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Difference between revisions of "Mme. Reno"

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'''Mme. Reno''' (c.1867-1927) was the wife and assistant of magician [[Ed Reno]] (1861-1949) who also performed as "The Empress of Magic".<ref>Obit, Linking Ring, August 1927</ref>
 
'''Mme. Reno''' (c.1867-1927) was the wife and assistant of magician [[Ed Reno]] (1861-1949) who also performed as "The Empress of Magic".<ref>Obit, Linking Ring, August 1927</ref>
  
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== Biography ==
 
They were married in 1886 and Ed taught her to perform magic. A 1910 program listed her repertoire as "Hindoo Mysteries, The Turtle Dove's Dream, The Fairy Flower Garden, The Magic Rifle, A Comedy of Errors, A Temperance Lesson, The Unlucky Watch, Our National Emblem, A Worried Rabbit, and Electricity Annihilated: A Lesson From Mars."
 
They were married in 1886 and Ed taught her to perform magic. A 1910 program listed her repertoire as "Hindoo Mysteries, The Turtle Dove's Dream, The Fairy Flower Garden, The Magic Rifle, A Comedy of Errors, A Temperance Lesson, The Unlucky Watch, Our National Emblem, A Worried Rabbit, and Electricity Annihilated: A Lesson From Mars."
  
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{{References}}
 
{{References}}
  
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reno}}
 
  
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[[Category:Female magicians]]
 
[[Category:Female magicians]]

Revision as of 11:24, 18 May 2014

Mme. Reno

Cover of Sphinx (Feb. 1912)
BornEmma Austin
circa 1867
DiedJuly 26, 1927 (age 59)
Kankakee, Illinois

Mme. Reno (c.1867-1927) was the wife and assistant of magician Ed Reno (1861-1949) who also performed as "The Empress of Magic".[1]

Biography

They were married in 1886 and Ed taught her to perform magic. A 1910 program listed her repertoire as "Hindoo Mysteries, The Turtle Dove's Dream, The Fairy Flower Garden, The Magic Rifle, A Comedy of Errors, A Temperance Lesson, The Unlucky Watch, Our National Emblem, A Worried Rabbit, and Electricity Annihilated: A Lesson From Mars."

The Sphinx for February 1912 honored her with a cover picture and praised her as a "woman of distinguished presence and graceful bearing," whose magic was "executed with all the skill and grace that her many years upon the stage has developed."[2]

She was an early member of the International Brotherhood of Magicians and performed at least until 1924.[3]

References

  1. Obit, Linking Ring, August 1927
  2. Cover Sphinx, February 1912
  3. Women in Magic R: Emma Reno, Linking Ring, November 2007