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Difference between revisions of "Second Sight"

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* [[Robert Heller]] & wife, Miss Hadee Heller <ref> [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9D07E0D81038E033A25753C3A9679D94659FD7CF Their Tricks Were Easy, New York Times, November 30, 1884]</ref>
 
* [[Robert Heller]] & wife, Miss Hadee Heller <ref> [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9D07E0D81038E033A25753C3A9679D94659FD7CF Their Tricks Were Easy, New York Times, November 30, 1884]</ref>
 
* [[Mercedes]] and Mlle. Stantone (vaudeville) - she played any tune whispered to her partner.  
 
* [[Mercedes]] and Mlle. Stantone (vaudeville) - she played any tune whispered to her partner.  
* Liz and Tom Tucker
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* Liz and [[Tommy Tucker]]
 
* Julius & Agnes [[Zancigs|Zancig]]
 
* Julius & Agnes [[Zancigs|Zancig]]
 
* The [[Piddingtons]]
 
* The [[Piddingtons]]

Revision as of 05:36, 8 December 2017

Second Sight, or Two Person Mental Act is an act of two partners who seemingly are able to know one another's thoughts. Typically, one of the partners is Blindfolded while the other one goes out into the audience getting items for the blindfolded partner to identify. The item is either handed to the person or something is whispered.

This is often referred to as clairvoyance or telepathy by psychics.

A method was reported in Reginald Scot in his classic treatise, The Discoverie of Witchcraft and was performed in 1831 by the "Double-sighted Phenomenon," an eight-year-old Scottish boy named Louis Gordon M'Kean. While blindfolded and facing away from the audience, he could identify objects and repeat what others had spoken with a whispered at a distance of a hundred yards.

The first use of the term "second sight" was by John Henry Anderson around 1838 for his magic act that featured his blindfolded daughter that he billed as "the Second-Sighted Sybil." Anderson would go into the audience to get objects for his daughter to reveal.

English female magician Georgiana Elizabeth Eagle performed her second sight act as "The Mysterious Lady" and "Gilliland Card" from 1841 to 1886.

Robert-Houdin's was also doing a second sight act with his son around 1846 in Paris.

Notable Teams that presented Second Sight Acts

References

  1. Their Tricks Were Easy, New York Times, November 30, 1884