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Difference between revisions of "Ted Heuber"
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| birth_name = Theodore H. Heuber | | birth_name = Theodore H. Heuber | ||
| birth_day = March 30, | | birth_day = March 30, | ||
− | | birth_year = | + | | birth_year = 1894 |
| birth_place = Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | | birth_place = Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | ||
| death_day = November 30, | | death_day = November 30, | ||
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| misc = | | misc = | ||
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− | '''Ted Heuber''' ( | + | '''Ted Heuber''' (1894-1976), aka Huber, was a semi-professional children's show magician. |
== Biography == | == Biography == |
Latest revision as of 10:41, 16 December 2014
Ted Heuber | |
Born | Theodore H. Heuber March 30, 1894 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
---|---|
Died | November 30, 1976 (age 82) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
Resting place | Homewood Cemetery Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
Ted Heuber (1894-1976), aka Huber, was a semi-professional children's show magician.
Biography
Heuber began in 1929 and was a member of SAM and IBM.[1] He served the IBM as it's Secretary (1933 - 1939) and as their Museum Curator.
He was a circus aerialist and a comedian before he became interested in magic and was known for his "Whistling Sailor" routine at conventions.[2]
Heuber was married to Dolly (Marie?), who's sister was married to Carl Rosini.[3]
In 1951, SAM Assembly 18 in Pittsburgh reported in MUM (January 1952) that Heuber brought and demonstrated the original cabinet from which came a host of walking-through-a-ribbon tricks.
References
- ↑ The Sphinx, Vol. 33, No. 3, March 1934, Who's Who in Magic, page 14
- ↑ Linking Ring, March 1956
- ↑ Carl Rosini His Life and His Magic by Robert Olson, page 104, (1966)
- Cover, Linking Ring, Vol. 13, No. 3, May 1933, "TED" HEUBER I.B.M. No. 3916, page 148
- The Linking Ring, Vol. 14, No. 2, April 1934, Ted Heuber's I.B.M. Museum of Magic to be Feature of Convention, page 106