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Encyclopedia > Parlor magic

Parlor magic is done for larger audiences than close-up magic (which is for a few people or even one person) and for smaller audiences than stage magic. In parlor magic, the performer is usually standing and on the same level as the audience, which may be seated on chairs or even on the floor. According to the Encyclopedia of Magic and Magicians by T.A. Waters, "The phrase [parlor magic] is often used as a pejorative to imply that an effect under discussion is not suitable for professional performance." Also, many magicians consider the term "parlor" to be old fashioned and limiting, since this type of magic is often done in rooms much larger than the traditional parlor, or even outdoors. A better term for this branch of magic may be "platform," "club" or "cabaret." Look up magic in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... Magician redirects here. ... Magician redirects here. ...


Most so-called "birthday-party magicians" do magic that fits into this classification. These tricks include the "Miser's Dream" (where a seemingly endless supply of coins is produced from thin air), sucker tricks (like the "die box", where a giant die is put in a two-compartment box; the magician makes it vanish but the audience believe he simply shifts it to the other compartment; eventually the magician opens both sides of the box and the die is gone; it has appeared in a previously-empty hat); audience participation tricks (like the breakaway wand, where a wand remains rigid for the magician but falls apart every time the volunteer touches it); production effects (like the square circle, in which a bottomless, topless box with a screened front encloses a bottomless, topless cylinder. Both are shown empty and put together again; the magician then produces large quantities of silk scarves, fruit, bottles, and so on from the "empty" cylinder, inside the square box); and so on. There are quite literally hundreds of parlor tricks.


Parlor, or club, magicians generally work without assistants and within a few miles of their homes (unlike stage magicians, who may have several in their crew - both backstage and on stage - and may travel thousands of miles between jobs). This is because payment is less for parlor magicians (but still generally more than for close-up performers).


Parlor magicians are not as well known to the general public (if at all) as stage magicians such as David Copperfield and Lance Burton. Parlor magicians include people such as Americans Hank Moorehouse, the late John Mulholland and Larry White, who is also the former magic editor of MUM magazine; Canadians Peter Marucci, and Darryl Hutton; Europeans Finn Jon, the late Fred Kaps, Alan Shaxon, and Terry Seabrooke. David Copperfield is a quasi-autobiographical novel by Charles Dickens. ... Lance Burton (full name William Lance Burton) was born 10 March 1960 in Louisville, Kentucky; and is a famed American stage magician who performs in his own show at The Monte Carlo hotel and resort, Las Vegas. ... World map showing Europe Europe is conventionally considered one of the seven continents which, in this case, is more a cultural and political distinction than a physiogeographic one. ... Fred Kaps (official name Abraham Bongers), (June 8, 1926 – July 22, 1980) was a Dutch magician. ... Alan Shaxon is one of England`s foremost magicians and specialises in a cabaret act. ...

  Magic  

History of magic | Timeline of magic Magic, including the arts of prestidigitation and conjuring, is the art of entertaining an audience by performing illusions that baffle and amaze, often by giving the impression that something impossible has been achieved, almost as if the performer had magic or supernatural powers. ... Magic, including the arts of prestidigitation and conjuring, is the art of entertaining an audience by performing illusions that baffle and amaze, often by giving the impression that something impossible has been achieved, almost as if the performer had magic or supernatural powers. ... 2700BC - The first known performance of a conjuring effect (cups and balls) by the magician Dedi in ancient Egypt 100AD - The Acetabularii performed the Cups and balls in ancient Rome using stones and small vinegar cups (hence the name Acetabularii) 1584 - Reginald Scott publishes The Discoverie of Witchcraft (sic) a...


Stage magic | Close-up magic | Parlor magic | Street magic | Mentalism Magician redirects here. ... Magician redirects here. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Mentalism is an ancient performing art in which the practitioner uses mental acuity, principles of stage magic and/or suggestion to present the illusion of mind reading, psychokinesis, precognition, clairvoyance or mind control. ...


Card magic | Coin magic Lance Cpl. ... Coin magic is a general term for feats of conjuring employing one or more coins which are manipulated so as to deceive and baffle the audience. ...


Category: Professional magicians | Category: Magic tricks | List of conjuring terms List of terms used by magicians. ...


Exposure of magic tricks | Intellectual rights to magic methods Exposure in magic refers to the practice of making magical methods (the secrets of how magic tricks are performed) available to those who are not magicians (usually defined as those who have not demonstrated some commitment to magic as a performance art, but occasionally further refined to those who are... This article may contain original research or unverified claims. ...



 

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