What’s Next? (and I don’t mean the trick?)

•October 16, 2020 • 4 Comments

2020 is a year that will cast a long shadow. In America, and almost everywhere else, the entertainment industry nearly ground to a halt. From mid-March onwards, COVID-19 has trumped virtually every form of entertainment other than sitting at home watching Netflix and taking your computer online. Clubs and theaters closed their doors. Cruise ships are languishing in dockyards. Las Vegas showrooms went dark, and corporate entertainment vanished like a birdcage up a sleeve. Magic has taken a particularly critical hit due to the interactive nature that is at the core of its being. Wages and fees have disappeared, as bookings have cancelled with a devastating finality. Of course, you already know this.

Without a crystal ball or an Alexander-like ability to “Know,” we are at the mercy of the evolution of this new and capricious virus. The entertainment industry’s immediate future rests on the novel coronavirus’ subsequent waves, spikes, and recurrences. Anyone who tells you they know what is going to happen next is only fooling themselves. However, this does seem like a suitable forum to take stock of where we are, where we may be heading, and to identify some recent changes that are unlikely to go away too quickly. With fifty years of making a living as a magician in my rearview mirror, I feel as qualified as anyone to have a shot at this process.

One plus point about quarantining has been experiencing how the magic community has reinvented itself digitally with a mass of new meetings, lectures, podcasts, groups, and shows for magicians to enjoy. Most of them are free, which is a handy bonus in the current financial climate. Magicians have also learned a new skill, Zooming. The only time I encountered Zoom before March of this year was when I guested on one of McBride’s Mystery School Mondays. Now, almost everyone in the community has mastered this useful and relatively painless skill. I suspect that this new level of inter-magician communication will outlive the COVID crisis. Most magicians are enthusiastic about meeting up with their cohorts and with Zoom they now have an inexpensive and efficient means to do so.

The early days of the COVID crisis launched an assortment of magicians using Facebook to stream shows from their living rooms. Many of these shows were frankly poor, and technical limitations did nothing to improve the performances. Often these events seemed like a somewhat desperate plea for attention by acts that would otherwise pass under their fellow magician’s radar; however, the situation quickly improved. As things settled down, it became clear that a “Zoom Show” just might become a legitimate way for the average magician to earn a few bucks. However, with one major exception, I have serious doubts whether the merits of a Zoom show will outlast the end of our national quarantine by any significant length of time. Magic tends to work much better live than on video unless your name is David Blaine.

Magicians tend to love their high-tech show trimmings, and a group of magicians who might once have been swapping card moves, are now focusing on iPhone tripods, USB microphones, virtual backdrops, and living room lighting. Some of the virtual show production trimmings are getting better, but the intrinsic impact with magic is usually more focused on the human interactions. The sizzle is fun, but if you want to charge a fee, don’t underestimate the importance of the steak. The recent industry embrace of mentalism has been useful training for these kinds of shows, and a Zoom style presentation can serve this kind of magic excellently. Another strong option for video shows is nonparticipant close-up magic routines, just as long as the objects involved look crisp and in focus.

What doesn’t play particularly well in a Zoom style show? Illusions are a tough sell due to the changes in size involved in shrinking the output down to a computer screen. It takes careful direction and multiple cameras to make illusion look good on a television show. Another serious Zoom casualty is pure comedy magic. Without hearing other audience members laughing, comedy is a lot less contagious than the coronavirus. If you don’t want an audio zoo, then you need to mute the viewers during the performance, and that makes comedy magic a tougher prospect.

The one type of paid Zoom show that I believe will be around for a substantial time is corporate entertainment. It is going to be a while before corporations want to gather all their executives, salespeople, and clients in one big room eating, talking, and drinking. I suspect the Zoom shows that corporate clients will want to employ will require very high-level production skills. These buyers are used to superb audiovisuals, and they will expect their Zoom shows to share this level of expertise.

Most performers are just waiting for their old lives to kick back into place again, and eventually, with stops and starts it will. However, I think it unrealistic to believe that we will not need to tailor our work to these changing times. Audience participation, and interaction with physical props, is going to need to be very carefully restructured for a very long time. Even if the majority of the audience is unworried about these issues, if even ONE person comments, “Oh, you’re not going to touch that are you?” then the entire audience is going to become uncomfortable. The hecklers of the future may come disguised as health advisors.

We are in a brief window of time which magicians should use to re-evaluate the direction of their magic repertoire. While it is correct to anticipate the return of live bookings, I think it is only realistic to re-tune our performance for the new normal. I am currently filming a series of new downloads for our online magic retail company that will feature classic “display” close-up routines that are Covid-19 and Zoom friendly. It is entirely unrealistic to believe that attention to these presentational details are not paramount in re-establishing one’s commercial presence. I am amazed how often I read posts from magicians on Facebook who seem to think that a firm allegiance to their old repertoire and performance style will be acceptable as the pandemic begins to fade. Clients will be impressed by the performer who appears to respect the health and interests of their guests, and will book accordingly. 

One area of employment that has totally ceased this year is the Cruise Ship market. Cruise work is one of the most extensive and highest paying gigs for magicians throughout the world and is going to resume functioning the very day that the cruise lines think they can get away with it. The money that is hemorrhaging from cruise lines is profound. Realistically I believe that re-booting this particular market is going to be extremely difficult. Every time a passenger comes down with COVID-19, the entire industry will face a potentially “close it down” chorus from the media. However, things will get back to normal eventually, and when they do, it will present a new and exciting employment opportunity for a great many entertainers.

With the colossal financial losses sustained by the entire cruise industry, some obvious and predictable changes will occur. Salaries will go down, and longer bookings are inevitable. Performers will also need to present more shows during their engagement, and pre/post show home quarantining may become standard. These changes will create a working situation that will cause many of the more established performers to exit this particular kind of booking rather than take that cut in salary and change in accustomed working conditions. The upside of these developments is that the industry will open up to a great many performers who were not previously working this lucrative and enjoyable market. There are not many opportunities to book a year’s worth of work with a single phone call in magic, but this is one of them. If a performer hasn’t worked on a ship before, he will not experience a wage cut, and will probably be very comfortable doing that extra twenty-minute show. He might even relish a six-month contract. I predict that this will be a “gold rush” for a new booking opportunities. Move quickly though because the fresh blood will soon absorb the overflow of bookings.

I hope you found a few useful angles in this post about What’s Next after our lives get back a little closer to normal. The time to think carefully about your magic is now. Things will improve, so stay safe and healthy!  

 

 

My friend Channing.

•September 3, 2020 • Leave a Comment

One very unusual friendship I have enjoyed was with the great magician Channing Pollack. Channing was one of the most influential magicians that America has ever added to the magic community. Channing was the man who pretty much invented the “dove act” as we know it. Dressed in a perfect tail suit, Pollack performed immaculate card manipulations punctuated by the gasp out loud production of beautiful white doves. As a finale he made an entire cage of doves disappear in thin air. However,  it wasn’t just what Channing did but the style with which he did it that made him so special.

David Copperfield described Pollack as “The James Bond of Magic,’ and that gets to the heart of the matter. He was extremely good looking (frequently described by the press as the best looking man in America) and had a serious and intense manner when he performed, only after the finale of his act did Channing flash a 50 megabit smile at the very close of his show when that cage of doves disappeared. It was great entertainment and even greater theater.

At the very height of his professional success, Channing made the easy jump into being a movie star and made a series of films designed to show off his matinee idol looks. Before too long he disappeared from the big screen and began a highly successful career at just being Channing. He spent his time in Beverly Hills, Half Moon Bay, and finally Las Vegas, he became an inspiration, friend, teacher, and mentor to generations of magicians. As show business stories go, this was an almost perfect one.

In the late 1970s, I met Channing for the first time at the Magic Castle in Hollywood. We hit it off immediately and spent the next few hours talking metaphysics in a smokey van.  We were both very involved in A Course In Miracles and were delighted to have a chance to discuss it in detail. On this, and all future occasions, we were both much to busy talking about spiritual matters to discuss magic!

Over the next few decades periodically I would bump into Channing and I would always greet him with, “What’s happening for you with the Course?” We would then pick up our conversation almost exactly where we left off the last time we met. It was rather a ritual. The last time I saw Channing was at one of Mac King’s annual Kentucky Derby parties in Las Vegas. When I asked him how the “Course” was going, his face clouded over a little and he said, “I have hit a block…” I responded immediately, “You might want to check out the work of Nisargadatta Maharaj.”  “Where should I look?” He replied. We chatted briefly, and when he parted Channing said, “I will phone you tomorrow to write down the name of those two books.”

I was slightly surprised the next day when Pollack phoned me, I had previously realized that he didn’t have my phone number! We chatted a while and I told him that Sri Nisargadatta’s magnum opus was I Am That. I added that I was particularly fond of the short book containing his final teaching called Consciousness and the Absolute. This second book was transcribed from Maharaj’s talks in the last six months of his life after he had been diagnosed with throat cancer. The diamond-like clarity, directness, and depth of his words are quite extraordinary. Channing thanked me and said goodbye. It was the last time we spoke, six months later Channing died from complications of cancer. I felt a little strange about my last communications with him were to recommend a book by someone in the exact life position that he was in.

When I attended The Tribute to Mr. Pollack after his death I was surprised when several of Channing’s friends came up to me and greeted me warmly as if they knew me. As I discovered my final interaction with Channing had been very appropriate and he had immediately ordered the two books I had recommended, and they had meant a great deal to him. In fact, he had sent copies of the books to many of his friends. When he died the three books beside his bed were A Course in Miracles, I Am That, and Consciousness and the Absolute. It was certainly a strange feeling to discover this. I am astounded looking back over the years, how few times Channing and I met. However the intensity of our mutual interests was very profound, and the friendship we had was a very rare and special one. There are other magicians, and then there was Channing Pollack.

 

 

 

Lance Burton on The Entertainment Files.

•August 29, 2020 • Leave a Comment

Lance Burton was one of our favorite guests on The Entertainment Files! He stopped by our studio for the interview and even performed a really cool close up trick. Lance really deserved the Master Magician title, his various shows were all incredibly enjoyable. While his show at the Monte Carlo Hotel was the biggest and most elaborate I have very fond memories of his show at the Hacienda!

 

 

Farewell To The Great Marvyn Roy

•August 17, 2020 • 2 Comments

On July 1, 2020, we lost one of the great magicians of our time with the passing of Marvyn “Mr. Electric” Roy, at the age of 95. Marvyn Roy was a star of magic for most of his life, and his passing has closed the curtain on an entire era of magic. Marvyn’s distinguished career included performing in just about every TV show and live venue that mattered. Marvyn Roy played the kind of gigs that most magicians merely dream about. Even more importantly, Roy has been a source of inspiration to many generations of magicians.

In the magic community, Roy was as famous for his generosity of spirit, as he was for his classic “Artistry of Light” magic act. Spending time with Marvyn was to be uplifted by his excitement and pure love of magic. He had an almost limitless knowledge and understanding of every aspect of the magical arts and shared it freely with his fellow magicians.  It was impossible to spend any time around “Mr. Electric” without becoming a better and more passionate magician.

Born in Los Angeles on April 1, 1925, Roy was the king of the themed magic show. In his teens, Marvyn developed an award-winning act of silk magic called “Marvyn the Silk Merchant.” In 1950 with help from Alan Wakeling and Ray Muse, he introduced the prototype of his Mr. Electric show.  Later in his career, Marvyn launched two more themed shows billed as Mr. Puzzle and The Magic Jeweler. However, it is as Mr. Electric that Marvyn Roy is remembered the most fondly.

During World War Two, Roy was among the second wave of soldiers that landed on Normandy in 1944. After being wounded and receiving the Purple Heart, he was attached to Special Services and performed in a variety show entertaining the troops. Upon returning to civilian life, Marvyn studied theater at UCLA to more fully develop the act. However, there was one more thing needed to propel his life and career to the next level. 

In the early fifties, Marvyn learned to ice skate to perform his act in ice shows. It was a fortuitous decision.  At The Conrad hotel in Chicago, he met Carol Williams, an ice skater and rope spinner. The young couple fell in love and were married in 1956. In Carol, Marvyn now had the perfect professional partner and life mate. For 50 years, they shared the stage and traveled the world, dazzling audiences with their iconic teamwork. Both onstage and off, “Mr. Electric & Carol,” were a perfect dyadic, and had a dynamic relationship that delighted both audiences and their eclectic collection of friends.

A brief recap of Marvyn and Carol’s career would have to mention their regular appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Tonight Show, and numerous other domestic and international television shows. The couple also played The London Palladium, The Lido de Paris, and Radio City Music Hall as well as the best Las Vegas venues. The couple toured Russia with Ed Sullivan and opened for Liberace for over five years. Along the line, Marvyn picked up every major award that magic has to give. An excellent first-hand reminiscence of Roy’s career is available in his 2005 book “Mr. Electric Unplugged,” it is a great read and highly recommended.

I am just one of many magicians whose life was quietly and profoundly changed by a meeting with Mr. Electric. I had watched Marvyn & Carol on various British television shows and was deeply in awe of their showmanship and high energy magic show. I particularly enjoyed the dramatic moment in their act when Marvyn donned goggles and illuminated a 10,000-watt lighthouse bulb in his bare hands. It was the powerful heart of a spectacular show. The duo seemed like inhabitants of a different universe to this teenage Brit magician. Watching them on our tiny TV set performing live from the London Palladium, I could never have dared to guess that they would become dear friends one day.

I arrived in America in 1974 at the age of 22 and began to unravel a career for myself doing what I loved best—performing magic. My first real gig was an 80 dollar “club date” at the Long Beach Elks Club. When I arrived at the venue, I was astonished to discover I was working with Marvyn and Carol Roy. There had been a hitch in the booking procedure resulting in a bill that featured two magicians and two jugglers. Even more alarmingly, the entertainment committee had decided to put both the magicians in the first half of the show, with the two jugglers comprising the second half. No-one has ever accused many Elks Club entertainment committees of having a lot of showbiz acumen! Marvyn explained the situation to me, and much to my surprise told me that he would be opening the bill, and I would follow him and close out the first half of the show. For a while, I was pretty darn excited that Mr. Electric was going to be my opening act. How little we know in those early performing days! As a gnarled old veteran, I am now firmly aware that unless it affects your fee, go on as early as you can in any bill. I learned this lesson very clearly that night in Long Beach. Almost everything I performed in my show that night had just been presented far better by Marvyn within his themed format.

My show featured a floating ball, Marvyn had floated a light bulb, I cut and restored a piece of rope while he cut and restored a microphone cord. Even my killer effect, featuring an electric chair routine, was eclipsed by being proceeded by Marvyn & Carol presenting their spectacular version 25 minutes earlier. The audience was pretty darn kind to me, which I appreciated. Still, I felt somewhat foolish, and crestfallen as my wife Susan and I were packing up my props after the show.

At the very end of the evening, I was getting ready to slink back home with my magical tail between my legs, Marvyn materialized next to me. “Would you both like to come out and join us getting some breakfast at “Denny’s?” He said. Amazed and delighted, I replied, “Of course!” I couldn’t have been more excited at this rare opportunity to act like a genuine magic professional. We followed Marvyn and Carol to the nearby coffee shop, and the four of us quickly settled into a corner booth.

After ordering our breakfast, I was to experience that signature enthusiasm and generosity that made Marvyn Roy such a prince among men. Marvyn told me how much he had enjoyed my show, especially my Chinese Linking Ring routine. This effect had undoubtedly been one of my better-received pieces, if only because Marvyn hadn’t performed it! Marvyn then spent the rest of our breakfast, educating me on the importance of having a themed act with a name that people would remember. Before we finished our pancakes, he had devised an entire act that involved me linking different items together. “What you can do,” he enthused, “is change your name to Link Lewin!” By the time we left the restaurant, I was halfway ready to do it.

One of Marvyn’s many suggestions was that I immediately purchase a Himber Linking Finger Ring to develop my linking prowess further. The next day still on a rush from being treated, totally unrealistically, as an equal by such an esteemed performer, I drove to Joe Berg’s Magic Shop in Hollywood and placed a deposit on a Himber Ring. While I never developed an entire show linking objects, I certainly got my money’s worth from that finger ring. It became a signature effect that opened many doors for me. It was the trick that I performed on my first TV appearance in 1979 on The Merv Griffin Show filmed in the enormous Caesars Palace showroom in Las Vegas.

Over the years, I worked with Marvyn and Carol many times, and we became good friends. We often recalled that first show, and I was able to thank him for his kindness to a young and nervous rookie performer. The last time I saw Mr. Roy was in October of 2019 when I was performing at the opening night of Marvyn’s namesake magic theater in La Quinta. I got to tell this little story onstage during my show and enjoyed seeing Marvyn’s laughter as he sat in the audience. After the show concluded, we did what all performers do on these occasions—we went out with a group of magicians to have breakfast. Some traditions never change.

Marvyn is already sorely missed in our community. He was the best of the best, both onstage and off. I am proud to have known him.

 

 


 

 

Ayala on The Entertainment Files.

•August 13, 2020 • Leave a Comment

Ayala was starring in Dick Foster’s Spellbound in Las Vegas when I first met him. He is considered by many to be Mexico’s top magician. We were delighted when Joaquin stopped by the Entertainment Files studio for this interview.

 

 

Mac King on The Entertainment Files

•August 6, 2020 • Leave a Comment

In 1998, Mac King swung by the studio to record this Interview for the Entertainment Files. As always it was a pleasure to chat with “The King” of comedy magic. Mac has now got the longest-running comedy magic show in Las Vegas.

Steve Schirripa On The Entertainment Files

•July 29, 2020 • Leave a Comment

Back in the early ’90s, everyone in Las Vegas knew who Steve Schirripa was.  He was a larger than life legend to every comedian. He launched a second career as an actor that was meteoric. His roles in The Sopranos and Blue Bloods were just two of his many successes. I got to interview Steve on The Entertainment Files and requested to do the interview with Steve the actor–who was actually a few years away from being really launched. You will notice in the interview that he thought I was slightly crazy! I knew what I was doing though and that he was going to be a big star one day though. I look at it as being one of the few “scoops” I ever achieved on the show.

 

Fielding West on The Entertainment Files

•July 28, 2020 • Leave a Comment

Fielding West is a very dear friend and a wonderful comedy magician. I was able to entice Fielding to the studio for this Entertainment Files interview. He is his usual charming self but definitely shows his more serious and thoughtful side.

Melissa Anderson on The Entertainment Files

•July 26, 2020 • Leave a Comment

Our guest on this episode was the gorgeous and talented Melissa Anderson we were very excited to have her visit with us in Las Vegas and drop by the studio to discuss her amazing career. 

 

 

Luna Shimada on The Entertainment Files

•July 25, 2020 • Leave a Comment

Luna is a wonderful performer and a very good friend. We recorded this interview in 1988, and she performed a very nice Gypsy Thread on the show live. Luna’s father is Haruo Shimada and her mother was Deanna, who were one of the finest magic acts the world has seen. Luna keeps up the tradition very nicely!