Home » Blog Category » Take Two

Take Two

While Vernon’s focus was on sleight-of-hand magic with playing cards and other small objects, his vision was such that it would eventually impact the entirety of performance magic, from its largest stage illusions down the smallest feat performed with a single coin.

Submitted Thu, 12/21/2017

Magicana has added a new archive of films of magicians, shot between 1976 and 1981 by Canadian collector Larry Thornton. In this Take Two, I have selected nine newly discovered vintage films, featuring six previous Take Two subjects, with links to the original essays to guide you along the way.

Submitted Mon, 12/04/2017

Canasta’s approach was startlingly original and so ahead of its time as to render him the subject of widespread criticism within the magic world by those who didn’t get it—and it would take another half century before they would. This didn’t have much of an impact on Canasta’s success...

Submitted Fri, 11/24/2017

When Bill Larsen wrote about him in a cover feature of Genii magazine in 1975, he began with this: “If my readers were asked to name the top ten close-up magicians in the world today, it is quite possible the at the name Jimmy Grippo would not be included. However, this same Jimmy Grippo probably comes close to heading the list (or possibly heads the list) but because he keeps a low profile, many magicians around the country do not know of him.”

Submitted Sat, 11/18/2017

"...in addition to being a great performer, Fantasio was an extraordinary and innovative inventor. His original effects with canes and candles, that appeared, disappeared, changed places and changed colors, became among the very best selling items for silent and manipulative stage acts, and influenced countless magicians who strove to follow in the maestro’s steps."

Submitted Mon, 11/13/2017

J.C. Wagner was a wonderful magician and a skilled and creative sleight-of-hand performer. Like most professional close-up performers, he was no household name, he wasn’t much known beyond the community of magic. But his life amounted to a stellar conjuring resumé ...

Submitted Mon, 10/30/2017

To say that Billy McComb was a beloved figure is a failure of language and imagination. Throughout the world of magic, on multiple continents, he was adored.

Submitted Fri, 10/20/2017

At the age of nine, he lost his right hand as the result of a car accident. Rather than dissuading him from his pursuit of magic, it may have served to motivate and elevate his passion...

Submitted Fri, 10/13/2017

Jerry Andrus was as brilliant as he was eccentric—which is saying something—in fact, saying quite a lot.

Submitted Fri, 09/29/2017

One simply cannot exaggerate Jay Marshall’s success as a performer, and the lengthy list of top venues he performed at over many decades. But it’s also true that this is only a part of his story...

Submitted Mon, 09/25/2017

Pages

Latest Tweets

@sharingwonder I just uploaded “Milbourne Christopher 2” to #Vimeo: https://t.co/AOZqqTshIT
September 28, 2022 5:32 pm
@sharingwonder I just uploaded “Milbourne Christopher 1” to #Vimeo: https://t.co/3wdAawRynG
September 28, 2022 5:31 pm

Photo Stream