every February, magicians search anew for the perfect “icebreaker” effect to use in a romantic setting. Las Vegas magician Chris Randall supplies two excellent magic effects with a flirty theme. Then Talk About Tricks explores a fascinating change using two different-colored pens, a mentalism effect with candy, and two amazing card effects.
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DEAR SHOW DOCTOR: I want to build up my show. The people who hire me want more than my ten-minute act. I would like to work banquet shows, corporate shows, and on cruise ships. I need to be able to create a show that is forty-five minutes to one hour long. How do I take my tricks and make a full show out of them? — Pierre K.
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WORKING POST-GRAD PARTIES
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While either of the effects in this month’s column can be stand-alone tricks, they’re best used to introduce a balloon needed for another routine or giveaway item in your show. Instead of merely pulling out a balloon for your helper or your card/dove/watch/billet/flower-from-balloon effect, use these magic-along-the-way methods for getting into the routine. The first is a transformation, the second is more of a fusion.
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This is one of my favorite stunts and the one I perform most often. It’s based on a Tom Mullica idea published in Penn & Teller’s book How to Play in Traffic. Here’s Mullica’s original idea:
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| MAGIC, The Magazine For Magicians (ISSN 1062-2845) is published monthly for $54 per year by Stagewrite Publishing, Inc., 6220 Stevenson Way, Las Vegas, NV 89120 USA. Periodical Postage Paid at Las Vegas, NV, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to MAGIC - Attn: Circulation Dept., 6220 Stevenson Way, Las Vegas, NV 89120 USA |
| © 2009 MAGIC Magazine |