https://geniimagazine.com/wiki/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Jmaloney&feedformat=atomMagicpedia - User contributions [en]2024-03-29T00:18:02ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.25.5https://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Nate_Leipzig&diff=67442Nate Leipzig2013-08-23T15:17:56Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox person<br />
| image = <br />
| image_size = <br />
| alt = <br />
| caption = <br />
| birth_name = Nathan Leipziger <br />
| birth_day = May 31, <br />
| birth_year = 1873 <br />
| birth_place = Stockholm, Sweden<br />
| death_day = October 13, <br />
| death_year = 1939<br />
| death_place = New York<br />
| resting_place = Mount Hope Cemetary, Hastings-on-Hudson, Westchester County, NY<br />
| resting_place_coordinates = 40.99187, -73.859078<br />
| nationality = <br />
| known_for = <br />
| notable works =<br />
| flourished = <br />
| awards = <br />
| box_width = <br />
| misc =<br />
}}<br />
'''Nate Leipzig''' (1873- 1939) was one of the early pioneers of performing simple straight forward magic with normal objects and passing on the use of fancy boxes and gadgetry. His work influenced people like [[Dai Vernon]], [[Roy Benson]], and [[John Scarne]]. <br />
<br />
In the late 1800's Nate Leipziger saw a magician at a child's party and wanted to learn more about magic. He learned his craft from books and had the belief that magicians were supposed to develop their own techniques. So rather than perform the effects he learned from magic books he developed his own methods. Because of this, Nate Leipzig was amazing both lay audiences as well as magicians. One of his early creations was the [[Coin Roll]], where a coin rolls over the back of the fingers. Nate's original version however had the coin not only rolling over the backs of the fingers, but the hand would be turned over and the coin would continue to roll on the palm up fingers as well. <br />
<br />
Around 1901 Nate left his job as an optician and went into a partnership with William and [[Felix Berol]], who made rag pictures on a large easel. For a time he was known as "Nate Berol". This was not a magic act however and lasted for only two years. After this time, Nate got his own break into [[Vaudeville]] by filling in for magician [[Warren Keane]] at Proctors in New York. Audiences and agents were so impressed after his two days at Proctors that the famous agent William Morris arranged a tour for Nate to work the entire Keith Vaudeville Circuit.<br />
<br />
It wasn't long before overseas contracts were coming in and Nate Leipzig would travel the globe with his act of sleight of hand magic and manipulation. When he went to Europe in 1906 he added technology to spice up his already amazing act. He used a Vitascope, which was an early movie projector to project a film on a screen of his hands presenting intricate manipulations. In this way, his audiences could see on a grand scale the amazing magic that came from his hands. One of the key moments on the film was when Leipzig demonstrated a move that he created, the coin roll over the fingers. No known copy of that film is known to exist today.<br />
<br />
His stage act consisted of manipulation with Thimbles, Balls and Cards. He also presented card tricks like the [[Rising Card]]s. In addition, Nate presented magic with knives, canes, cigars, his Vest and other common and everyday objects. He was not a comedic performer but rather a gentlemen who presented magic to mystify his audience. His career lasted over 30 years. He died from cancer in 1939.<br />
<br />
Possibly invented the [[Side Steal]] and was recognized as one of the ten [[Card Stars of the U.S.A.]] in 1938.<br />
<br />
==Books==<br />
* [[Thanks to Leipzig !]] written by [[Victor Farelli]] (1948)<br />
* [[Dai Vernon's Tribute to Nate Leipzig]] written by [[Lewis Ganson]] (1963)<br />
* [[Roy Benson by Starlight]] written by Levent and Todd Karr<br />
<br />
{{References}}<br />
* Who's Who in Magic, [[Sphinx]], Janurary, 1933<br />
* Obit The Sphinx, Vol. 18, No. 9, November 1939, Nate Leipzig, page 228 <br />
* Obit [[The Linking Ring]], Vol. 19, No. 09, November 1939, page 671.<br />
* The Linking Ring, Vol. 19, No. 10, December 1939, RESOLUTION PASSED BY THE NATIONAL COUNCIL S.A.M., page 759 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No. 4, September 1953, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY, page 125 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 5, October 1953, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY PART 2. OF THE SAGA OF A MASTER MAGICIAN, page 169 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 6, November 1953, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY PART 3. – BREAKING INTO VAUDEVILLE, page 215 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 7, December 1953, NATE LEIPZIG IN EUROPE PART 4. – LEIPZIG’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY, page 263 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 8, January 1954, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY Part 5. The Saga of a Master Magician, page 331<br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 9, February 1954, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY PART 6. THE SAGA OF A MASTER MAGICIAN, page 364 <br />
* [http://www.miraclefactory.net/mpt/view.php?id=129&type=articles Nate Leipzig's Autobiography]<br />
* Obit, NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE, October 14, 1939<br />
* http://magicpostcards.wordpress.com/2010/10/24/nate-leipzig/<br />
[[Category:Biographies]]<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Leipzig}}</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Nate_Leipzig&diff=67441Nate Leipzig2013-08-23T15:17:40Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox person<br />
| image = <br />
| image_size = <br />
| alt = <br />
| caption = <br />
| birth_name = Nathan Leipziger <br />
| birth_day = May 31, <br />
| birth_year = 1873 <br />
| birth_place = Stockholm, Sweden<br />
| death_day = October 13, <br />
| death_year = 1939<br />
| death_place = New York<br />
| resting_place = Mount Hope Cemetary, Hastings-on-Hudson, Westchester County, NY<br />
| resting_place_coordinates = 40.99187', -73.859078<br />
| nationality = <br />
| known_for = <br />
| notable works =<br />
| flourished = <br />
| awards = <br />
| box_width = <br />
| misc =<br />
}}<br />
'''Nate Leipzig''' (1873- 1939) was one of the early pioneers of performing simple straight forward magic with normal objects and passing on the use of fancy boxes and gadgetry. His work influenced people like [[Dai Vernon]], [[Roy Benson]], and [[John Scarne]]. <br />
<br />
In the late 1800's Nate Leipziger saw a magician at a child's party and wanted to learn more about magic. He learned his craft from books and had the belief that magicians were supposed to develop their own techniques. So rather than perform the effects he learned from magic books he developed his own methods. Because of this, Nate Leipzig was amazing both lay audiences as well as magicians. One of his early creations was the [[Coin Roll]], where a coin rolls over the back of the fingers. Nate's original version however had the coin not only rolling over the backs of the fingers, but the hand would be turned over and the coin would continue to roll on the palm up fingers as well. <br />
<br />
Around 1901 Nate left his job as an optician and went into a partnership with William and [[Felix Berol]], who made rag pictures on a large easel. For a time he was known as "Nate Berol". This was not a magic act however and lasted for only two years. After this time, Nate got his own break into [[Vaudeville]] by filling in for magician [[Warren Keane]] at Proctors in New York. Audiences and agents were so impressed after his two days at Proctors that the famous agent William Morris arranged a tour for Nate to work the entire Keith Vaudeville Circuit.<br />
<br />
It wasn't long before overseas contracts were coming in and Nate Leipzig would travel the globe with his act of sleight of hand magic and manipulation. When he went to Europe in 1906 he added technology to spice up his already amazing act. He used a Vitascope, which was an early movie projector to project a film on a screen of his hands presenting intricate manipulations. In this way, his audiences could see on a grand scale the amazing magic that came from his hands. One of the key moments on the film was when Leipzig demonstrated a move that he created, the coin roll over the fingers. No known copy of that film is known to exist today.<br />
<br />
His stage act consisted of manipulation with Thimbles, Balls and Cards. He also presented card tricks like the [[Rising Card]]s. In addition, Nate presented magic with knives, canes, cigars, his Vest and other common and everyday objects. He was not a comedic performer but rather a gentlemen who presented magic to mystify his audience. His career lasted over 30 years. He died from cancer in 1939.<br />
<br />
Possibly invented the [[Side Steal]] and was recognized as one of the ten [[Card Stars of the U.S.A.]] in 1938.<br />
<br />
==Books==<br />
* [[Thanks to Leipzig !]] written by [[Victor Farelli]] (1948)<br />
* [[Dai Vernon's Tribute to Nate Leipzig]] written by [[Lewis Ganson]] (1963)<br />
* [[Roy Benson by Starlight]] written by Levent and Todd Karr<br />
<br />
{{References}}<br />
* Who's Who in Magic, [[Sphinx]], Janurary, 1933<br />
* Obit The Sphinx, Vol. 18, No. 9, November 1939, Nate Leipzig, page 228 <br />
* Obit [[The Linking Ring]], Vol. 19, No. 09, November 1939, page 671.<br />
* The Linking Ring, Vol. 19, No. 10, December 1939, RESOLUTION PASSED BY THE NATIONAL COUNCIL S.A.M., page 759 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No. 4, September 1953, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY, page 125 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 5, October 1953, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY PART 2. OF THE SAGA OF A MASTER MAGICIAN, page 169 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 6, November 1953, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY PART 3. – BREAKING INTO VAUDEVILLE, page 215 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 7, December 1953, NATE LEIPZIG IN EUROPE PART 4. – LEIPZIG’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY, page 263 <br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 8, January 1954, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY Part 5. The Saga of a Master Magician, page 331<br />
* M-U-M, Vol. 43, No 9, February 1954, NATE LEIPZIG'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY PART 6. THE SAGA OF A MASTER MAGICIAN, page 364 <br />
* [http://www.miraclefactory.net/mpt/view.php?id=129&type=articles Nate Leipzig's Autobiography]<br />
* Obit, NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE, October 14, 1939<br />
* http://magicpostcards.wordpress.com/2010/10/24/nate-leipzig/<br />
[[Category:Biographies]]<br />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Leipzig}}</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55847AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T19:17:15Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Advanced Search Options */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Searching ==<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
=== Some basic facts ===<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
=== Search Results ===<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.<br />
<br />
== Advanced Search ==<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch.png|thumb|Advanced Search location]]<br />
Most searches can be done by simply entering the search terms, but sometimes you want a little more power. For this, you will need the ''Advanced Search'' Page, which can be accessed by clicking on the link below the basic search box.<br />
<br />
=== Using the Advanced Search Page ===<br />
<br />
The basic search will handle 95% of your search needs and the search operators add the power to refine your search results. The Advanced Search page simply exposes the search operators you already know in a simple way. <br />
<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch2.png|thumb|left|Your generated search query]]<br />
<br />
This page also makes it easy to experiment and learn the syntax of the advanced search options. Type search words into the appropriate fields and Alex generate the equivalent basic search into the ''Your generated search query'' field.<br />
<br />
=== Advanced Search Options ===<br />
*Phrase search ("")<br/>Putting double quotes around a set of words tells Alex to search for those words in the exact order without any change. Putting words in quotes will narrow your search results, but perhaps in unexpected ways. For example, searching for '''"Thomas Nelson Downs"''' will miss pages that only reference '''"Thomas Downs"'''.<br />
<br />
*Excluding terms (-)<br/>Prepending a minus sign immediately before a word indicates that you do not want pages that contain that word to appear in your results. The minus sign should be preceded by a space and appear immediately before the word to be excluded. The minus sign can exclude more than one word by combining it with the phrase operator. For example, '''-"louis b tannen"'''.<br />
<br />
*The OR operator (|)<br/>Searches include all words by default. If you want to allow either one of several words, you can use the OR operator. For example, '''ed | edward | eddie marlo''' will return results that contain any of Marlo's first names and include his last name.<br />
<br />
==== Metadata searches ====<br />
<br />
Alexander knows more about each document than just the words they contain -- it can search for items by their title, author, etc. <br />
<br />
*@author ''name''<br/>Items written by '''name'''. Use '''marlo @author racherbaumer''' to find references to Marlo in Jon Racherbaumer's writings.<br />
<br />
*@title ''title''<br/>Items with the title or sub-title containing '''name'''<br />
<br />
*@date ''start_date end_date''<br/>Items published in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@added ''start_date end_date''<br/>Items add to the Alexander online library in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@lang ''language''<br/>Search for items written in ''language''.<br/>'''Caveat''': language support is under development. Not all media is correctly cataloged by language and each document can have only a single language assigned. Both of these deficiencies will be addressed in an upcoming release.<br />
<br />
*@body ''text''<br/>@body searches the contents of a document. Searching the contents of the document is the default so you'll probably never, ever use this. It's included here merely for the edification of the adventurous or completist searchers amongst us.<br />
<br />
Metadata searching is a powerful capability and one that we'll expand with more attributes in time.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55846AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T19:10:43Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Advanced Search Options */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Searching ==<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
=== Some basic facts ===<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
=== Search Results ===<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.<br />
<br />
== Advanced Search ==<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch.png|thumb|Advanced Search location]]<br />
Most searches can be done by simply entering the search terms, but sometimes you want a little more power. For this, you will need the ''Advanced Search'' Page, which can be accessed by clicking on the link below the basic search box.<br />
<br />
=== Using the Advanced Search Page ===<br />
<br />
The basic search will handle 95% of your search needs and the search operators add the power to refine your search results. The Advanced Search page simply exposes the search operators you already know in a simple way. <br />
<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch2.png|thumb|left|Your generated search query]]<br />
<br />
This page also makes it easy to experiment and learn the syntax of the advanced search options. Type search words into the appropriate fields and Alex generate the equivalent basic search into the ''Your generated search query'' field.<br />
<br />
=== Advanced Search Options ===<br />
*Phrase search ("")<br/>Putting double quotes around a set of words tells Alex to search for those words in the exact order without any change. Putting words in quotes will narrow your search results, but perhaps in unexpected ways. For example, searching for "Thomas Nelson Downs" will miss pages that only reference "Thomas Downs".<br />
<br />
*Excluding terms (-)<br/>Prepending a minus sign immediately before a word indicates that you do not want pages that contain that word to appear in your results. The minus sign should be preceded by a space and appear immediately before the word to be excluded. The minus sign can exclude more than one word by combining it with the phrase operator. For example, -"louis b tannen".<br />
<br />
*The OR operator (|)<br/>Searches include all words by default. If you want to allow either one of several words, you can use the OR operator. For example, '''ed | edward | eddie marlo''' will return results that contain any of Marlo's first names and include his last name.<br />
<br />
==== Metadata searches ====<br />
<br />
Alexander knows more about each document than just the words they contain -- it can search for items by their title, author, etc. <br />
<br />
*@author name<br/>Items written by name. Use marlo @author racherbaumer to find references to Marlo in Jon Racherbaumer's writings.<br />
<br />
*@title title<br/>Items with the title or sub-title containing name<br />
<br />
*@date start_date end_date<br/>Items published in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@added start_date end_date<br/>Items add to the Alexander online library in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@lang language<br/>Search for items written in language.<br/>Caveat: language support is under development. Not all media is correctly cataloged by language and each document can have only a single language assigned. Both of these deficiencies will be addressed in an upcoming release.<br />
<br />
*@body text<br />
<br />
*@body searches the contents of a document. Searching the contents of the document is the default so you'll probably never, ever use this. It's included here merely for the edification of the adventurous or completist searchers amongst us.<br />
<br />
Metadata searching is a powerful capability and one that we'll expand with more attributes in time.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55845AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T19:05:31Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Advanced Search Options */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Searching ==<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
=== Some basic facts ===<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
=== Search Results ===<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.<br />
<br />
== Advanced Search ==<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch.png|thumb|Advanced Search location]]<br />
Most searches can be done by simply entering the search terms, but sometimes you want a little more power. For this, you will need the ''Advanced Search'' Page, which can be accessed by clicking on the link below the basic search box.<br />
<br />
=== Using the Advanced Search Page ===<br />
<br />
The basic search will handle 95% of your search needs and the search operators add the power to refine your search results. The Advanced Search page simply exposes the search operators you already know in a simple way. <br />
<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch2.png|thumb|left|Your generated search query]]<br />
<br />
This page also makes it easy to experiment and learn the syntax of the advanced search options. Type search words into the appropriate fields and Alex generate the equivalent basic search into the ''Your generated search query'' field.<br />
<br />
=== Advanced Search Options ===<br />
*Phrase search ("")<br/>Putting double quotes around a set of words tells Alex to search for those words in the exact order without any change. Putting words in quotes will narrow your search results, but perhaps in unexpected ways. For example, searching for "Thomas Nelson Downs" will miss pages that only reference "Thomas Downs".<br />
<br />
*Excluding terms (-)<br/>Prepending a minus sign immediately before a word indicates that you do not want pages that contain that word to appear in your results. The minus sign should be preceded by a space and appear immediately before the word to be excluded. The minus sign can exclude more than one word by combining it with the phrase operator. For example, -"louis b tannen".<br />
<br />
*The OR operator (|)<br/>Searches include all words by default. If you want to allow either one of several words, you can use the OR operator. For example, ed | edward | eddie marlo will return results that contain any of Marlo's first names and include his last name.<br />
<br />
==== Metadata searches ====<br />
<br />
Alexander knows more about each document than just the words they contain -- it can search for items by their title, author, etc. <br />
<br />
*@author name<br/>Items written by name. Use marlo @author racherbaumer to find references to Marlo in Jon Racherbaumer's writings.<br />
<br />
*@title title<br/>Items with the title or sub-title containing name<br />
<br />
*@date start_date end_date<br/>Items published in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@added start_date end_date<br/>Items add to the Alexander online library in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@lang language<br/>Search for items written in language.<br/>Caveat: language support is under development. Not all media is correctly cataloged by language and each document can have only a single language assigned. Both of these deficiencies will be addressed in an upcoming release.<br />
<br />
*@body text<br />
<br />
*@body searches the contents of a document. Searching the contents of the document is the default so you'll probably never, ever use this. It's included here merely for the edification of the adventurous or completist searchers amongst us.<br />
<br />
Metadata searching is a powerful capability and one that we'll expand with more attributes in time.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55844AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T19:04:38Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Metadata searches */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Searching ==<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
=== Some basic facts ===<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
=== Search Results ===<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.<br />
<br />
== Advanced Search ==<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch.png|thumb|Advanced Search location]]<br />
Most searches can be done by simply entering the search terms, but sometimes you want a little more power. For this, you will need the ''Advanced Search'' Page, which can be accessed by clicking on the link below the basic search box.<br />
<br />
=== Using the Advanced Search Page ===<br />
<br />
The basic search will handle 95% of your search needs and the search operators add the power to refine your search results. The Advanced Search page simply exposes the search operators you already know in a simple way. <br />
<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch2.png|thumb|left|Your generated search query]]<br />
<br />
This page also makes it easy to experiment and learn the syntax of the advanced search options. Type search words into the appropriate fields and Alex generate the equivalent basic search into the ''Your generated search query'' field.<br />
<br />
=== Advanced Search Options ===<br />
*Phrase search ("")<br />
Putting double quotes around a set of words tells Alex to search for those words in the exact order without any change. Putting words in quotes will narrow your search results, but perhaps in unexpected ways. For example, searching for "Thomas Nelson Downs" will miss pages that only reference "Thomas Downs".<br />
<br />
*Excluding terms (-)<br />
Prepending a minus sign immediately before a word indicates that you do not want pages that contain that word to appear in your results. The minus sign should be preceded by a space and appear immediately before the word to be excluded. The minus sign can exclude more than one word by combining it with the phrase operator. For example, -"louis b tannen".<br />
<br />
*The OR operator (|)<br />
Searches include all words by default. If you want to allow either one of several words, you can use the OR operator. For example, ed | edward | eddie marlo will return results that contain any of Marlo's first names and include his last name.<br />
<br />
==== Metadata searches ====<br />
<br />
Alexander knows more about each document than just the words they contain -- it can search for items by their title, author, etc. <br />
<br />
*@author name<br/>Items written by name. Use marlo @author racherbaumer to find references to Marlo in Jon Racherbaumer's writings.<br />
* @title title<br/>Items with the title or sub-title containing name<br />
*@date start_date end_date<br/>Items published in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
*@added start_date end_date<br/>Items add to the Alexander online library in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
*@lang language<br/>Search for items written in language.<br/>Caveat: language support is under development. Not all media is correctly cataloged by language and each document can have only a single language assigned. Both of these deficiencies will be addressed in an upcoming release.<br />
*@body text<br />
*@body searches the contents of a document. Searching the contents of the document is the default so you'll probably never, ever use this. It's included here merely for the edification of the adventurous or completist searchers amongst us.<br />
<br />
Metadata searching is a powerful capability and one that we'll expand with more attributes in time.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55843AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T19:01:43Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Advanced Search */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Searching ==<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
=== Some basic facts ===<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
=== Search Results ===<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.<br />
<br />
== Advanced Search ==<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch.png|thumb|Advanced Search location]]<br />
Most searches can be done by simply entering the search terms, but sometimes you want a little more power. For this, you will need the ''Advanced Search'' Page, which can be accessed by clicking on the link below the basic search box.<br />
<br />
=== Using the Advanced Search Page ===<br />
<br />
The basic search will handle 95% of your search needs and the search operators add the power to refine your search results. The Advanced Search page simply exposes the search operators you already know in a simple way. <br />
<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch2.png|thumb|left|Your generated search query]]<br />
<br />
This page also makes it easy to experiment and learn the syntax of the advanced search options. Type search words into the appropriate fields and Alex generate the equivalent basic search into the ''Your generated search query'' field.<br />
<br />
=== Advanced Search Options ===<br />
*Phrase search ("")<br />
Putting double quotes around a set of words tells Alex to search for those words in the exact order without any change. Putting words in quotes will narrow your search results, but perhaps in unexpected ways. For example, searching for "Thomas Nelson Downs" will miss pages that only reference "Thomas Downs".<br />
<br />
*Excluding terms (-)<br />
Prepending a minus sign immediately before a word indicates that you do not want pages that contain that word to appear in your results. The minus sign should be preceded by a space and appear immediately before the word to be excluded. The minus sign can exclude more than one word by combining it with the phrase operator. For example, -"louis b tannen".<br />
<br />
*The OR operator (|)<br />
Searches include all words by default. If you want to allow either one of several words, you can use the OR operator. For example, ed | edward | eddie marlo will return results that contain any of Marlo's first names and include his last name.<br />
<br />
==== Metadata searches ====<br />
<br />
Alexander knows more about each document than just the words they contain -- it can search for items by their title, author, etc. <br />
<br />
*@author name<br />
Items written by name. Use marlo @author racherbaumer to find references to Marlo in Jon Racherbaumer's writings.<br />
<br />
* @title title<br />
Items with the title or sub-title containing name<br />
<br />
*@date start_date end_date<br />
Items published in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@added start_date end_date<br />
Items add to the Alexander online library in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@lang language<br />
Search for items written in language.<br />
Caveat: language support is under development. Not all media is correctly cataloged by language and each document can have only a single language assigned. Both of these deficiencies will be addressed in an upcoming release.<br />
<br />
*@body text<br />
*@body searches the contents of a document. Searching the contents of the document is the default so you'll probably never, ever use this. It's included here merely for the edification of the adventurous or completist searchers amongst us. Onward..<br />
<br />
Metadata searching is a powerful capability and one that we'll expand with more attributes in time.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=File:AdvancedSearch2.png&diff=55842File:AdvancedSearch2.png2012-06-25T19:00:30Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55841AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T19:00:05Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>== Searching ==<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
=== Some basic facts ===<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
=== Search Results ===<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.<br />
<br />
== Advanced Search ==<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch.png|thumb|Advanced Search location]]<br />
Most searches can be done by simply entering the search terms, but sometimes you want a little more power. For this, you will need the ''Advanced Search'' Page, which can be accessed by clicking on the link below the basic search box.<br />
<br />
=== Using the Advanced Search Page ===<br />
<br />
The basic search will handle 95% of your search needs and the search operators add the power to refine your search results. The Advanced Search page simply exposes the search operators you already know in a simple way. <br />
<br />
[[File:AdvancedSearch2.png|thumb|Your generated search query]]<br />
<br />
This page also makes it easy to experiment and learn the syntax of the advanced search options. Type search words into the appropriate fields and Alex generate the equivalent basic search into the ''Your generated search query'' field.<br />
<br />
=== Advanced Search Options ===<br />
*Phrase search ("")<br />
Putting double quotes around a set of words tells Alex to search for those words in the exact order without any change. Putting words in quotes will narrow your search results, but perhaps in unexpected ways. For example, searching for "Thomas Nelson Downs" will miss pages that only reference "Thomas Downs".<br />
<br />
*Excluding terms (-)<br />
Prepending a minus sign immediately before a word indicates that you do not want pages that contain that word to appear in your results. The minus sign should be preceded by a space and appear immediately before the word to be excluded. The minus sign can exclude more than one word by combining it with the phrase operator. For example, -"louis b tannen".<br />
<br />
*The OR operator (|)<br />
Searches include all words by default. If you want to allow either one of several words, you can use the OR operator. For example, ed | edward | eddie marlo will return results that contain any of Marlo's first names and include his last name.<br />
<br />
==== Metadata searches ====<br />
<br />
Alexander knows more about each document than just the words they contain -- it can search for items by their title, author, etc. <br />
<br />
*@author name<br />
Items written by name. Use marlo @author racherbaumer to find references to Marlo in Jon Racherbaumer's writings.<br />
<br />
* @title title<br />
Items with the title or sub-title containing name<br />
<br />
*@date start_date end_date<br />
Items published in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@added start_date end_date<br />
Items add to the Alexander online library in the period specified. A date of - means either the beginning of time or today, depending on whether its used for start or end date respectively. Start and end date must be in the format: mm/dd/yyyy.<br />
<br />
*@lang language<br />
Search for items written in language.<br />
Caveat: language support is under development. Not all media is correctly cataloged by language and each document can have only a single language assigned. Both of these deficiencies will be addressed in an upcoming release.<br />
<br />
*@body text<br />
*@body searches the contents of a document. Searching the contents of the document is the default so you'll probably never, ever use this. It's included here merely for the edification of the adventurous or completist searchers amongst us. Onward..<br />
<br />
Metadata searching is a powerful capability and one that we'll expand with more attributes in time.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=File:AdvancedSearch.png&diff=55840File:AdvancedSearch.png2012-06-25T18:55:03Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55839AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T18:45:52Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png|thumb|Search for Ed Marlo]]<br />
<br />
Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. <br />
<br />
'''Some basic facts'''<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
'''Search Results'''<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in.<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png|thumb|left|Search Results]]<br />
<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help&diff=55838AskAlexander/Help2012-06-25T18:35:55Z<p>Jmaloney: Created page with "This page will contain various help topics for AskAlexander. *Searching"</p>
<hr />
<div>This page will contain various help topics for AskAlexander.<br />
<br />
*[[AskAlexander/Help/Search|Searching]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=File:SearchResults.png&diff=55837File:SearchResults.png2012-06-25T18:34:03Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=File:SearchEdMarlo.png&diff=55836File:SearchEdMarlo.png2012-06-25T18:33:25Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=AskAlexander/Help/Search&diff=55835AskAlexander/Help/Search2012-06-25T18:32:30Z<p>Jmaloney: Created page with "Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. Here is a..."</p>
<hr />
<div>Searching in AskAlexander is simple: just type in what you're interested in, hit Enter, and Alex will search its library for content that is relevant to your search. Here is a sample search for the original Cardician:<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchEdMarlo.png]]<br />
<br />
'''Some basic facts'''<br />
<br />
*Searches are always case insensitive. Searching for "Ed Marlo" is the same as searching for "ed marlo".<br />
*Punctuation is generally ignored.<br />
*Searching for more than one word displays pages that include all the words<br />
<br />
'''Search Results'''<br />
<br />
The search results are designed to make it easy to find exactly what you're interested in. Here's the 1st page of results:<br />
<br />
[[File:SearchResults.png]]<br />
<br />
*The search results within each document show the page number and references to the searched words.<br />
*Clicking the page number or reference displays the page. <br />
*The yellow highlight indicates that last page you visited. In this case, the last visited page was Marlo's list of Top 20 Card Stars in the U.S.A.<br />
*The number of results is dependent on your membership level and active subscriptions.<br />
<br />
The top of the Search Results page (not shown) shows that 828 matching pages were found in this example. To see more matches, click '''NEXT''' or jump to a specific results page by clicking on a number.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Gravesites&diff=2667Gravesites2008-02-28T01:45:05Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Gravesites */</p>
<hr />
<div>Please contribute and add more!<br />
<br />
[http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&time=&date=&ttype=&q=http:%2F%2Fhome.comcast.net%2F~joseph.pecore%2FMagician_graves.kml&ie=UTF8&z=7&om=1 View online with Google Maps] or [http://home.comcast.net/~joseph.pecore/Magician_graves.kml.kml View on Google Earth] (if you have that installed on your computer).<br />
<br />
This list below is convert to the Google Maps/Earth format (KML) to be used with Google Maps and Google Earth links above when [[User:Jpecore|Joe]] has time.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Gravesites ==<br />
<!-- Copy and paste template:<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName= |FirstName= <br />
|Description=|Born=|Died=<br />
|BurialLocation=<br />
|Lat=|Lon=}}<br />
<br />
--><br />
<br />
{| cellspacing="0" border="1"<br />
!Name<br />
!Description<br />
!Born<br />
!Died<br />
!Burial_Location<br />
!Lat<br />
!Lon<br />
<!-- --><br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Gwynne|FirstName=Jack<br />
|Description=An illusionist and Vaudeville magician. Invented the 'Flip over box', 'Temple of Benares', and 'The Illusion Trunk' or 'Gwynne Trunk', which was originally created in the 1940's. <br />
|Born=1895_04_12|Died=1969_12_07<br />
|BurialLocation=Lakeside Cemetery<br />
Colon<br />
St. Joseph County<br />
Michigan, USA<br />
|Lat=41.9667|Lon=-85.3364}}<br />
<!-- --><br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Blackstone, Jr.|FirstName=Harry<br />
|Description=An American stage magician, author, and television performer.He was born in Three Rivers, Michigan, the son of noted stage magician Harry Blackstone, Sr.<br />
|Born=1934_06_30|Died=1997_05_14<br />
|BurialLocation=Lakeside Cemetery<br />
Colon<br />
St. Joseph County<br />
Michigan, USA<br />
|Lat=41.96671|Lon=-85.33641}}<br />
<!-- --><br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Thurston|FirstName=Howard<br />
|Description=|Born=1869_07_20|Died=1936_04_13<br />
|BurialLocation=Green Lawn Abbey Mausoleum<br />
Columbus<br />
Franklin County<br />
Ohio, USA<br />
|Lat= 39.94|Lon=-83.0158 }}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Downs|FirstName=Thomas Nelson <br />
|Description=|Born=1867-03-16|Died=1938-09-11<br />
|BurialLocation=Riverside Cemetery in Marshalltown, Iowa<br />
|Lat=42.0583|Lon=-92.9131}}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=McWethy |FirstName= Don Alan <br />
|Description=|Born=1926-02-22|Died=1999-04-15<br />
|BurialLocation=Lakeside Cemetery<br />
Colon<br />
St. Joseph County<br />
Michigan, USA<br />
|Lat=41.96671|Lon=-85.33641}}<br />
<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Dunn|FirstName=Ricky <br />
|Description=|Born=1929|Died=1999<br />
|BurialLocation=Lakeside Cemetery<br />
Colon<br />
St. Joseph County<br />
Michigan, USA<br />
|Lat=41.96671|Lon=-85.33641}}<br />
<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Fox|FirstName=Karrell<br />
|Description=|Born=|Died=<br />
|BurialLocation=Lakeside Cemetery<br />
Colon<br />
St. Joseph County<br />
Michigan, USA<br />
|Lat=41.96671|Lon=-85.33641}}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Houdini|FirstName=Harry<br />
|Description=|Born=|Died=<br />
|BurialLocation=Machpelah Cemetery<br />
New York City<br />
|Lat=40.6936|Lon=-73.8869}}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Hardeen|FirstName=Theodore<br />
|Description=Houdini's brother|Born=|Died=<br />
|BurialLocation=Machpelah Cemetery<br />
New York City<br />
|Lat=40.6936|Lon=-73.8869}}<br />
<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Herrmann|FirstName=Adelaide<br />
|Description=|Born=|Died=<br />
|BurialLocation=Woodlawn Cemetery<br />
New York City<br />
|Lat=|Lon=}}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Herrmann|FirstName=Alexander<br />
|Description=|Born=|Died=<br />
|BurialLocation=Woodlawn Cemetery<br />
New York City<br />
|Lat=|Lon=}}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Harbin|FirstName=Robert <br />
|Description=|Born=1908|Died=1978<br />
|BurialLocation=Golders Green Crematorium <br />
London, England<br />
|Lat=|Lon=}}<br />
<br />
{{Gravesite|LastName=Leipzig|FirstName=Nate <br />
|Description=|Born=1873_05_31|Died=1939_10_13<br />
|BurialLocation=Mount Hope Cemetery <br />
Hastings-on-Hudson, NY<br />
|Lat=|Lon=}}<br />
<br />
<!-- end table --><br />
|}<br />
<br />
== References ==<br />
* http://www.findagrave.com/<br />
* http://www.findagrave.com/php/famous.php?page=ctf&FSctf=30</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Drawing_Room_Deceptions&diff=1525Drawing Room Deceptions2007-10-26T16:35:12Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Table of Contents */</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Drawing_room_deceptions.jpg|frame|right|Cover]]<br />
<br />
[[Drawing Room Deceptions]] by [[Books by Guy Hollingworth | Guy Hollingworth]] published by [[Books published by Magic Words | Magic Words]] in 1999.<br />
<br />
====Highlights====<br />
<br />
*[[Waving the Aces]]<br />
*[[The Cassandra Quandary]]<br />
*[[Reformation]] (taught in the Epilogue)<br />
<br />
====Table of Contents====<br />
* -<br />
**Waving the Aces<br />
**Oil and Water<br />
**Cherchez la Femme<br />
**The Hofzinser Problem<br />
* -<br />
**The Penetration of Cards Through a Jacket<br />
**Travellers<br />
**An Ambidextrous Interchange<br />
**A "One Card" Routine<br />
* -<br />
**The Control of Chosen Cards<br />
**An Ace Assembly<br />
**The Homing Card<br />
**Cannibal Cards<br />
* -<br />
**The Shift<br />
**Methods for Controlling and Palming<br />
**Switching Cards<br />
**False Dealing<br />
**False Shuffling<br />
* -<br />
**A Gambling Routine<br />
**A More Light-Hearted Routine<br />
**"Call to the Colours"<br />
* -<br />
**A Destroyed and Reproduced Card<br />
**A Card at any Number<br />
**A Card Stab<br />
* -<br />
**Three Cards under a Box<br />
**A Triumph Routine<br />
**The Cassandra Quandary<br />
* -<br />
**Epilogue</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Drawing_Room_Deceptions&diff=1524Drawing Room Deceptions2007-10-26T16:34:11Z<p>Jmaloney: /* Highlights */</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Drawing_room_deceptions.jpg|frame|right|Cover]]<br />
<br />
[[Drawing Room Deceptions]] by [[Books by Guy Hollingworth | Guy Hollingworth]] published by [[Books published by Magic Words | Magic Words]] in 1999.<br />
<br />
====Highlights====<br />
<br />
*[[Waving the Aces]]<br />
*[[The Cassandra Quandary]]<br />
*[[Reformation]] (taught in the Epilogue)<br />
<br />
====Table of Contents====<br />
* -<br />
**Waving the Aces<br />
**Oil and Water<br />
**Cherchez la Femme<br />
**The Hofzinser Problem<br />
* -<br />
**The Penetration of Cards Through a Jacket<br />
**Travellers<br />
**An Ambidextrous Interchange<br />
**A "One Card" Routine<br />
* -<br />
**The Control of Chosen Cards<br />
**An Ace Assembly<br />
**The Homing Card<br />
**Cannibal Cards<br />
* -<br />
**The Shift<br />
**Methods for Controlling and Palming<br />
**Switching Cards<br />
**False Dealing<br />
**False Shuffling<br />
* -<br />
**A Gambling Routine<br />
**A More Light-Hearted Routine<br />
**"Call to the Colours"<br />
* -<br />
**A Destroyed and Reproduced Card<br />
**A Card at any Number<br />
**A Card Stab<br />
* -<br />
**Three Cards under a Box<br />
**A Triumph Routine<br />
**The Cassandra Quandary</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Peter_Samelson&diff=1266Peter Samelson2007-10-14T02:07:00Z<p>Jmaloney: New page: *''Theatrical Close-up (1984)''</p>
<hr />
<div>*''[[Theatrical Close-up (1984)]]''</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Close_Up_Magic_Authors_Starting_With_S&diff=1264Close Up Magic Authors Starting With S2007-10-14T01:34:31Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>"up" to [[Close Up Magic Books]] ([[Close Up Magic Books Indexed By Title |title]], [[Close Up Magic Books Indexed By Artist|artist]], [[Close Up Magic Books Indexed By Author|author]])<br />
<br />
{|<br />
|[[Books by Peter Samelson|Samelson, Peter ]]<br />
|([[Peter Samelson|bio]])<br />
|-<br />
|[[Books by Jay Sankey|Sankey, Jay ]]<br />
|([[Jay Sankey|bio]])<br />
|-<br />
|[[Books by Al Schneider|Schneider, Al]]<br />
|([[Al Schneider |bio]])<br />
|-<br />
|[[Books by Frank Simon|Simon, Frank ]]<br />
|([[Frank Simon|bio]])<br />
|-<br />
|[[Books by Jim Sisti|Sisti, Jim ]]<br />
|([[Jim Sisti|bio]])<br />
|-<br />
|[[Books by Michael Skinner|Skinner, Michael ]]<br />
|[[Michael Skinner|bio]])<br />
|-<br />
|[[Books by Jim Swain|Swain, Jim ]]<br />
|([[Jim Swain|bio]])<br />
|}</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Rick_Bronson&diff=948Rick Bronson2007-10-05T17:42:02Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Rick_Bronson.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Rick Bronson]]<br />
<br />
Starting out in 1981 as a children's magician in Montreal, Canada, a 12-year-old Rick Bronson eventually became one of the most popular kidshow entertainers in the city. Four years later, at 16, he decided to try stand-up comedy, and launched a parallel career that would soon become his exclusive vocation.<br />
<br />
[[Image:rick-bronson-bill-clinton.jpg|thumb|200px|right|With President Bill Clinton]]<br />
<br />
With much of his early act built around some of the same magic he had been doing at children's shows (a comedy Zipper Dove Bag routine, an interactive, multi-phase silk vanish and reproduction sequence, etc.), Bronson quickly realized he was being looked down on by his fellow comedians as a "prop comic" and slowly phased out the magic, relying exclusively on his sharpening stand-up and improv skills. Before long, he began performing at comedy clubs across the country, then abroad, and his explosive, high-energy, Sam Kinison-esque charm earned him a colossal following.<br />
<br />
In 1994, Bronson moved to Edmonton, Alberta and married model Tammy MacPherson, with whom he now has two children (Noah and Tanner), and over the next decade, he taped a national comedy special for CTV (''Comedy Now Presents: Rick Bronson''), hosted seminars for the likes of Bill Clinton and Dr. Phil, and won seven Canadian Organization of Campus Activities (C.O.C.A.) Comedian of the Year awards. He also created, hosted and produced three seasons of the hit travel series, ''The Tourist'', which aired on The Travel Channel (and its affiliates) in over 20 countries, and earned Bronson A.M.P.I.A awards for Best Male Host and Best Light Information Series.<br />
<br />
In 2005, a business opportunity arose that would keep Bronson tied down to his home base for awhile when he opened a high-end comedy club called Rick Bronson’s The Comic Strip on “Bourbon Street” in the world famous West Edmonton Mall. The club quickly gained a reputation among both comedians and audiences for being one of the finest in the country, and now books only the best headliners in North America.<br />
<br />
Perhaps not surprisingly, through all of this, magic has never entirely left Bronson’s blood, and he still has three original routines he will pull out to close a longer set if he’s inclined, including a version of Tricky (a.k.a. “Topsy Turvy”) Bottles called “Ricky Bottles” that was published in ''[[Seven By Rick Bronson]]'' (Acer, 2005). Rick has also had original material published in ''[[Genii Magazine]]'', and appears on two of [[David Acer]]’s lecture DVDs—''On Screen & Other Mysteries'' (2005) and ''Open Traveller'' (2007).<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Bronson,Rick]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Richard_Sanders&diff=947Richard Sanders2007-10-05T17:41:38Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Richard_Sanders.jpg]]<br />
<br />
Richard Sanders is an innovative magician and lecturer from Montreal, Canada. He first came to the attention of the international magic community through his collaborational work with Jay Sankey, a sampling of which appeared in ''Sankey Pankey'' (Kaufman, 1986), then later comprised the entire contents of the book, ''When Creators Collide'' (Sankey/Sanders, 1987).<br />
<br />
In 1989, Sanders formed a comedy magic trio called The Running Gags with fellow magicians [[David Acer]] (now the co-host and co-writer of Discovery Kids’ documentary series, ''[[Mystery Hunters]]'') and Barry Julien (currently a writer on Comedy Central's ''The Colbert Report''). The group performed original, unusual, and highly interactive magic at comedy clubs, colleges and show bars in and around Montreal, then disbanded a little more than a year later when Sanders moved to Toronto to expand his work opportunities.<br />
<br />
In 1998, after years of honing his craft at corporate shows, trade shows, and on cruise ships, Sanders released a small, successful, ten-trick booklet through the [[Camirand Academy of Magic]] called ''Close-Up Assassin'', written by fellow Running Gag, David Acer. Other popular one-trick releases through the Academy followed—“On Foot,” “Picture This” and “Three Ropes and a Baby”—but more recently, Sanders has begun to produce and market his own material, which includes “Slow Burn,” “Interlace,” “Visi-Bill,” “Fiber Optics,” and the three-volume DVD set, ''The Richard Sanders Show''. In 2002, Sanders also renewed his collaborational efforts with Jay Sankey, resulting in the two-volume DVD set, ''The Sankey Sanders Sessions''.<br />
<br />
In addition to these sources, miscellaneous Sanders material has apeared in ''[[Genii Magazine]]'', ''Magic'', Ben Harris’ ''New Directions'', Michael Ammar & Adam J. Fleischer's ''The Magical Arts Journal'', Jim Sisti’s ''The Magic Menu'', Jay Sankey’s ''100% Sankey'' (by [[Richard Kaufman]]), ''Switch'' (by Jon Lovick), and two of David Acer’s books—''Natural Selections'' (1996) and ''Random Acts of Magic'' (2004).<br />
<br />
Sanders has also performed at the Magic Castle, lectured at F.I.S.M., and appeared many times on Canadian television, including featured performances on CBC’s ''The Magic of Canada'' (1995) and Global’s ''Urban Magic'' (2000).<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Sanders,Richard]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Phil_Matlin&diff=946Phil Matlin2007-10-05T17:41:13Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Phil_Matlin.jpg|right|border|Phil Matlin]]<br />
<br />
Phil Matlin is the owner of one of Canada's oldest and most respected magic shops, Perfect Magic, which began as a mail-order company in the basement of his Montreal home in 1976, then, in 1979, moved to the building on Van Horne Avenue where it still resides. In 1980, he co-founded (with William Vermeys, a.k.a. Mephisto) what would eventually become an enormously successful regional convention, Magie Montréal, and began releasing some of his own creations, including "Bewildered," "Future Foretold," and "Silver Sanctums." In the ensuing years, Perfect Magic also produced and marketed tricks by, among others, [[David Acer]] ("Quartermain," "Spare Change"), [[Michael Ammar]] ("Visually Yours"), [[Buddy Ankner]] ("Ankner's Aces"), and [[Bill Zavis]] ("Soft Center"), and in the mid 1980s, [[Videonics]] recorded Phil Matlin's lecture, ''Perfect Magic'', as part of their groundbreaking line of videos, which are now the property of [[L&L Publishing]].<br />
<br />
More recently, Matlin has been indulging his interest in ragtime music, playing piano live for the legendary manipulator [[Romaine]] in a touring show called "Back in Time" (Matlin also played piano for [[Cardini]] when he appeared at the Bellevue Casino Nite Club in Montreal), and releasing two CDs—''Ragtime Magic'' and ''Ragtime Daze''—both available through www.perfectmagic.com.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Matlin,Phil]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Paul_Harris&diff=945Paul Harris2007-10-05T17:40:46Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>'''Paul Harris''' is an inventor, magician, and writer. Described by the magazine [[Genii_Magazine| Genii Magazine]] (December 1996) as "the most innovative magic mind of our day" and is listed in [[MAGIC_Magazine| MAGIC Magazine]] (August 1999) as one of "the 100 magicians who shaped the art of magic in America." <br />
<br />
He has invented many original tricks including: Linking playing cards, a solid deck, a torn and restored card effect, coins materializing from mirrors, a card that appears to turning ninety degrees when pushed into the pack, and a torn and restored quarter.<br />
<br />
''MAGIC'' magazine (August 1999) states that "the feats of astonishments that Paul creates and teaches are in the repertoires of a multitude of working pros."<br />
<br />
Harris has performed at the Dunes Hotel and at other locations on the Las Vegas Strip and was a technical advisor for [[David Blaine]]'s ''Magic Man'' and ''Street Magic'' TV shows. He also wrote the screenplay for the abysmal 1987 film ''Nice Girls Don't Explode.''<br />
<br />
In 2007, his effect "LadyBug" won 3rd place in The Magic Woods Awards for Best Trick 2007.<br />
<br />
MAGIC magazine did a Paul Harris cover issue for June 2007, which contained a great cover story "Living in Astonishment" by [[Eric Mead]].<br />
<br />
== Bibliography ==<br />
Magic Books written by Paul Harris:<br />
<br />
* 1976: ''[[Magic of Paul Harris]]''<br />
* 1976: ''[[Paul Harris Reveals Some of His Most Intimate Secrets]]'' <br />
* 1976: ''[[Super Swindle]]'' (Manuscript) <br />
* 1977: ''[[Inside/Close up]]'' (Lecture notes)<br />
* 1977: ''[[Cardboard Connection]]'' (Manuscript) <br />
* 1977: ''[[Supermagic]]'' <br />
* 1978: ''[[Las Vegas close-up]]'' <br />
* 1979: ''[[Close-Up Entertainer]]''<br />
* 1980: ''[[Close Up Fantasies Book One]]'' <br />
* 1980: ''[[Close Up Fantasies Book Two]]''<br />
* 1980: ''[[The Inner Circle]]'' (Manuscript) <br />
* 1981: ''[[Close Up Fantasies Finale]]'' <br />
* 1981: ''[[P.H. Breakthrough]]'' (Manuscript)<br />
* 1983: ''[[Immaculate Connection]]'' (Manuscript) <br />
* 1983: ''[[Close-Up Kinda Guy]]'' <br />
* 1983: ''[[Brainstorm in the Bahamas]]'' (with Mike Ammar, Daryl) <br />
* 1984: ''[[Close-Up Seductions]]'' <br />
* 1991: ''[[Secrets of the Astonishing Executive]] with Bill Herz'' <br />
* 1996: ''[[Art of Astonishment]] Vol 1-3''<br />
<br />
<br />
== Noted illusions ==<br />
Amongst the magicians who are known to have presented Paul Harris creations are [[David Copperfield]] and [[Doug Henning]]. In the field of card and close-up magic, Paul Harris more or less re-innovated the genre during the 1970-80s, and is held in very high regard among magicians in the western world.<br />
<br />
Doug Henning performed a routine called "Twilight" on his third TV special (December 13, 1977). An effect using a coin and a mirror where the mirror image of the coin becomes real. A surreal piece.<br />
<br />
David Copperfield in a 1984 special (the one where he made the Statue of Liberty disappear) performed a linking card effect "The Immaculate Connection." In this routine, the magician tears holes in the center of three playing cards in order to create three "frames." The illusion consists in causing the frames to appear to link and unlink without damaging any of the cards. At the conclusion, the cards are sometimes passed for inspection; to all appearances no extra cards or gimmicks are employed. <br />
<br />
[[Rudy Coby]], in his English TV series, used Paul Harris's odd idea of letting the helium in a balloon magically change place with the air in the performer's lungs—-so, as the balloon slowly sunk to the floor, the performer simultaneously went up in the air with an all squeaky voice.<br />
<br />
Paul Harris has been a technical advisor/magic consultant for [[David Blaine]]'s TV Shows.<br />
<br />
== External links ==<br />
* [http://www.theastonishmentproject.com The Astonishment Project Website]<br />
* [http://archive.denisbehr.de/archive/resultkey.php?search=Harris,%20Paul&connect=string&creator=creator&prop=all&bookonly=all&order=title Denis Behr's Searchable Magic Book Contents]<br />
* [http://www.geocities.com/magicpaulharris The Ultimate Paul Harris fan page]<br />
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Harris_%28magician%29 Wikipedia article]<br />
* [http://magicref.tripod.com/magref/pharris.htm Paul Harris Reference Guide]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Harris,Paul]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Patrik_Kuffs&diff=944Patrik Kuffs2007-10-05T17:40:20Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Patrik_Kuffs.gif]]<br />
<br />
Patrik Kuffs is a magician, mentalist, author and lecturer from Montreal, Canada who has appeared many times on some of the country’s highest rated French-language television shows. (''Juste Pour Rire'', ''Le Grand Rire Bleu'', ''Ad Lib'', etc.)<br />
<br />
In 2000, he made his English-language television debut (with [[David Acer]] and [[Richard Sanders]]) on a “street magic” special for Global TV called [[Urban Magic]], and later appeared on a children’s science series called [[Popular Mechanics for Kids]]. More recently, he has engaged in a series of extended runs for his one-man mentalism show in a variety of upscale Montreal venues, and a book of tricks he wrote for the public (in French) called [[Pscychomagie]] was published in 2003.<br />
<br />
In addition, Kuffs has produced three lecture DVDs for magicians - [[Metal Bending: The Real Work]] ([[Camirand Academy of Magic]]), [[Mind Stunts]] and [[Mind Stunts II]], and a smattering of his original material has appeared in [[Lee Earle]]’s [[Syzygy]], [[Banachek]]’s [[Psychological Subtleties II]], [[John Lovick]]’s [[Switch]], [[Robert Cassidy]]’s [[Quintessence]], [[Genii Magazine]], [[MAGIC]], and in a small booklet called [[Seven by Patrik Kuffs]] (Acer, 2004).<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Kuffs,Patrik]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Michel_Huot&diff=942Michel Huot2007-10-05T17:39:49Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Michel_Huots_Eye.jpg|thumbnail|100px|left|Michel Huot]]<br />
<br />
Michel Huot is a Montreal-based close-up magician who, among other things, has performed several unusual (and noteworthy) acts at [[Fechter’s Finger Flicking Frolic]], including a memorable appearance in 2007 with fellow Montrealer [[Yannick Lacroix]] as “The Human Deck of Cards.” Huot’s original material has also been published in [[Genii Magazine]], [[MAGIC]], [[Northern Peaks]], [[David Acer]]’s [[Random Acts of Magic]] (2004), [[John Lovick]]’s [[Switch]] (2006), and in a small collection of his own tricks, [[Seven by Michel Huot]] (Acer, 2003).<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Huot,Michel]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Jon_Racherbaumer&diff=941Jon Racherbaumer2007-10-05T17:39:16Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>==Biography==<br />
Jon Racherbaumer was born January 22, 1940, in Oak Park, Illinois, under the sign of Aquarius. His early years were spent in Elmhurst, Illinois (Harlan Tarbell’s hometown), a western suburb of Chicago. His interest in magic was sparked by seeing Dr. Tarbell perform in 1950. Tarbell’s daughter, Marian, was involved in community theater with Jon’s mother at the time. Soon thereafter, he received his first magic book, Tarbell Course in Magic –Volume 1, on his eleventh birthday. After discovering that Dr. Tarbell had donated his entire course to the local library, Jon spent many hours diligently studied each volume along with other magic books in the library.<br />
<br />
Jon joined the Mazda Mystics Club (Juniors) in 1953, a club started by Russell Shaw and his wife in Oak Park, Illinois. Meetings were held in the basement of the Mazda Magic Shop. He maintained his interest throughout his schooling and thereafter when he moved to New Orleans in 1963. The Big Easy, home of the Mardi Gras, jazz music, and voodoo, is often called the Dream State, an ideal place for all things magical to ferment. From 1957 to 1965, Jon attended four universities and worked at various jobs: radio programmer, disk-jockey, promotion man, salesman, restaurant manager, male model, tree-trimmer, blackjack dealer, construction worker, warehouseman, program consultant (voluntary health agency), institutional house-father, social worker, gym instructor, bartender, ambulance driver (at a race track), and finally he went to work for Eastern Airlines from 1965-1990 as an airlines business person.<br />
<br />
He eventually joined the International Brotherhood of Magicians and the Society of American Magicians in 1966, is a member of the Order of Merlin, and is a Lifetime Member of the Magic Castle in Hollywood, California. He worked as an Associate Editor at Richard Kaufman’s GENII magazine and currently writes "On the Slant," a monthly column. He was a columnist and contributing editor to Stan Allen’s MAGIC magazine for six years and has been the Parade Editor for the LINKING RING since 1991. He writes a regular column ("THe Artful Ledger") in Antimony magazine, a quarterly. Additionally, he was an active columnist for Joe Steven’s Gemini Magic Network. He has contributed columns to M-U-M (“At The Table”) and scores of tricks and articles to various magazines: Genii, The New Tops, M-U-M, Linking Ring, The New Pentagram, Blue Print, Precursor, The Looking Glass, The Conjuror, and Apocalypse. He has published over 60 books and is a recipient of a Literary Fellowship from the Academy of Magical Arts and Sciences and the Milbourne Christopher Literary Award.<br />
<br />
Jon’s mentors were Ed Marlo and Eddie Fields; however, at different times he was inspired by Channing Pollock, Cardini, Don Alan, Albert Goshman, Chan Canasta, Tony Slydini, Finn Jon, Lennert Green, Tommy Wonder and Juan Tameriz. His (magic) literary influences are Martin Gardner, John Northern Hilliard, Walter Gibson, Ted Annemann, Bruce Elliott, P. Howard Lyons, and Victor Farelli.<br />
<br />
His other interests are: body-building, literature, book-collecting, martial arts, philosophy, poetry, film, theater (theory), cosmology, painting, and mathematical recreations.<br />
<br />
He has seven children (Karen, Michael, Jona, Jonathan, Erika, Robynn, and Ry) and ten grandchildren (Lindsey, Matthew, Thomas, Sasha, Autumn, Ben, Adam, Allyssa, Sophina, and Koko).<br />
<br />
==Bibliography==<br />
<br />
===Publications===<br />
<br />
# The Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields (1968)<br />
# On the Clock Effect (1971)<br />
# The Universal Card (1972)<br />
# Further Flight (1973)<br />
# Hyper-Twist (1975)<br />
# Kabbala Three (Lou Tannen) <br />
## Suppressed edition (1975)<br />
## Printed edition (June - 1976)<br />
# Lecture Notes 1 (1976)<br />
# The Mandarin Mystery Coin (1976)<br />
# The Ascanio Spread (1976)<br />
# Card-Coins (1977)<br />
# Good Turns (1977)<br />
# Arch Triumphs (1978)<br />
# Kabbala - Volume 1 (October - 1980)<br />
# Kabbala - Volume 2 (March - 1981) This includes the missing issues 9-10-11-12.<br />
# The Lost Pages of Kabbala (May - 1981)<br />
# Card Finesse (1982)<br />
# Lecture Notes 2 - IBM Convention (1982)<br />
# The Card Puzzle (1983)<br />
# Marlo Without Tears (1983)<br />
# Facsimile I<br />
# At The Table (1984)<br />
# Gaffed To The Hilt (1985)<br />
## A collaboration with Don England and Richard Kaufman<br />
# Card Fixes (1990)<br />
# Lecture Notes 3 - European Lecture Tour (July - 1991)<br />
# Synergistic Sandwiches (1991)<br />
# Cavorting Ladies (1991)<br />
# The Wild Card Kit - First Edition (1991) spiral-bound<br />
# Cabbages & Kings (1991)<br />
# Lecture Notes 4 - Another Roadside Attraction (1991)<br />
# Racherbaumer Papers (September - 1991)<br />
# Wild Card Kit (1992) - hard-bound edition<br />
# Back To The Future Classic (1992)<br />
# Vintage Marlo - Volume One (1992)<br />
# Pastiche (1992)<br />
# Full Tilt (1992)<br />
# Big-Easy Card-Cunning (1992)<br />
# Chronopoly (1992)<br />
# Card Finesse II (1992) hard-bound<br />
# Inside Tracks - Lecture 5 (1992)<br />
# Psi-Clones (1992)<br />
# Compleat K.M. Move (1992)<br />
# Compleat Devilish Miracle (1992)<br />
# Flashpoints (1992)<br />
# Imitations, Intimations (1993)<br />
# Pastiche II (1994)<br />
# Recycle (1994)<br />
# Magie Duvivier (1996)<br />
# Arcade Dreams (1997)<br />
# Greater Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields (1997)<br />
# The Amazing Cigar (1998)<br />
# The Legendary Hierophant (1998)<br />
# The Legendary Kabbala (1998)<br />
# In A Class by Himself: The Legacy of Don Alan (2000)<br />
# No Pipe Dreams: Trade Secrets of Mike Rogers (2002 - unpublished)<br />
# Prime Moves (2002)<br />
# Counthesarus - Volume One (2005)<br />
# Sankey Unleashed (2004)<br />
# Art and Ardor at the Card Table (2004)<br />
# Marlo on Erdnase (2007) (soon to be released)<br />
<br />
===Periodicals=== <br />
<br />
THE HIEROPHANT (1969-1980)<br />
1 - September - 1969<br />
2 - Winter - 1969<br />
3 - March - 1970<br />
4 - June - 1970<br />
5-6 - (Fall/Spring 1970-71)<br />
7 - Resurrection Issue (1975)<br />
8 - The Last Hierophant (June-1980)<br />
<br />
THE KABBALA<br />
<br />
Volume 1 (1-12) September 1971 - August 1972<br />
Volume 2 (1-8) September 1972 - April 1973 (four issues missing)<br />
<br />
AVATAR (2 issues) 1973<br />
<br />
PIDDLINGS & PETTIFOGGERY (January - 1972)<br />
50 Xerox copies<br />
<br />
STICKS & STONES<br />
<br />
1-12 (1976)<br />
13-24 (1977)<br />
This leaflet was part of Son of Bat Jr. (Lloyd Jones)<br />
96 pages, complete<br />
<br />
SWIPE<br />
<br />
1-7 (1991-93)<br />
<br />
THE OLRAM FILE<br />
<br />
Volume 1 (1-12) December 1990 - June 1992<br />
Number 13 (September-1992)<br />
Numbers 14-16 (1993)<br />
<br />
MARLOPHILE<br />
<br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
<br />
THE LOOKING GLASS (with Richard Kaufman and Stephen Hobbs)<br />
<br />
(1995) <br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
(1998)<br />
<br />
FACSIMILE<br />
<br />
(September - 1983)<br />
(1994)<br />
(1995)<br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
<br />
OBITER DICTA: Dust-Motes in the Grid<br />
27 installments (available through Joe Steven’s Gemini Network)<br />
<br />
FOREIGN EDITIONS<br />
<br />
The Very Best of Kabbala (Richard Vollmer) 1981<br />
The Very Best of Hierophant (Richard Vollmer) 1985<br />
These are translated into French<br />
<br />
EDITED and RE-WROTE:<br />
<br />
Hauntiques (Christian Chelman)<br />
Vis-a-Vis (Jack Avis)<br />
<br />
Technical Editor (with Mark Levy):<br />
Magic For Dummies (1999)<br />
<br />
===External Links===<br />
* [http://jonracherbaumer.com Jon Racherbaumer's Website]<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Racherbaumer,Jon]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Doug_henning&diff=940Doug henning2007-10-05T17:38:34Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
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<div>{{unreferencedsection}}<br />
<br />
Douglas James Henning was born on May 3, 1947 in the Winnipeg suburb of Fort Gary, Manitoba to father Clarke Henning (an air line pilot for Air Canada) and mother Shirley Jean Henning (nee Rutherford.)<br />
<br />
== Early Life ==<br />
<br />
At six years old, he watched [[Richiardi]] on the Ed Sullivan Show float a young lady in mid-air. When he asked his mother how it's done, she told him, "That's magic!" Doug was hooked. He soon finds his way to the local library where he finds the usual library books on magic. An industrious Doug then makes his props from cardboard, tin cans, and construction paper; he then talks his parents into buying a magic kit.<br />
<br />
Doug once asked his father to scratch an identifying mark on a coin, which Doug wrapped in a handkerchief and made disappear. Then he reached around to his rear pocket to produce a tiny box, which he asked his father to open. Inside was a tinier box, and in that a little cloth bag, within which he found his own marked coin. "That was the first time I had ever given anybody wonder! It was a marvelous feeling." His mother then encouraged a shy Doug to perform for his two sisters; Nancy and Carol, hoping it would draw him out. "I was so shy," he recalled, "When company came I used to hide in the clothes hamper."<br />
In 1956 Doug’s father received a promotion and the family moved to Oakville, Ontario.<br />
<br />
His father built him a magic table and in 1961, at age 14, Doug performed his first paid show at a friend's birthday party for the princely sum of $5. Soon after he had "The Great Hendoo" business cards printed and places an ad in the local paper: "Magician, Have Rabbit, Will Travel." From then on he was busy performing two to three shows per week for $15 a show.<br />
<br />
At age 16 Doug began performing magic in local TV shows and started to attend meetings of Toronto's famed [[Hat & Rabbit Club]]. He also attended [[Abbott's Get-Together]] and Wisconsin's Houdini Club Conventions.<br />
<br />
In the January, 1965 issue of [[The Zombie]], the youth-magicians section of the [[Hade-E-Gram]], [[Micky Hades]] wrote: "With this issue of the [[Hade-E-Gram]] Doug Henning takes over as editor of the young magicians section." He would continue to edit this for one year.<br />
<br />
== University ==<br />
<br />
During this time Doug also performed at a High school-assembly show and was promoted with a publicity shot of Doug levitating his younger sister Nancy.<br />
In 1967 Doug Enrolled at McMaster University in Hamilton with plans to get a degree in physiological psychology with intentions to continue studies at medical school. While at school he studied the psychology of perception, which helped him to understand the power of suggestion and attention manipulation in creating his illusions. "My thesis was on Hypnotism." Henning told MacLean’s Magazine in the December 1974 edition.<br />
<br />
Doug also studied acting, mime, and dance. "The real magic is in the presentation of your illusions. Every thing you say and every movement you make count toward making your audience believe in your magic."<br />
<br />
To support himself Doug performed in restaurants and nightclubs. Doug is able to books his show "Magic-A-Go-Go," in Barbados during spring break, then in the Yorkville coffee houses of Toronto. He also opened for such rock bands as Lighthouse and Breathless.<br />
<br />
"During College, I was making as much as $5,000 a year," Doug would later tell a New York Times reporter. "In addition to night clubs, I did Rotary Club stuff in a tuxedo. You know, they'd have a belly dancer, a bad pianist, a terrible comedian - and me." He also performed in a strip joint. "I was real innocent and had never seen a naked woman."<br />
<br />
“At first, when I was in college, being a magician was not the classiest thing to be. It was like being a folk singer before Bob Dylan came around and people thought you only did Old English folk songs. Everyone thought a magician worked only children’s birthday parties – I’ve done that, too – and nightclubs were afraid to book me too.”<br />
<br />
This would be a good place to note that during this time Doug would perform with short hair and clean-shaven. He would wear a sport coat and bow tie, or a crisp Nehru jacket. He didn't switch to his tradition bell-bottoms and long hair until later<br />
<br />
In 1968 Doug begins performing with new assistant [[Mars]], who he met in University. As well, it was during this time that his father died in a plane crash.<br />
<br />
During a semester break, Henning and Mars are booked for the 7th anniversary week of the [[Magic Castle]]. In 1970 Doug graduated with a B.Sc. in Honors Psychology. After graduation Doug was speaking with Dr. Roy Pritchard, a psychology professor who he frequently discussed the related mysteries of human perception and magical illusion. The professor posed a provocative question. "Why do you want to be a doctor? There are already tons of good doctors, but where are the magicians?"<br />
<br />
With this in mind, Doug decided to "Give magic a whirl" for two years before going into medicine.<br />
<br />
== Army Tour ==<br />
<br />
In 1971 Doug received an invitation from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to perform Christmas shows for troops stationed "400 miles from the North Pole." <br />
<br />
"At one point on the tour, they asked if I would like to do a show for a group of Inuit's [Eskimos]. … I set up me show in a little building, and the Inuit's came in to watch. They sat on the floor in their parkas, and I did what I thought was some pretty good stuff. They just sat there, didn't smile, didn't say a word and, at the end, nobody applauded. But they were completely focused on me, like I was some sort of phenomenon. Only one of them spoke English, so I asked him, "Did you like the show?"<br />
<br />
"Yes, we like the show," He said.<br />
<br />
Then I asked, "Did everyone like the magic?" <br />
<br />
He said, "The magic?" <br />
<br />
I explained that I was trying to entertain people. <br />
<br />
He said, "Entertainment is good, but why are you doing magic? The whole world is magical…" We sat down on the floor and he told me "It's magic that the snow falls, all those little crystals are completely different… that's magic."<br />
<br />
Now I was gasping, trying to explain magic to him. I thought of my "Zombie," which I thought was my best thing. I said, "I made that beautiful silver ball float in the air… That's magic."<br />
<br />
"Then the Inuit's started talking among themselves. The man came to me with a big smile on his face, and said, "Now, we know why you're doing that. It's because your people have forgotten the magic. You're doing it to remind them of magic. Well done!""<br />
<br />
"I cried right then… I said, "Thank you for teaching me about the magic. I didn't know." That was really the first time I knew what wonder was. It was the most memorable thing that has ever happened to me. I never forgot that, inside. That's why I became a magician.""<br />
<br />
Doug returned home and abandoned plans for medical school.<br />
<br />
== The Henning Formula ==<br />
<br />
THE HENNING FORMULA: Magic + Theatre = Art.<br />
<br />
With this thesis, Doug applied for a Canadian Council of the Arts Grant, governmental funding traditionally awarded to musicians, singers, dancers, painters, and playwrights. Upon receiving a rejection letter stating "Magic is not a fine art," He traveled to Montreal, where he performed, thus convincing a skeptical panel of the Canadian Council of the Arts to grant him $4,000 plus travel expenses to pursue the study of magic as an art.<br />
<br />
In 1971, the 24-year-old college "dropout" studied dance with Lenny Gibson in Toronto and pantomime with Adrian Pecknold, director of the Canadian Mime Theatre Company. He became more graceful, using his hands more theatrically. He then traveled to Europe then to New York to learn sleight of hand from [[Tony Slydini]] "The Master of Misdirection," who taught Doug maneuvers for diverting audience attention.<br />
<br />
He then attended the [[PCAM]] ([[Pacific Coast Association of Magicians]]) convention in Vancouver. By now he had grown his hair and was starting to dress in the style that he would soon become famous for. As Hermetic Press owner and magical author [[Stephen Minch]] described it in Genii, March 1997, "When I got to Vancouver the only other long hair at this convention was Doug … He was traveling from Toronto through Vancouver for this convention, then down to L.A. to spend some time with Dai Vernon … The second day of the convention, one of Doug's lungs collapsed, and he had to be hospitalized."<br />
<br />
The lung collapse was the result of a congenital ailment. In three months he underwent 13 unsuccessful attempts to permanently reinflate his lungs. He lost 35 pounds, became addicted to morphine, the painkiller he was given, and came to realize "there was a chance I was going to die." Then a 14th try succeeded. "It's the greatest miracle that I am alive." <br />
<br />
After recovery he went to the West Coast to study with [[Dai Vernon]] at the [[Magic Castle]].<br />
<br />
"… I went to Hollywood, where Dai lives … and he agreed to take me on as a student. So I spent three months with him. I was the first Pupil he ever had. We watched films, really old films, of [[Blackstone]] and [[Kellar]] and people like that. And we talked about magic, and we did magic together. And with him I developed my own style of magic. You know, what we talked about. Magic." <br />
<br />
After Henning completed his apprenticeship with the [[Professor]], in his March 1972 column in [[Genii]], [[The Conjurors Magazine]] wrote: "I predict that if he keeps up with his present schedule of study and dedication, Doug Henning will be a great success in magic, and he will help magic itself consequently."<br />
<br />
== Spellbound ==<br />
<br />
Impressed with the success of the rock musical Hair, Doug convinced college friend Ivan Reitman (Who would also go on to great success as a movie producer & director) to co-produce a "rock concert of illusion" to be called [[Spellbound]]. Doug happened across a college friend who had just taken a job at a bank. Through his friend he was able to borrow $5,000 from the bank to buy the mostly-used illusions. Because of this loan his friend looses his job. Ivan gets a starving musician friend to write the songs. They stage a backer's audition and raise $40,000. Doug then teams with [[Maya]], who is his assistant during the show and plays the Goddess of Magic. ([[Mars]] and [[Maya]] will eventually become a team and present their own illusion show.)<br />
<br />
After eight months of rehearsal, a last-minute show cancellation allows them to open at the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto, owned by flamboyant merchandiser Ed Mirvish. Bob Mirvish, Ed's brother, had attended the backers' audition, taking his two small sons. Remembering the little boys' delight with Doug's illusions, the Mirvishes hastily called Doug and Ivan, and a bargain was struck. [[Spellbound]] had a home.<br />
<br />
Urjo Kareda, reviewing for the Toronto Star, said, "[[Spellbound]] is a magic show with pretensions, you see, and one of its delusions is this weary plot." Although another critic hailed him as "the most exciting magician since [[Houdini]], [[Thurston]] and [[Blackstone]]."<br />
<br />
Even with bad reviews, audiences love Doug, and the two-week run broke all box-office records for the theatre, including Hair and Godspell. A short piece on January 4, 1974, in a Toronto newspaper indicated that "A spokesman for [[Spellbound]], the magic show ending a two-week run at the Royal Alexandra theatre tomorrow, claims $10,000-per-day ticket sales over the holidays, a feat surpassing Toronto's Hair."<br />
<br />
"I was only making $500 a week, less than the members of the orchestra." Doug would later say.<br />
<br />
New York producers Edgar Lansbury (Brother of Angela Lansbury and producer of Broadway hit Gypsy) and Joe Beruh (also producer of Gypsy) came to Toronto to see the show, and negotiations begin for a Broadway production.<br />
<br />
== The Magic Show ==<br />
<br />
With a new book written by Bob Randall, and with new music by Stephen Schwartz (who wrote the music for the popular Broadway show Pippen) and directed and choreographed by Grover Dale (Who was married to Anita Morris, the actress who played Charmin in the show.) <br />
<br />
There was one major problem with writing the show, Doug couldn't sing. To make up for it they wove the plot so that it was the other cast members who presented the musical side of the show, so Doug only had to worry about the magic.<br />
<br />
After twelve days of previews, on May 28, 1974 [[The Magic Show]] opened at the Cort Theatre in New York City. In a review published in [[The New Tops]] (Vol. 14 No. 7, July 1974) Larry Valentine says, "The Magic Show has a rather weak story line but does offer some fine comedy material along with some thoroughly forgettable songs by Stephen Schwartz." Yet he concludes, "All in all it was a delightful evening." Meanwhile, Clive Barnes in the New York Times says, "Doug Henning is terrific! He is the greatest magician I have ever seen; Brilliant!"<br />
<br />
The setting for the show is a seedy nightclub, the Passaic Top Hat, a nightclub in New Jersey, where an aging alcoholic magician "Feldman the Magnificent," (David Ogden Stiers, who would later claim fame as Charles on the hit TV show M*A*S*H) an overly grand performer. Manny the Top Hat owner (Robert Lupone) wants to replace him. Because he is drunk all the time, Manny brings in Doug Henning's character, also named Doug. He is very unconventional as far as magicians go, as Feldman points this out in the song "Style."<br />
<br />
Doug has this assistant named Cal (Dale Soules) who is in love with Doug, but he is focused on advancing his career and pays little attention to her. She sings that she'd like to be a "Lion Tamer," in order to get him to notice. <br />
<br />
Donna (Annie McGreevey) and Dina (Cheryl Barnes) are the rock act in the club. One of them dates the nephew of a big agent named Goldfarb (Sam Schacht). Goldfarb is coming to the club to check out Donna and Dina as a favor to the nephew. Everyone is excited, especially Feldman. <br />
<br />
Meanwhile, Doug realizes he needs a beautiful assistant. Cal gets mad and tells him she's just going to go back to West End Avenue. Doug is busy conjuring up the beautiful Charmin (Anita Morris).<br />
<br />
Charmin says when Goldfarb gets a look at her, it's Doug's act that he will love. Donna and Dina get worried, and along with Feldman, plot to expose the secrets to Doug's tricks during the show. They fail. Doug realizes he loves Cal, and gets to her before she leaves. Charmin is sent back to wherever she came from. Feldman tries to do an act with Donna and Dina.<br />
<br />
In the Thursday, June 13, 1974 edition of the New York Times, Doug explains how he prepares for shows. "I keep myself in condition … during the day, I work these cards and do finger exercises - this is my equivalent of a musician practicing his scales. I do yoga exercises for an hour a day and I meditate for 20 minutes twice a day. I can't be tired, because I might get killed if I don't move fast."<br />
<br />
The show becomes a four-an-a-half-year Broadway fixture for theatergoers, running either 1,859 or 1920 performances. (Depending on which source you use.)<br />
On December 25, 1974 Doug made his first appearance on The Tonight Show, with guest host John Davidson. Doug was the last of four guests (which included Robert Goulet and Barbera Eden) and he performed an illusion, talked about his upcoming special, [[Houdini]] and did some card tricks for "the panel." <br />
<br />
== Magic on T.V. ==<br />
<br />
As well, after eight months of design and rehearsal, [[Doug Henning's World of Magic]] aired live on Friday, December 26, 1975, on NBC with special guest Bill Cosby. Produced by famed talk show host David Suskind and sponsored by Mobil, the show ran live without commercials and began with an introduction by Gene Kelly. Then they showed a close up on Doug's hands manipulating a nickel, then a jukebox production of Bill Cosby. He introduced a number of novel (for the time) illusions, including a version of [[DeKolta's Vanishing Lady]] (with special musical guest Lori Liberman) and concluded with an up-tempo version of [[Houdini]]'s [[Water Torture Escape]]<br />
<br />
The special was the top rated show for the evening, with a reported 50 million viewers, making it the highest-rated magic special of all time. The show also won the Christopher Award for outstanding achievement. In this one-hour show more people saw Doug Henning's magic than saw Houdini during his entire lifetime. Overnight, people all over the U.S. and Canada knew Doug's name and face. <br />
<br />
In 1976 Doug left The Magic Show for two months and, with the latest from his TV special and the best of the Broadway show, toured colleges with his lecture/demonstration [[Illusion & Reality]].<br />
<br />
Magic's new superstar finally left [[The Magic Show]] and, in October, moved to Los Angeles to begin work on a second special and on special paraphernalia for the soul group Earth, Wind & Fire. In December, [[Doug Henning's World of Magic II]] aired, again live and with only two commercial breaks, on NBC. The theme for this show was "Fire, water and air" and is hosted by actor Michael Landon. The show included Doug vanishing an elephant and also included a segment with special guest magician [[Ricky Jay]].<br />
<br />
In January of 1977, Doug received the coveted Georgie Award from the Academy Guild of Variety Artists for Special Attraction Entertainer of the Year. Doug then spent seven months in Switzerland, studying Transcendental Meditation at Maharishi European University.<br />
<br />
Along with co-author [[Charles Reynolds]], Doug wrote his first book, [[Houdini: His Legend and His Magic]]. It was published by Warner Books and included hundreds of pictures from Houdini's personal scrapbooks, and presented the legendary escape artist through the eyes of Doug Henning as a young magician. <br />
<br />
In the February edition of the magazine Canadian Review, Doug summed up his philosophy, "My theory is this: the difficult must become habit; habit must become easy in order to make it beautiful. And only when it's beautiful is it magic. Audiences and I don't care what I use to make it happen. I'll use all the things in my power to convince people that there is an unknown."<br />
<br />
On December 13, 1977, Doug marked his second appearance on The Tonight Show, this time with regular host Johnny Carson. While Doug performed illusions and chatted with Johnny and the panel, he also plugged his new book on [[Houdini]] and announced that he is getting married in a week.<br />
<br />
On December 15th, [[Doug Henning's World of Magic III]] aired live with guests Glen Campbell and Sandy Duncan. The hyped illusion on this one is "Walking Through a Brick Wall," and immediately following the broadcast a contract is negotiated with NBC for three more one-hour shows.<br />
<br />
Doug then married songwriter and fellow TM devotee Barbara DeAngelis, (who would later become a motivational speaker specializing on relationships). It was his first marriage and her second. Together they would begin the project that would become the Broadway show [[Merlin]] when Doug read a book titled The Crystal Cave and found his mind pole-vaulting across centuries to feel both reverence and affection for the ancient seer.<br />
<br />
In 1978 Doug showed up in New York City when the 50th anniversary [[SAM]] Convention honors [[Dai Vernon]], then celebrating his 84th birthday.<br />
<br />
On December 14, [[Doug Henning's World of Magic IV]] aired with the theme "A Magical Journey Through Time." The show is fraught with problems. Doug tipped off a mirrored table, illusions misfired, and tigers escaped backstage swallowing a menagerie of baby chicks and ducks that was supposed to be the touching finale. Because these problems, this is the last special broadcast live.<br />
<br />
In 1979 Doug hit the road again with his two-hour [[World of Magic]] show. Between the 54-major United States and Canadian cities played, the tour also included lengthy engagements at the Sahara in Reno and the Las Vegas Hilton. Doug became the first magical celebrity to headline in Las Vegas, going to star at the Caesars and MGM Grand.<br />
<br />
Doug then appeared on The Crystal Gayle Special, a variety program starring singer Crystal Gayle and featuring, along with Doug, B.B. King and The Statler Brothers.<br />
<br />
As well, Magic Mania, the longest and largest magical musical, opened in Tokyo, Japan. Doug created, built and staged the dozens of illusions for the show and taught them to the cast.<br />
<br />
On February 4 through 8, 1980 Doug filmed an episode of The Muppet Show, performing such effects slicing up a huge monster then putting it back together in a different order. The producers of the show decided not to edit the magic routines, so how they aired was how they were performed. At one point some stagehands decided to try and see if they could figure out how Doug did the [[Metamorphosis]], but couldn't. The episode aired on May 1. <br />
<br />
On February 15, there was a broadcast of the fifth special, which was taped at the Las Vegas Hilton. <br />
<br />
In December, Doug appeared in The Osmond Family Christmas Special. Starring the popular brother/sister act Donny and Marie Osmond and guesting with such entertainers as Peggy Flemming and Greg (B.J. and the Bear) Evigan.<br />
<br />
On February 13, 1981, Doug made his seventh appearance on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. This show marked the first time Doug is Johnny's first guest. Doug is then named spokesman for the March of Dimes 1981 reading program. Through the use of his magic he instructed children on the importance of books.<br />
<br />
[[Doug Henning's World of Magic VI]], taped at Osmond Studios in Provo, Utah, is broadcast February 22 on NBC. Doug then met and became friends with a young Michael Jackson. The result was two fantastic illusions for the Jackson's' 1981 tour.<br />
<br />
A version of [[The Magic Show]] was mounted in Toronto at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. The purpose of this show was to film in front of a live audience of several thousand people for broadcast on a Canadian Broadcast network. For this version many changes were made. Notably most of the cast was changed, specifically the role of Cal, which was now performed by Didi Conn (Who was known as the character "Frenchy" in the movie version of Grease.) As well certain script changes were made, for example the nite club was now known as "Chez Manny" and the older, drunk magician was now named "Van Zyskin."<br />
Some of the songs in the Broadway version were also changed (notably the risqué lyrics of Carmen's lament), or replaced, such as the song Solid Silver Platform Shoes (a type of shoe that had gone out of style by the 80's) which was replaced with “It's Gonna take a magician.”<br />
<br />
The "Movie" of [[The Magic Show]] was only aired once on Canadian Television. (But is now available on DVD, for the interested.)<br />
<br />
== Debby ==<br />
<br />
After separating from his first wife, Doug meets Deborah Ann Douillard.<br />
Debby was the daughter of Roger and Ann Douillard and had received her B.F.A. from the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Art and Science in New York where she majored in painting, graphics and video art. She was successful as a painter and graphic artist and also in the clothing design business. As well, Debby starred in several summer theatre musicals (including Fiddler on the Roof and Applause) and studied mime, jazz dance and singing.<br />
<br />
They met at a charity benefit where Doug was a guest and entertainer and Debby was a volunteer worker, at the Transcendental Meditation Centre at Maharishi International University in Fairfield, Iowa. Debbie was previously married to Jose Carcamo, a Mexican artist who she split with in 1980<br />
<br />
"Dougy was supposed to speak that night and do some magic, and I was supposed to tell him when to go on stage." Debbie told Beverly Hills [213] magazine in 1986. "So I tapped him on the shoulder and he turned around and we looked at each other. It was an overwhelming experience. Dougy almost fell off his chair. My heart was racing. After my heart finally calmed down, time literally seemed to go into slow motion." <br />
<br />
"After the show," she continued, "he came over and tapped me on the shoulder and asked if we could talk later. So we went somewhere and talked a long, long time, and I remember having this powerful feeling of recognition. It just swept over me. I couldn't help myself. I whispered, "I know you."" <br />
<br />
"My friends told me there was practically a flash of light," Doug told People magazine in the December 20, 1982 edition. "I had never felt anything like it in my life."<br />
<br />
Debby agreed, "It was like I blossomed right on the spot."<br />
<br />
They were engaged within a week. "I proposed to her four days later. I made a diamond appear in a rose petal and it rolled out into her hand." On December 6, Doug and Debby were married at the University.<br />
<br />
"When I perform, I could love a million people, but I had trouble loving one person … Debby's helped me overcome my fear of intimacy."<br />
<br />
Debby became Doug's assistant, appearing as a singer and dancer, as well as designing all of the costumes in [[Merlin]] and on tour.<br />
<br />
"I was scared to death the first time I performed," Debby recalled, "but then I started to love it. In a sense, Dougy forced me to overcome my natural shyness.<br />
[[Doug Henning's World of Magic VII]], videotaped at NBC studios in Burbank, airs on February 14, 1982.<br />
<br />
In September, the eighth and last TV special, this one called [[Doug Henning's Magic]] on Broadway, is taped at the Ed Sullivan Theatre in New York, as rehearsals are underway for a second Broadway show, [[Merlin]].<br />
<br />
== Merlin ==<br />
<br />
On January 30, 1983, after six years and with a reported budget of $4 million, [[Merlin]] unofficially opens at the Mark Hellinger Theatre. With a book by Richard Levinson and William Link, (Both of whom would go on the acclaim and television producers and writers, and are probably best known for creating the TV detective Columbo.) Lyrics by Don Black (Who would later win two Tony awards for Sunset Boulevard, a collaboration with Andrew Lloyd Webber.) and music by Academy Award winning composer Elmer Bernstein. With constant re-writes and endless improvements, [[Merlin]] manages to officially run from February 13, 1983 to August 7, 1983, with previews it was a total of nine months. <br />
<br />
According to [[Jim Steinmeyer]], who worked on the show, "Everything [Changed]. Mostly we put more magic in, but the book and music also changed a lot. Characters, dances. Fortunately, they liked the magic, so it wasn't always hard for us, but it always felt like we were dodging land mines." <br />
<br />
"It's a shame that the show wasn't more successful. It wasn't quite the flop that legend will have it."<br />
<br />
Starring Doug, Debbie and Chita Rivera (As well as young actors Nathan Lane and Christian Slater), the lavish show received five Tony nominations, including Best Musical. The show also broke a Broadway record for setting the one-week box office record at the Mark Hellinger Theatre, earning $421,000.<br />
"Doug Henning believes in magic and makes us true believers, too." Wrote Frank Rich in the New York Times. "He is beyond compare as an illusionist."<br />
<br />
In 1984, Doug embarked on another major tour of North America with his World of Magic. Beginning at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles and finishing up December 11 in New York City. Booked into the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre for a month, [[Doug Henning's World of Magic]] is held over an additional month, making it his third show on Broadway. <br />
<br />
Winding down touring and with no future plans for television, in 1986 Doug became a consultant for the Disney organization. He sets up "Wonder Workshops" for Disney's staff of Imagineers and persuades them to put more magic into their park. In 1986 he helped design Kingdom Island theme park in Washington, DC.<br />
<br />
When Michael Eisner took a position with Disney and put a hold on all creative projects, Doug flew to India for a TM world conference that was being staged by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.<br />
<br />
On March 26th, Doug made what would be his last appearance on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. He was the first guest and performed an illusion that ended with his wife, Debby, appearing in a box that was once empty. Then he talked with Johnny on how he became interested in magic at the age of six. He also takes a moment to plug his and Debby's new toys, the Wonder Whims, which was produced by toy manufacturer Panosh.<br />
<br />
== Quitting Magic ==<br />
<br />
In 1987, Doug quit magic. After a conference in India, Doug is convinced that his life mission is to promote the TM movement. Even though his company was at work on plans for a new touring show, a book, and a long term Vegas contract He closed all magic operations in Los Angeles, sold his illusions (rumor has it magician [[David Copperfield]] purchased most, but a good many were sold to other individuals), and accepted a full-time position with Maharishi Veda Land Inc., developing concepts for an amusement park with themes of enlightenment, knowledge, and entertainment.<br />
<br />
"Quite honestly, Doug's sudden retirement left us all stunned." [[Jim Steinmeyer]] wrote in the April 2000 issue of [[Genii]]. "We couldn't understand how he would turn his back on so much business. Even worse, he seemed to be turning his back on us, as Doug always valued a loyal group of people around him. But with a little perspective, it was the right thing to do. Doug had found a new passion and, typically, he devoted all of his attentions toward it. The moment he lost some interest in performing, he stopped. In addition to his own change of focus, I think this was some sign of respect for his audience."<br />
<br />
In 1988 an Announcement is made for future locations of Maharishi Veda Land. Press releases tell of options on prime real estate near Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida; a site near Niagara Falls in Toronto, Canada; and a large tract of land outside Koyoto, Japan.<br />
<br />
As senior vice-president of Maharishi's Natural Law Party (founded on a belief that world peace is possible through the power of group TM), Doug became a NLP candidate in England's 1992 general election. He finished last among four candidates.<br />
<br />
Doug then held a news conference to announce the proposed $1.5 Billion Maharishi Veda Land theme park on 1,400 acres of land purchased at Niagara Falls, Ontario. The park was planned to have rides, illusions and a 7,000-student university and housing development. He said he plans to have the park opened in 18 months.<br />
<br />
When asked about funding, he admitted that only about half of the price tag has been raised but repeatedly claimed that there is a "huge amount of interest." He also announced that they planned to approach the Ontario Provincial Government and the Canadian Federal Government for money after the bulk of the investments are squared away. Unfortunately, the Ontario Government had already refused to get involved and Doug's claim that Niagara Falls will build and pay for highway overpasses and other infrastructure were quickly denied by Mayor Wayne Thomson, who sat at the podium with him.<br />
<br />
In the 1993 Canadian elections, Doug ran as NLP candidate from Rosedale, Ontario where he works on the planting of Veda Land Canada. His platform included employing 7,000 flying yogis who would meditate to cure the nation's ills. Natural Law touted the "Maharishi effect," which they claimed helped to bring down the Berlin Wall, caused stock markets to rise, and cut crime. Out of 55,928 votes cast, he gets 839.<br />
<br />
In June 1999, there were reports of Doug sightings in magic shops in Toronto, New York, Chicago, and Hollywood. He lets some of his old friends know that he's shut down the Veda Land offices in Holland and is moving to Los Angeles.<br />
In August, David Charvet suggests an interview to let the magic world know what Doug's up to. Readers of the October issue of [[Magic Magazine]] learn that Doug is indeed back to performing, but only as part of his fund-raising efforts for then University of World Peace. He also gives information concerning his career that "I never had a chance to tell anybody about."<br />
<br />
== Illness ==<br />
<br />
Then Doug got sick. He was diagnosed with liver cancer and, apparently, no one but Debby knew. He refused chemotherapy after one round of treatment made him too sick. For a while he rebounded and was optimistic about his recovery.<br />
<br />
According to Debby, "Dougy was starting to get interested in magic again and he was going to many magic shops purchasing props so that he could use them when he got better."<br />
<br />
Shortly before his death he planned his memorial service with Debby, insisting that it be a positive celebration and that all his friends be invited. He carefully chose what food was to be served, which was mainly his favorite vegetarian treats such as grilled cheese sandwiches, Boca burgers with plenty of relish, baked potatoes with lots of butter and blueberry pie, just to name a few.<br />
<br />
On February 7, at 6:35 a.m., Douglas James Henning died of liver cancer and Metastatic carcinoma at the age of 52 at Cedars Sinai Medical Centre in Los Angeles. His remains were cremated on the Wednesday following his death and his ashes were spread on the Pacific Ocean, off Redondo Beach, California, the following day. On February 20th, a memorial service was conducted and attended by an estimated 175 friends, family, and close associates of Doug and [[Debby Henning]]. A celebration of the life of Doug Henning was held at The [[Magic Castle]] on Sunday, April 2, at 4pm.<br />
<br />
== References ==<br />
<br />
<br />
# Globe & Mail. Saturday, December 22, 1973.<br />
# Toronto Star. Thursday, December 27, 1973.<br />
# Genii, The Conjuror's Magazine. February (Published in July), 1974. Pages 70-73.<br />
# Playbill Magazine. July, 1974.<br />
# The New Tops. July, 1974, pages 8-10.<br />
# Maclean's: Canada's National Magazine. December, 1974. Pg. 74.<br />
# TV Showtime Magazine. December 19-26, 1975.<br />
# Houdini: His Legend and His Magic by Doug Henning & Charles Reynolds. Warner Books, 1977.<br />
# Canadian Review. February, 1977, pages 18-19, 42.<br />
# Reader's Digest. September, 1980.<br />
# Genii: The Conjuror's Magazine. May, 1980, Pages 321-322.<br />
# Genii: The Conjuror's Magazine. January, 1982, page 23.<br />
# People Weekly. December 20, 1982, pages 70-72.<br />
# Magic Manuscript. December 1982/January 1983, pages 28-33.<br />
# Doug Hennin's World of Magic Tour Press Kit. 1984.<br />
# Doug Henning's World of Magic Official Tour Program. 1984.<br />
# Playbill Magazine. December 11, 1984.<br />
# Beverly Hills [213]. November 12, 1986, pages 6-7.<br />
# Louis Tennen's Catalog of Magic Number 16. 1989.<br />
# Magic: The Independent Magazine for Magicians. December, 1992.<br />
# Magic: The Independent Magazine for Magicians. January, 1994.<br />
# Magic: The Independent Magazine for Magicians. September, 1996.<br />
# Genii: The Conjuror's Magazine. March, 1997.<br />
# Genii: The Conjuror's Magazine. August, 1997, pages 22-33.<br />
# Magic: The Independent Magazinge for Magicians. October, 1999.<br />
# The Linking Ring. March, 2000.<br />
# Magic: The Independent Magazine for Magicians. March, 2000, pages 48-55.<br />
# The Linking Ring. April, 2000.<br />
# Genii: The Conjuror's Magazine. April 15, 2000, pages 20-34.<br />
# Genii: The Conjuror's Magazine. November, 2003.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Henning,Doug]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Harry_Houdini&diff=938Harry Houdini2007-10-05T17:37:15Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>Harry Houdini is the most famous escape artist/magician who has ever lived.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies|Houdini,Harry]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Jon_Racherbaumer&diff=909Jon Racherbaumer2007-10-04T22:02:46Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>==Biography==<br />
Jon Racherbaumer was born January 22, 1940, in Oak Park, Illinois, under the sign of Aquarius. His early years were spent in Elmhurst, Illinois (Harlan Tarbell’s hometown), a western suburb of Chicago. His interest in magic was sparked by seeing Dr. Tarbell perform in 1950. Tarbell’s daughter, Marian, was involved in community theater with Jon’s mother at the time. Soon thereafter, he received his first magic book, Tarbell Course in Magic –Volume 1, on his eleventh birthday. After discovering that Dr. Tarbell had donated his entire course to the local library, Jon spent many hours diligently studied each volume along with other magic books in the library.<br />
<br />
Jon joined the Mazda Mystics Club (Juniors) in 1953, a club started by Russell Shaw and his wife in Oak Park, Illinois. Meetings were held in the basement of the Mazda Magic Shop. He maintained his interest throughout his schooling and thereafter when he moved to New Orleans in 1963. The Big Easy, home of the Mardi Gras, jazz music, and voodoo, is often called the Dream State, an ideal place for all things magical to ferment. From 1957 to 1965, Jon attended four universities and worked at various jobs: radio programmer, disk-jockey, promotion man, salesman, restaurant manager, male model, tree-trimmer, blackjack dealer, construction worker, warehouseman, program consultant (voluntary health agency), institutional house-father, social worker, gym instructor, bartender, ambulance driver (at a race track), and finally he went to work for Eastern Airlines from 1965-1990 as an airlines business person.<br />
<br />
He eventually joined the International Brotherhood of Magicians and the Society of American Magicians in 1966, is a member of the Order of Merlin, and is a Lifetime Member of the Magic Castle in Hollywood, California. He worked as an Associate Editor at Richard Kaufman’s GENII magazine and currently writes "On the Slant," a monthly column. He was a columnist and contributing editor to Stan Allen’s MAGIC magazine for six years and has been the Parade Editor for the LINKING RING since 1991. He writes a regular column ("THe Artful Ledger") in Antimony magazine, a quarterly. Additionally, he was an active columnist for Joe Steven’s Gemini Magic Network. He has contributed columns to M-U-M (“At The Table”) and scores of tricks and articles to various magazines: Genii, The New Tops, M-U-M, Linking Ring, The New Pentagram, Blue Print, Precursor, The Looking Glass, The Conjuror, and Apocalypse. He has published over 60 books and is a recipient of a Literary Fellowship from the Academy of Magical Arts and Sciences and the Milbourne Christopher Literary Award.<br />
<br />
Jon’s mentors were Ed Marlo and Eddie Fields; however, at different times he was inspired by Channing Pollock, Cardini, Don Alan, Albert Goshman, Chan Canasta, Tony Slydini, Finn Jon, Lennert Green, Tommy Wonder and Juan Tameriz. His (magic) literary influences are Martin Gardner, John Northern Hilliard, Walter Gibson, Ted Annemann, Bruce Elliott, P. Howard Lyons, and Victor Farelli.<br />
<br />
His other interests are: body-building, literature, book-collecting, martial arts, philosophy, poetry, film, theater (theory), cosmology, painting, and mathematical recreations.<br />
<br />
He has seven children (Karen, Michael, Jona, Jonathan, Erika, Robynn, and Ry) and ten grandchildren (Lindsey, Matthew, Thomas, Sasha, Autumn, Ben, Adam, Allyssa, Sophina, and Koko).<br />
<br />
==Bibliography==<br />
<br />
===Publications===<br />
<br />
# The Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields (1968)<br />
# On the Clock Effect (1971)<br />
# The Universal Card (1972)<br />
# Further Flight (1973)<br />
# Hyper-Twist (1975)<br />
# Kabbala Three (Lou Tannen) <br />
## Suppressed edition (1975)<br />
## Printed edition (June - 1976)<br />
# Lecture Notes 1 (1976)<br />
# The Mandarin Mystery Coin (1976)<br />
# The Ascanio Spread (1976)<br />
# Card-Coins (1977)<br />
# Good Turns (1977)<br />
# Arch Triumphs (1978)<br />
# Kabbala - Volume 1 (October - 1980)<br />
# Kabbala - Volume 2 (March - 1981) This includes the missing issues 9-10-11-12.<br />
# The Lost Pages of Kabbala (May - 1981)<br />
# Card Finesse (1982)<br />
# Lecture Notes 2 - IBM Convention (1982)<br />
# The Card Puzzle (1983)<br />
# Marlo Without Tears (1983)<br />
# Facsimile I<br />
# At The Table (1984)<br />
# Gaffed To The Hilt (1985)<br />
## A collaboration with Don England and Richard Kaufman<br />
# Card Fixes (1990)<br />
# Lecture Notes 3 - European Lecture Tour (July - 1991)<br />
# Synergistic Sandwiches (1991)<br />
# Cavorting Ladies (1991)<br />
# The Wild Card Kit - First Edition (1991) spiral-bound<br />
# Cabbages & Kings (1991)<br />
# Lecture Notes 4 - Another Roadside Attraction (1991)<br />
# Racherbaumer Papers (September - 1991)<br />
# Wild Card Kit (1992) - hard-bound edition<br />
# Back To The Future Classic (1992)<br />
# Vintage Marlo - Volume One (1992)<br />
# Pastiche (1992)<br />
# Full Tilt (1992)<br />
# Big-Easy Card-Cunning (1992)<br />
# Chronopoly (1992)<br />
# Card Finesse II (1992) hard-bound<br />
# Inside Tracks - Lecture 5 (1992)<br />
# Psi-Clones (1992)<br />
# Compleat K.M. Move (1992)<br />
# Compleat Devilish Miracle (1992)<br />
# Flashpoints (1992)<br />
# Imitations, Intimations (1993)<br />
# Pastiche II (1994)<br />
# Recycle (1994)<br />
# Magie Duvivier (1996)<br />
# Arcade Dreams (1997)<br />
# Greater Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields (1997)<br />
# The Amazing Cigar (1998)<br />
# The Legendary Hierophant (1998)<br />
# The Legendary Kabbala (1998)<br />
# In A Class by Himself: The Legacy of Don Alan (2000)<br />
# No Pipe Dreams: Trade Secrets of Mike Rogers (2002 - unpublished)<br />
# Prime Moves (2002)<br />
# Counthesarus - Volume One (2005)<br />
# Sankey Unleashed (2004)<br />
# Art and Ardor at the Card Table (2004)<br />
# Marlo on Erdnase (2007) (soon to be released)<br />
<br />
===Periodicals=== <br />
<br />
THE HIEROPHANT (1969-1980)<br />
1 - September - 1969<br />
2 - Winter - 1969<br />
3 - March - 1970<br />
4 - June - 1970<br />
5-6 - (Fall/Spring 1970-71)<br />
7 - Resurrection Issue (1975)<br />
8 - The Last Hierophant (June-1980)<br />
<br />
THE KABBALA<br />
<br />
Volume 1 (1-12) September 1971 - August 1972<br />
Volume 2 (1-8) September 1972 - April 1973 (four issues missing)<br />
<br />
AVATAR (2 issues) 1973<br />
<br />
PIDDLINGS & PETTIFOGGERY (January - 1972)<br />
50 Xerox copies<br />
<br />
STICKS & STONES<br />
<br />
1-12 (1976)<br />
13-24 (1977)<br />
This leaflet was part of Son of Bat Jr. (Lloyd Jones)<br />
96 pages, complete<br />
<br />
SWIPE<br />
<br />
1-7 (1991-93)<br />
<br />
THE OLRAM FILE<br />
<br />
Volume 1 (1-12) December 1990 - June 1992<br />
Number 13 (September-1992)<br />
Numbers 14-16 (1993)<br />
<br />
MARLOPHILE<br />
<br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
<br />
THE LOOKING GLASS (with Richard Kaufman and Stephen Hobbs)<br />
<br />
(1995) <br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
(1998)<br />
<br />
FACSIMILE<br />
<br />
(September - 1983)<br />
(1994)<br />
(1995)<br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
<br />
OBITER DICTA: Dust-Motes in the Grid<br />
27 installments (available through Joe Steven’s Gemini Network)<br />
<br />
FOREIGN EDITIONS<br />
<br />
The Very Best of Kabbala (Richard Vollmer) 1981<br />
The Very Best of Hierophant (Richard Vollmer) 1985<br />
These are translated into French<br />
<br />
EDITED and RE-WROTE:<br />
<br />
Hauntiques (Christian Chelman)<br />
Vis-a-Vis (Jack Avis)<br />
<br />
Technical Editor (with Mark Levy):<br />
Magic For Dummies (1999)<br />
<br />
===External Links===<br />
* [http://jonracherbaumer.com Jon Racherbaumer's Website]<br />
[[Category:Biographies]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Books_by_Tommy_Wonder&diff=906Books by Tommy Wonder2007-10-04T19:07:11Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>*''[[Books of Wonder Vol. 1]]'' (with [[Books by Stephen Minch | Stephen Minch]]) - published by [[Books published by Hermetic Press |Hermetic Press]] in 1996.<br />
*''[[Books of Wonder Vol. 2]]'' (with [[Books by Stephen Minch | Stephen Minch]]) - published by [[Books published by Hermetic Press |Hermetic Press]] in 1996.</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Jon_Racherbaumer&diff=905Jon Racherbaumer2007-10-04T18:41:32Z<p>Jmaloney: Formatting on Publications section, edits to biography</p>
<hr />
<div>==Biography==<br />
Jon Racherbaumer was born January 22, 1940, in Oak Park, Illinois. His early years were spent in Elmhurst, Illinois, a western suburb of Chicago. His interest in magic was sparked by seeing Dr. Harlan Tarbell, another resident of Elmhurst, perform in 1950. Tarbell’s daughter, Marian, was involved in community theater with Racherbaumer’s mother at the time. Soon thereafter, he received his first magic book, Tarbell Course in Magic –Volume 1, on his eleventh birthday. After discovering that Tarbell had donated his entire course to the local library, Racherbaumer studied each volume along with other magic books in the library.<br />
<br />
Racherbaumer joined the Mazda Mystics Club (Juniors) in 1953, in Oak Park, Illinois. Meetings were held in the basement of the Mazda Magic Shop. Racherbaumer maintained his interest throughout his schooling and thereafter when he moved to New Orleans in 1963. From 1957 to 1965, Racherbaumer appears to have led a somewhat itinerant lifestyle attending four universities and working at a range of jobs before finally working for Eastern Airlines from 1965-1990 as an airlines business person. Racherbaumer is a member of various magical organizations, including the IBM.<br />
<br />
Racherbaumer has primarily distinguished himself as an author in periodicals and of several well known texts. He worked as an Associate Editor at Richard Kaufman’s GENII magazine and currently writes "On the Slant," a monthly column. He was a columnist and contributing editor to Stan Allen’s MAGIC magazine for six years and has been the Parade Editor for the LINKING RING since 1991. He writes a regular column ("The Artful Ledger") in Antimony magazine, a quarterly. Additionally, he was an active columnist for Joe Steven’s Gemini Magic Network. He has contributed columns to M-U-M (“At The Table”) and scores of tricks and articles to various magazines: Genii, The New Tops, M-U-M, Linking Ring, The New Pentagram, Blue Print, Precursor, The Looking Glass, The Conjuror, and Apocalypse. He has published over 60 books and is a recipient of a Literary Fellowship from the Academy of Magical Arts and Sciences and the Milbourne Christopher Literary Award.<br />
<br />
Racherbaumer’s mentors were Edward Marlo and Eddie Fields; with Racherbaumer being primarily associated with the former. Racherbaumer has defended Marlo against the widely-held accusations of non-crediting on a number of occasions and was aligned with controversy surrounding Marlo's undermining of the Zarrow concept in championing the so-called Shank shuffle. Racherbaumer claims also to have been influenced at different times by Channing Pollock, Cardini, Don Alan, Albert Goshman, Chan Canasta, Tony Slydini, Finn Jon, Lennert Green, Tommy Wonder and Juan Tamariz; however these influences are not usually evident in his published material. Racherbaumer has identified his literary influences in magic as Martin Gardner, John Northern Hilliard, Walter Gibson, Ted Annemann, Bruce Elliott, P. Howard Lyons, and Victor Farelli. These influences appear to be more inspirational in nature, as their stylistic idiosyncrasies are rarely apparent in Racherbaumer's own writing. Racherbaumer's own writing style is characterised by an ornate and colourful use of wordplay, and the frequent use of obscure, arcane and sometimes anachronistic terminology. The influence of Ed Marlo's machine like imperative to explore endless variations of theme and method is at times evident, but in Racherbaumer's case it is not accurate to say that he has the same messianic obsession with variation towards published credit but, rather, a possible fascination with variation as a creative process. Racherbaumer is thus focussed on the process itself, rather than the objective. Aligned to this, his writings also show an obvious (and perhaps overarching) fascination with the craft of writing itself as a creative and communicative process. Racherbaumer's 'creative process' has at times led to accusations that he has transgressed some of the conventions of magic publication, with Jamy Ian Swiss notably criticising his revisionist approach to hardcover reprints of periodicals he had published in the 70's and 80's. Regardless of the controversy, there is no question that Racherbaumer has been an enduring presence in magical publishing for the last three decades, with several valued and even influential works to his credit.<br />
<br />
==Bibliography==<br />
<br />
===Publications===<br />
<br />
# The Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields (1968)<br />
# On the Clock Effect (1971)<br />
# The Universal Card (1972)<br />
# Further Flight (1973)<br />
# Hyper-Twist (1975)<br />
# Kabbala Three (Lou Tannen) <br />
## Suppressed edition (1975)<br />
## Printed edition (June - 1976)<br />
# Lecture Notes 1 (1976)<br />
# The Mandarin Mystery Coin (1976)<br />
# The Ascanio Spread (1976)<br />
# Card-Coins (1977)<br />
# Good Turns (1977)<br />
# Arch Triumphs (1978)<br />
# Kabbala - Volume 1 (October - 1980)<br />
# Kabbala - Volume 2 (March - 1981) This includes the missing issues 9-10-11-12.<br />
# The Lost Pages of Kabbala (May - 1981)<br />
# Card Finesse (1982)<br />
# Lecture Notes 2 - IBM Convention (1982)<br />
# The Card Puzzle (1983)<br />
# Marlo Without Tears (1983)<br />
# Facsimile I<br />
# At The Table (1984)<br />
# Gaffed To The Hilt (1985)<br />
## A collaboration with Don England and Richard Kaufman<br />
# Card Fixes (1990)<br />
# Lecture Notes 3 - European Lecture Tour (July - 1991)<br />
# Synergistic Sandwiches (1991)<br />
# Cavorting Ladies (1991)<br />
# The Wild Card Kit - First Edition (1991) spiral-bound<br />
# Cabbages & Kings (1991)<br />
# Lecture Notes 4 - Another Roadside Attraction (1991)<br />
# Racherbaumer Papers (September - 1991)<br />
# Wild Card Kit (1992) - hard-bound edition<br />
# Back To The Future Classic (1992)<br />
# Vintage Marlo - Volume One (1992)<br />
# Pastiche (1992)<br />
# Full Tilt (1992)<br />
# Big-Easy Card-Cunning (1992)<br />
# Chronopoly (1992)<br />
# Card Finesse II (1992) hard-bound<br />
# Inside Tracks - Lecture 5 (1992)<br />
# Psi-Clones (1992)<br />
# Compleat K.M. Move (1992)<br />
# Compleat Devilish Miracle (1992)<br />
# Flashpoints (1992)<br />
# Imitations, Intimations (1993)<br />
# Pastiche II (1994)<br />
# Recycle (1994)<br />
# Magie Duvivier (1996)<br />
# Arcade Dreams (1997)<br />
# Greater Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields (1997)<br />
# The Amazing Cigar (1998)<br />
# The Legendary Hierophant (1998)<br />
# The Legendary Kabbala (1998)<br />
# In A Class by Himself: The Legacy of Don Alan (2000)<br />
# No Pipe Dreams: Trade Secrets of Mike Rogers (2002 - unpublished)<br />
# Prime Moves (2002)<br />
# Counthesarus - Volume One (2005)<br />
# Sankey Unleashed (2004)<br />
# Art and Ardor at the Card Table (2004)<br />
# Marlo on Erdnase (2007) (soon to be released)<br />
<br />
===Periodicals=== <br />
<br />
THE HIEROPHANT (1969-1980)<br />
1 - September - 1969<br />
2 - Winter - 1969<br />
3 - March - 1970<br />
4 - June - 1970<br />
5-6 - (Fall/Spring 1970-71)<br />
7 - Resurrection Issue (1975)<br />
8 - The Last Hierophant (June-1980)<br />
<br />
THE KABBALA<br />
<br />
Volume 1 (1-12) September 1971 - August 1972<br />
Volume 2 (1-8) September 1972 - April 1973 (four issues missing)<br />
<br />
AVATAR (2 issues) 1973<br />
<br />
PIDDLINGS & PETTIFOGGERY (January - 1972)<br />
50 Xerox copies<br />
<br />
STICKS & STONES<br />
<br />
1-12 (1976)<br />
13-24 (1977)<br />
This leaflet was part of Son of Bat Jr. (Lloyd Jones)<br />
96 pages, complete<br />
<br />
SWIPE<br />
<br />
1-7 (1991-93)<br />
<br />
THE OLRAM FILE<br />
<br />
Volume 1 (1-12) December 1990 - June 1992<br />
Number 13 (September-1992)<br />
Numbers 14-16 (1993)<br />
<br />
MARLOPHILE<br />
<br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
<br />
THE LOOKING GLASS (with Richard Kaufman and Stephen Hobbs)<br />
<br />
(1995) <br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
(1998)<br />
<br />
FACSIMILE<br />
<br />
(September - 1983)<br />
(1994)<br />
(1995)<br />
(1996)<br />
(1997)<br />
<br />
OBITER DICTA: Dust-Motes in the Grid<br />
27 installments (available through Joe Steven’s Gemini Network)<br />
<br />
FOREIGN EDITIONS<br />
<br />
The Very Best of Kabbala (Richard Vollmer) 1981<br />
The Very Best of Hierophant (Richard Vollmer) 1985<br />
These are translated into French<br />
<br />
EDITED and RE-WROTE:<br />
<br />
Hauntiques (Christian Chelman)<br />
Vis-a-Vis (Jack Avis)<br />
<br />
Technical Editor (with Mark Levy):<br />
Magic For Dummies (1999)<br />
<br />
[[Category:Biographies]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Denis_Behr&diff=755Denis Behr2007-10-03T03:15:01Z<p>Jmaloney: New page: Handcrafted Card Magic</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Handcrafted Card Magic]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Books_by_Darwin_Ortiz&diff=754Books by Darwin Ortiz2007-10-03T03:14:14Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>* ''[[Darwin Ortiz at the Card Table]]''<br />
* ''[[Strong Magic]]''<br />
* ''[[CardShark]]''<br />
* ''[[Scams & Fantasies]]''<br />
* ''[[Designing Miracles]]''</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Books_by_Al_Leech&diff=599Books by Al Leech2007-10-02T20:40:04Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Don't Look Now (The Smart Slant on Misdirection) (1948)]]<br />
<br />
[[For Card Men Only (1949)]]<br />
<br />
[[Manipulating With Leech (1952)]]<br />
<br />
[[Card Man Stuff (1953)]]<br />
<br />
[[Handbook of Card Sleights (1954)]]<br />
<br />
[[Cardmanship (1959)]]<br />
<br />
[[Super Card Man Stuff (1965)]]<br />
<br />
[[Al Leech's Legacy (1980)]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Books_by_Al_Leech&diff=598Books by Al Leech2007-10-02T20:38:23Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Don't Look Now (The Smart Slant on Misdirection) (1948)]]<br />
<br />
[[For Card Men Only (1949)]]<br />
<br />
[[Manipulating With Leech (1952)]]<br />
<br />
[[Card Man Stuff (1953)]]<br />
<br />
[[Handbook of Card Sleights (1954)]]<br />
<br />
[[Cardmanship (1959)]]<br />
<br />
[[Super Card Man Stuff (1965)]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Books_by_Al_Leech&diff=597Books by Al Leech2007-10-02T20:37:00Z<p>Jmaloney: New page: Don't Look Now (The Smart Slant on Misdirection) (1948) For Card Men Only (1949) Manipulating With Leech (1952) Card Man Stuff (1953) Handbook of Card Sleights (1954) Cardmanship (195...</p>
<hr />
<div>Don't Look Now (The Smart Slant on Misdirection) (1948)<br />
<br />
For Card Men Only (1949)<br />
<br />
Manipulating With Leech (1952)<br />
<br />
Card Man Stuff (1953)<br />
<br />
Handbook of Card Sleights (1954)<br />
<br />
Cardmanship (1959)<br />
<br />
Super Card Man Stuff (1965)</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Close_Up_Magic_Authors_Starting_With_L&diff=596Close Up Magic Authors Starting With L2007-10-02T20:31:14Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Books by Harry Lorayne | Lorayne, Harry]]<br />
<br />
[[Books by Al Leech | Leech, Al]]</div>Jmaloneyhttps://geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php?title=Close_Up_Magic_Authors_Starting_With_L&diff=595Close Up Magic Authors Starting With L2007-10-02T20:29:59Z<p>Jmaloney: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Books by Harry Lorayne | Lorayne, Harry]]<br />
[[Books by Al Leech | Leech, Al]]</div>Jmaloney