FISM – Tuesday

This is my second attempt at posting this daily report. It’s 1am and the report I just spend over an hour on was deleted when my 24 hour hotel internet allowance expired unexpectedly as I was posting. Why did it expire and why did it take me so long to write the report? Because the temperature in this hotel room is 29 degrees. The air-conditioner is still faulty (and getting even hotter) and no-one can turn it off and the windows are sealed shut. The staff have offered us a cooler room to sleep in (we don’t have the time to move our stuff into it) but the maintenance staff can’t look at our "cooler" until tomorrow. Hopefully the room won’t have melted down completely by then!

So anyway… here’s a brief version of today’s activities before I pass out from heat exhaustion.

Undy9.00am – We headed off to see the Stage Competition and there were some really outstanding acts (some outstanding for different reasons… like Mr Underpants) but you can read Sue-Anne’s full competition report on our website www.MagicUnlimited.com at the end of the week.

While we were watching the acts, others attended lectures by Cellini, Jeff McBride, John Gallo, Armando Lucero, a one-man show by Juan Tamariz or a session on cheating and gambling by Paul Wilson and Jason England.

After the Stage Comp ended people rushed to see the Close Up Comp but, as the close up room only seats about 200, getting tickets to sit in the room is almost impossible! You need to line up 45 minutes before the doors open to get your ticket, then when the doors open you rush in like mad to claim your space. That’s one of the benefits of being on the Close Up Jury, I get a front row seat every time! Sure I’ve got to work for it, but it’s a great perk.

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Those who can’t get a seat move into the adjoining room which is much larger and they get to watch the close up competitors on the big screen.

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Of course, if you miss out on that room you can watch the acts on any one of the many monitors throughout the FISM centre.

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This is a pic Sue-Anne took of Shawn Farqhuar and Ali Bongo in the close up room. (I think Ali had just been told he’d missed out on a seat!)

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During the Close Up Competition Paul Daniels presented his Malini Show, but once those two events finished the schedule suddenly got a little thin for most of the registrants. The Dealers Room was closed, and Gazzo kindly put on a street show in the foyer at 6.00pm

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but other than the 7.00pm Close Up Gala Show for Group C (1/3 of the registrants), there was nothing for the other 2/3 to do until Stevie Starr, regurgitator extraordinaire did his 30 minute show at 9.30pm.

It was at about this time we heard quite a bit of grumbling from registrants complaining about bad organisation and scheduling, as well as complaining about the quality of the Close Up Gala and the AV support in general. We’ll have to wait until the end of the week to see how it all pans out.

As expected, Stevie Starr was the ‘hit’ of the convention. Magicians were intrigued and amazed as he swallowed gases, liquids and objects and regurgitated them on command. He was rewarded with a loud and very long standing ovation.

After this some people went back into the city centre by train to see the Bar Magic at the Scandic Sergel Plaza, tonight featuring Bill Malone, Michael Vincent and Gazzo from 11.00pm. Since the last train back to our hotel is about 11.42pm we decided to call it a night… that was many hours ago and I’m still typing!

Catch you tomorrow and hopefully this computer won’t have melted in the heat by then! Believe it or not, even though cold air is coming out of the vent at a rate of knots, the temperature has risen by another degree and it’s still getting hotter!

Continue reading “FISM – Tuesday”

New Magic Movie Shooting in LA: We Like it Already

Emily Blunt Joins Magic Movie CastThe industry already loves the new movie The Great Buck Howard even though its first day of shooting was yesterday.
We’d like to think the buzz comes from the story line but it is likely due to the high-profile cast attracted to the project.


The Hollywood Reporter gives it great play and piggy-backs the story with the development of Emily Blunt’s negotiations to play the female lead. 

Tom Hanks, John Malkovich and Colin Hanks are already pegged as the stars of the film about "a luckless magician and his assistant who struggle to reinvigorate his career. Blunt will play a self-assured publicist hired by Buck Howard (Malkovich) to publicize an event that will put him back on the map."

Our energetic but often unavailable agent, Petunia Bougainvillea, said we still haven't heard from Sean McGinley, the movie's writer and director. 

We offered to play any role available.  From the sound of things, the female lead is now filled — not that we were going for it but we'd take it in a pinch. 

Things happen quickly in Hollywood. We were amazed they were already filming even though the female lead wasn't finalized. 

But we were very surprised to see a page at the New York Times web site allowing you to rate the movie. 

Why wait until the movie is made to give an evaluation?  That is so 1990's. We submitted our review for the editor's consideration.  From our perspective, any movie about magic or magicians is a winner — or at least a presumptive winner.

We'll keep you up-to-date on the latest news on the production and certainly you'll be among the first to know if we get a role.  

Continue reading “New Magic Movie Shooting in LA: We Like it Already”

All things FISM

Just a quick note from our hot hotel (this air conditioning seems to make the room warmer rather than hotter… cool air is coming out but the temperature has gone up to 26 degrees… and it’s cool and raining outside!) as we begin DAY 2 of FISM.

If you’re interested in all things FISM http://www.magician.org.uk/ is writing daily blog reports and there are reports appearing in Genii Magazine Forum too.

Well, off we go for a full day of Stage and Close-up Competition!

Continue reading “All things FISM”

Barry Gibbs on Petrick and Mia

Petrick and Mia

I first met Petrick and Mia about 20years ago or so when I was running A&B Novelties Magic and Fun Shop in West Palm Beach, Florida. At the time, they were a very young couple on one of their first lecture tours.

They were scheduled to
lecture at IBM Ring 117, and the arrangements were that they would
drive into West Palm Beach, meet me at the magic shop and I would in
turn accompany them to the motel we had booked for them, take them to
dinner and then to the lecture hall at the Moose Lodge where Ring 117
held their meetings.

All was going fine. After a couple of calls for directions they arrived at the Magic Shop close to 5:00 PM.
They were driving a van and were accompanied by two (2) beautiful,
black Afghan Hounds. After closing the shop, the beautiful Mia got into
my car and Petrick followed in the van.

We drove to downtown West Palm Beach to the old Holiday Inn, arriving in front of the Holiday Inn at about 5:15 P.M.
I told Petrick I would take Mia inside, and get them registered while
he parked the van in the lot at the back of the motel. Hopefully we
would save some time that way and have an opportunity to go to dinner
before the lecture. Petrick agreed and Mia and I went into the motel to
register, while he went to park the van.

Holiday Inn (West Palm circa 1982) Parking Below

About 10 minutes passed while I got them registered and took Mia and
the luggage up to the room. The room was located at the back of the
motel and faced the Inner Coastal Waterway on Flagler Drive. The balcony overlooked a large parking lot in the rear of the building.

While Mia changed clothes for
the lecture I stood on the balcony awaiting the arrival of Petrick.
Almost 15 minutes passed and there was still no sign of Petrick. When
Mia came out of the room I told her I was going down to the lobby to
see if perhaps Petrick was there waiting for us.

When I got to the lobby there
was no sign of Petrick and none of the staff had seen him. I thought
great "he's disappeared"! I pictured him having made a wrong turn and
"just knew" he was now aimlessly driving through the maze of "one way
streets" in downtown
West Palm Beach, and hopelessly lost.

I returned to the balcony,
where Mia was waiting, but there was still no sign of Petrick. Another
15 minutes passed when suddenly Mia excitedly exclaimed, "there is
Petrick"!!. Looking down into the parking lot, sure enough, there was
Petrick, finding a place to park. It was then I noticed that there was
a gaping hole in the top of the van, where about an hour before there
was a nice "bubble top".

It seems that Petrick,
instead of driving around to the back of the lot initially, decided to
take the Van into the underground garage. Unfortunately the Van, with
the "bubble top", did not quite fit, and as Petrick drove into the
underground garage, the top of the van wedged against the ceiling and
the "bubble top" was shattered.

It took him quite some time
to back the wedged van out of the garage entrance and finally make his
way around to the back parking lot.

To make matters worse, it was
starting to rain! I went to the lobby and the staff of the motel were
kind enough to give me a number of large garbage bags and some tape.
Petrick and I spent about 15 minutes taping up the gaping hole in the
top of the van, and by now it was close to time to be at the lecture
hall.

Finally the hole was repaired
enough to heap the rain out and Petrick followed Mia and I to the Moose
Lodge, arriving at exactly
7:00 PM. So much for dinner.

While the short business
meeting was going on, Petrick and Mia set up for the lecture, and
although still hungry, they put on a tremendous lecture that night. I
truly felt that this was a couple that could overcome any adversity and
give a tremendous performance.

True professionals in every
sense of the word, and Petrick spent a lot of time answering questions
and explaining every effect in detail.

After the meeting we finally went out for a very late dinner and many of the members of Ring 117 joined us.

I really felt sorry for them
though, as it was one of their first lecture tours, and I felt the
agent booking them certainly did not seem to care about the way he
lined up the schedule. I found out they had to lecture the following
night and the drive to the next lecture was 800 miles.

I don't know if they made
that lecture on time, but even if they didn't, I realize that no matter
what time they got there, because of their obvious love of, and
devotion to magic, no matter how "late" they might be, they would
always be "great.'

Copyright @ 2006

Barry M. Gibbs

Continue reading “Barry Gibbs on Petrick and Mia”

Rick Fisher, FAB Magic Featured

Rick Fisher - Magician - Magic Store OwnerThe Sturgis
Journal
goes front and center with a great profile on one of our
favorite magic dealers and people in the world, Rick Fisher.

It seems like it wasn't that long ago that FAB Magic began
what some considered the magic equivalent of shipping coal to Newcastle. 

We didn't know what that meant so we just took it in stride.

But it sounded like, "does the world need Hillary Duff and Lindsay Lohan?" 

How can you have too many magic stores?

FAB Magic opened its beautifully adorned magic shop just
yards from Abbott's Magic Factory.  Colon is not a large
town, or even a medium-sized village. 

It
boasts a population of 1,227 residents and the main road to the south
accommodates both motor vehicles and horse-drawn Amish carriages and carts. 

Colon, Michigan is a beautiful and historic
location.  However, could it support two
magic shops?

It appears Newcastle
needed more coal because both Abbott's and FAB Magic are still open for
business and have expanded their plans for the upcoming Magic Week.

Whilst Abbott's charges registration for participation in
the iconic Get-Together, Mr. Fisher offers most of his events, lectures,
activities and shows free.

"Tuesday through Saturday is pretty much going to be non-sleep,"
owner Rick Fisher told The Sturgis
Journal
.

The shop will be open from 9:00 am through 10:00 pm during
Magic Week.

We presume we're supposed to go back to the campgrounds
behind the high school and sleep while the store is closed.

Mr. Fisher signed up a bunch and a half of corporate
sponsors,  to present all but the Friday
and Saturday evening shows for free. 

Special for this year's edition, Mr. Fisher will be offering
two DVDs: one of Percy Abbott performing and the other is a collection of shows
by Jerry Conklin.  We viewed an advance
copy of the Percy Abbott DVD and were so impressed.  This is a keepsake worth keeping. 

Marilyn Abbott will be on hand to sign DVD's on Saturday and
Mr. Conklin will stop by to sign his DVDs on Friday. 

Mr. Fisher has worked hard to make FAB Magic a real magic
store; a brick and mortar location that has a high-speed avenue to the
internet. 

We've purchased much from FAB Magic and have yet to be
disappointed in the quality, service, or price. 
Artisans (some formerly of Abbott's) are not apparently driven to meet
quotas or crank out merchandise but to design and manufacture tricks they would
be proud to use in a show.

We purchased our Suitcase Table and Close-Up Table from FAB
and have not seen such high-quality since we attended an antique magic
auction.  The FAB version of the Torn and
  

Mr. Fisher once said he wanted a magic shop attractive to
both the beginners and seasoned pros.  He
has produced that in FAB Magic.  The
floorboards creak as you walk into the historic storefront, the long counter
with demo pads and tricks in various stages of preparation invites you to join
other magic-lovers for swapping and showing magic, discussing the "best of"
any particular magic category, and the type of fellowship you don't see outside
of the traditional magic store. 

Visit Mr. Fisher's FAB Magic in person during Magic Week
(we'll see you there) or virtually on the web at http://www.fabmagic.com.

Continue reading “Rick Fisher, FAB Magic Featured”

Magic Movies and Magic Markers

Our Magic Nightmare - Harold the StalkerWe love magic.  There
we said it.  Sue us.  We'll pretty much see anything with magic in
it; or even in its title.  We bought a
gross of Magic Markers just because of the name. 

(We also learned that while the fumes from one Magic Marker
may not be hazardous to your mental or physical health – the wafting aroma of
magic solvent from 144 uncapped Magic Markers will mess you up something
fierce. 

We still have flash-backs and
disturbed dreams – we can't stop our paranoid delusions the story book
character, Harold of Harold and the Purple Crayon is stalking us.  He hopes to draw the silhouette at the crime
scene of our cringing, lifeless body. 

Plus, he doesn't really wear proper clothes and that scares us in and of
itself – we feared non-conforming clothes long before our experimental and
unintentional abuse of Magic Markers). 

Whoa.  Where did all
that come from.  We were writing about
how much we loved magic and all things magic when, "Wham!" we're in
the midst of an Ibsen soliloquy of angst, regret, and fumes.  Sorry.

Magic is what we love. 

Right.  Let's get on
with the story, then.

We had no intention of seeing Woody Allen's new film Scoop. 
We knew nothing about the story line or plot.  In fact we assumed it involved a newspaper
person or perhaps someone who diligently cleans up after her animal during dog
walks. 

We were half right.

Scoop does involve a newspaper woman, Scarlett Johanson, but
just barely.

That is apparently the point of the movie.  The stunning Ms. Johanson is a young
journalism student who is often barely clothed. 

But there is magic involved. 

She gets her biggest scoop (like Great Dane-sized)  when she volunteers for a magician's
trick. 

During the effect, she is visited by a gossiping spirit who
tells her the identity of Britian's "Tarot Card Killer." 

She works with the magician played by Mr. Allen on the hunt
for the murderer. 

Well, one thing leads to another, comedy ensues, the bad guy
keeps killing women, more laughs, jealousy is evidenced, some more gags, and
then it ends. 

Not a lot of magic in the film.  It is analogous to the amount of magic one
would find in Magic Markers.  While Magic
Markers' fumes may intoxicate, it is the upper-torso of Ms. Johanson that does
the trick in this film.

Offered one cynical critic, Alex Sandell:  “If you threw together Manhattan Murder
Mystery and The Curse of the Jade Scorpion and gave each film's leading lady
humungous boobs, you'd pretty much have Scoop.”

That's hardly high praise.

We searched the internet(s) for Mr. Sandell's critique of
Magic Markers or that little obsessive-compulsive, ugly-clothes-wearing,
stalking, graffiti-drawing, ambiguously-aged, linear-thinking, freak Harold or
his purple crayon of doom.  So far no
luck.  It could be Mr. Sandell hasn't
found time to review Harold and the Purple Crayon or maybe he too has been
threatened or intimidated by the spooky little deviant. 

You can read a review of the reviews for
Scoop here
.

Check out the outstanding official web
site for Scoop here
.

Continue reading “Magic Movies and Magic Markers”

Doc Eason Hosts Snowmagical in Snowmass

Doc Eason Welcomes You to Magic after MagicDoc Eason is the organizer and
head cheerleader for the 25th Anniversary of Snowmass, Colorado's spectacular weekend fest of fun and magic.   

Eric Meade, Doc Eason, Connie and Dave
Elstun
, Terry Ward, and a host of other entertainers will help the town celebrate their 25th
annual Snowmagical Family Fun Fest

Snowmass is synonymous magic. Bob
Sheets
, Doc Eason, Eric Meade are not only stars of our business, they also
worked Snowmass.

The festivities kick off Friday
with street performers and activities, plus an outdoor showing of “ET” on the
big Fanny Hill screen at dusk.

(Bring a blanket and popcorn.)

On Saturday and
Sunday, families can check out the continuous assortment of magic and puppet
shows, street entertainers, puppet-making, juggling and magic workshops going
on in the vicinity of the Snowmass Mall.

Connie Elstun will perform her kid’s show and provide a
Magic Workshop “in the shade near Paradise Bakery.”

Later Saturday evening, there will be a “Magical
dine-around” in several area restaurants followed by the Magic Cabaret with Doc
Eason, Eric Mead and a host other magicians in a nightclub performance at The
Blue Door, next to the Silvertree Hotel.

For all the times, performers, and history, check out the Official Snowmass Village web
site – it’s outstanding. Doc Eason is
the organizer for the fest so you know it is going to be more than great, it’s
going to be fun.

By the way, make sure you check out Doc Eason's newly revamped web site.  We've always loved his humor (he's as twisted as we like) and he shares his jokes, show schedule, and news. 
Mr. Eason has often put up the cash to keep this festival alive and thriving.

Continue reading “Doc Eason Hosts Snowmagical in Snowmass”

Sure Sign of Summer – Abbott’s Weekend Magic Shows

Just After Winter - Summer for Magicians in MichiganSure, it gets cold here in Michigan but only for about nine months of the year.  The rest of the time, we have sunny days and great summer activities.

Because we don't have much of a Summer, we have to squeeze it in as best as we can.  Every day has something great — usually within a few hours travel — and well-attended. 
For us, one of the sure signs of Summer is Abbott's Saturday Magic Shows. 

Visitors to the famous factory of magic can see some great magicians perform well-practiced routines.  We saw Hank Moorehouse work the room — and we learned some great bits to borrow for our show. 

But even if you aren't a magician, you'll find great pleasure in taking a stroll through downtown Colon, Michigan before or after Magic Week, crossing the bank parking lot, walking a few steps down St. Joseph Street to the one-and-only Abbott's Magic Factory.

The price is a very reasonable $5.00 and the seating couldn't be better. 

If you are in the area, give a call for details about the performer.  You can reach the friendly folks at Abbott's by dialing (269) 432-3235.

You owe it to yourself — Summer in metaphor and Michigan lasts but a second or two.

Continue reading “Sure Sign of Summer – Abbott’s Weekend Magic Shows”

Oregon Magician Jeff Martin Featured

Magician Jeff Martin Wows EmIn its on-going coverage of The Park County Fair, The Billings Gazette did a heck of a job with their coverage of Salem, Oregon magician Jeff Martin.

To read the coverage one would think there were only two worth-while events at this year's rendition of the fair: the pig wrestling and Mr. Martin's magic. 

Both attractions went a long way to entertaining the most difficult demographic out there – teenagers.

Magician Jeff Martin, of Salem, Ore., dazzled a group of teenagers with a three-card monte display and other sleight-of-hand tricks.

"Here, let me slow it down and show you again," said Martin, as onlookers stared slack-jawed in disbelief. "And that's why you never want to bet on this game."

Check out the piece and the two versions of Mr. Martin's photographs. 
Congratulations to Mr. Martin. 
Check out his website to learn the secret behind his nick-name "The Blond Curly-Haired Magician." Okay, it's not that big a secret but it is a great hook for future clients.

Continue reading “Oregon Magician Jeff Martin Featured”

Magicians Should Be Clean Shaven – Only!

Beauty Picks Lice from Magician's MustacheMark Panner submitted sixteen articles this week (and it's
only Tuesday).  This one made the least
sense so we print it without comment.
You can reach Mark Panner at magicmark@insidemagic.com.
 

Introduction to
this Column

It used to be magicians were
clean-cut, All-American men.  Not any
more.  No. Now, magicians have to look
like every other performer in the side-show.
They have long hair, tattoos, pierced body parts, and even facial
hair. 

Walt Disney didn't allow facial
hair on the people meeting the public.
He knew that facial hair (on men or women) makes people nervous (when it
is on men) or nauseous (when it is on women).
Mr. Walt Disney did not let his women wear too much make-up or his men
wear any make-up at all. Men couldn't have ear rings or any other kind of
piercing and no visible tattoos were allowed at all.

The Problem I am
Talking About Here

We are always worried about making
sure the "kids" get good role models.
It used to be magicians could be good role models but not any more.  You can't take off a tattoo or heal the
gaping hole in your nose, cheek, or ear – so it doesn't make any sense for me
to waste my time preaching on the evils of tattooing or piercing.  You either have Hepatitis or you don't. 

You probably got it from the people
who gave you the tattoo or pierced your skin – they usually have a few extra
virus germs flying around their needles and are always willing to share with
you.  You may think the needles they use
are clean but often they just lick them off in between clients to make them
look clean.  Spit from anyone is not
clean. 

Spit from someone with a lot of
virus germs and no morals is very unclean.

But like I said, I can't help you
heal so if you have piercings or tattoos, you can either read this or not.  It's up to you.

I want to address facial hair.  Facial hair should be eliminated from
magician's faces the same way smudges of lipstick or food should be wiped away
before performing in public.

You wouldn't do a show with your fly down, right?  You would take care of your costume by
righting things and fixing things before you walk out on to the stage.

Same thing goes for facial
hair.  Facial hair is supposed to be
removed – that's why God invented shaving.
We wash our faces, brush our teeth, put on deodorant, and shave off the
hair that grew on our face while we were sleeping.     You wouldn't leave toe-nail fungus on your
toes just because it grew there overnight, right?  It's the same thing for facial hair. 

It grew where it shouldn't so it
shouldn't be there. Pull up your zipper, clean your toes, brush your teeth, and
get rid of all the things that can grow on you if you don't groom yourself.

I know you think you look neat and "cool" to wear
a mustache or a beard but you don't.  You
look scary and not trustworthy. 

Proof My Argument
is True

Do you think I am wrong?  Ask any woman who she would want to kiss or
have entertain her kids while she was out shopping – it won't be someone with a
beard or a mustache.

Have you ever noticed there are no
famous Amish magicians?  That's because
of the beards they have to wear when they get married.  And they all have to get married so they all
have beards.  But no one would book a
magician who had a beard like an Amish married man even if you could trust them
and you'd know they would be peaceful and could rebuild your house if it burned
down. 

So even though they are good
people, they are held back in show business because their religion says they
have to have a beard. If they were clean-cut like the Mormons then they could
get shows hand-over-fist but they couldn't play in lounges or do
"blue" material so they wouldn't be famous.

Can you name a famous circus clown
who had a mustache or a beard?  No.  You can't.

It's not just because the
greasepaint would not apply properly to the gristly facial hair, it's because
clowns don't want to scare kids or intimidate people.  They want to make people laugh and feel the
opposite of intimidated.  Some kids are
scared of clowns anyway but it has nothing to do with facial hair.  Some kids have had bad experiences with
clowns and so they stay scared their whole life of clowns. 

But what about the famous magicians
of the past or the present that had or have facial hair?  How did they get famous if Walter Elias
Disney's theory was so right?  Well, I'll
tell you.

First look at the
magicians who were famous but didn't have facial hair:

Houdini

Hardeen

David Copperfield

Criss Angel

Shari Lewis and Lambchop

Mark Wilson

Siegfried & Roy

Bill Bixby

Lance Burton

Mac King

The Davenport
Brothers

The Fox Sisters

Uri Gellar

Howard Thurston

Orson Welles

Tim Ellis

Losander

Tommy Cooper

The Cast of the Broadway Musical Hit, Pippin

Johnny Carson

Frank Sinatra, Jr.

Harry Anderson

Teller

That's a lot of magicians who did
not have facial hair and were famous.
That's not a coincidence.  If it
were a coincidence, they wouldn't keep doing it, right?

Would you do something that would hurt your career?  No.
You would do things that made people like you and want to book you for a
show. 

That's what those magicians above
did and they became famous because they did things that they knew worked well.

So let's look at the magicians you
would point to as "proof" that facial hair can't hurt your career or
that magicians should have facial hair.

Facial Hair
Wearers

Chung Ling Soo

                He had
a mustache but it wasn't real and remember he wasn't really who he said he
was.  He was a magician who used to have
a real mustache when he worked with Alexander Hermann or Harry Kellar.  But he had to wear a costume when he
pretended to be Chinese or Japanese and so he wore the mustache just like you
would wear a mask for Halloween.  Plus,
his wife killed him on stage in the bullet catching trick.

David Blaine

                Sometimes
he has a mustache but sometimes he doesn't.
When he has a mustache, he doesn't look like a
"magician."  He looks like a
vagrant and people look at him with fear.
The spectators just say he named their card correctly because they are
afraid he is going to hit them or try to take their money.  What would you do if someone came up to you
with a mustache and started rubbing burning paper on their hairy arms to reveal
a name of a card?  Right. 

Max Maven

                He is
wearing a costume too.  I saw him when he
didn't have his costume on and I don't think he had a mustache. But even if
did, it was just because he wanted to be authentic in his character. 

Harry Blackstone, Sr.

                He wore
a mustache and goatee because he had a very bad blemish on his chin.  It was like that stain that Gorbachev had on
his bald head back at the end of the cold war.
His son didn't have the blemish but he still wore the goatee and
mustache but that was out of respect for his dad – so his dad wouldn't feel
strange wearing a mustache and beard (goatee) when his son didn't have to. 

Amazing Johnathan

                He
actually proves my point.  He has that
scraggly facial hair to make you think he is crazy and can't be trusted.  He is performing in Las Vegas.
He is not trying to get shows at kids' parties.  He also drinks Windex and eats Draino during
his act – would you do that too? 

Dante

                He
never got the same attention as Thurston or even Laurel and Hardy.  He had a show and it did alright but no one
said, "I want to see that magician who is named after Satan and who wears
a striking resemblance to Satan himself."

They would go to see the show if
there was nothing else to see.  That's
why you can buy his posters everywhere – no one ever put them up or needed to
use them.  He had plenty in stock.   When he was in that film with Laurel and
Hardy, he was kind of the bad/mysterious/weird guy playing against the
scared/weirded-out guys who were Laurel and Hardy.

Bob Sheets

                He has
a lot of things working against him already and so adding a mustache doesn't
set him back so much.  I did a
review of his show last year
so you can read all the problems he has
performing magic for the public.  Chances
are most parents wouldn't want someone with a blindfold stabbing cards on their
furniture for their little child's birthday party – with or without a
mustache. 

Dai Vernon

                I don't
know off-hand why he had a mustache.  He
didn't need to wear one – he wasn't in character or anything.  Maybe he felt he needed it to distract people
from looking too closely at his hands when he was doing sleight of hand. 

I saw two pictures of him – he was
in the same pose both times.  One was
taken when he was young and he is looking down at his hands and at the
cards he
is holding while cigarette smoke floated upwards.  The other was taken
when he was older.  He was doing the same exact thing!!  Clearly, he
was self-conscious about his
sleight of hand ability or he wouldn't be staring down at his hands
while he
was doing card sleights. 

Let that be a lesson to you.  Practice your card tricks so well you don't
have to look down at your hands when you do them.  But that doesn't mean you should wear a
blindfold and a mustache like Bob Sheets.
There has to be moderation. 

                The bad
thing about Dai Vernon was he taught so many younger magicians how to look and
act like a magician. 

Poor Doug Henning came from Canada just
like Dai Vernon and thought he had to do everything just like Dai Vernon.  So he grew his mustache and used it in his
act.  He seemed like a very nice man and
it was a shame he had to copy everything Dai Vernon did. 

Although, I don't think he ever
smoked cigarettes or stared at his own hands when he did sleights.  But
look what the mustache did to him.  The hair on his upper-lip acted
like a
slippery slope to take him out of magic and into the Transcontinental
Meditation (the 'insiders' call it TM for short) where mustaches and
beards
were de rigueur

That doesn't mean if you wear a
mustache you will go into a cult.  It
means your more likely to go into a cult, though.  You won't get good paying jobs doing magic so
you will think you can never be loved by anyone and that's when cults come
a-knockin'. 

They prey on the weak animals who
can't do magic shows for the other animals' kids' parties because they look
weird. 

What about the
women?

                I was
just joking at the top of this column when I said that Walt Disney didn't let
his women wear facial hair – most women can't grow facial hair unless they can
grow just a little but they can wax it off pretty easily.  But if facial hair was the answer, wouldn't
women magicians wear facial hair so they could break into the "boys
club"?  Of course they would.

                You see
women magicians everyday who wear top hats and tails to look like men so people
will mistake them for male magicians.
Some women can't pull off the ruse though because they are either too
pretty or too female-shaped to hide their womanhood. 

They have to make their own way
through the business.  Like Melinda – she
could never convince a modern audience that she was a man or a male
magician.  So she gave it up and dressed
like a woman dresses and tried to be a success anyway.  But for the women magicians who don't have
good figures or aren't pretty, dressing up like a man works pretty well.  Audiences will give you points for at least
trying to do what you are supposed to do.

Conclusion

                Unless
you have a facial blemish that you need to hide or you want to pay homage to
your dad who had to wear a goatee to hide a "Wine Stain" like Gorbachev,
you shouldn't wear facial hair.  You will
do so much better if you do not frighten children or scare women.  Clowns don't wear facial hair and a magician
is better than a clown in the order of entertainers so there is no reason for a
magician to wear a mustache or beard.

                You may
disagree with me but that's because you don't have the experience I have in
getting and keeping clients.  I have a
questionnaire I give to all of my clients and I always ask them to say what
they like or didn't like.  Not one of
them ever said they didn't like the fact that I didn't have a mustache or
beard.  In fact, for years, they never
even mentioned facial hair so I put a special check box on the form:

Do you think the magic show would be better if I had a
mustache?

Do you think the magic show would be better if I had a
beard?

Do you think the magic show would be better if I had long
sideburns?

Would you pay me more for the show if I had a mustache,
beard or long side-burns?

The answers have been consistent.  No one would have paid more for facial hair
and no one thought my show could be improved – even with facial hair.

Do your own research if you don't want to rely on my years
of experience and scientific surveys of the only opinion-holders that matter:

The Customer!

Thank you.

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