Kaufman,
Richard: The New
York Magic
Symposium Close Up Stage Collection Two ©1983 by NY Magic Symposium Hardcover, no DJ, 135 pages |
Image courtesy eBay seller KochMagic |
Comments: Illustrated by Richard Kaufman, Edited by Adam Fleischer, Published by New York Magic Symposium. There are 6 volumes in the NY Magic Symposium collection. The books include material submitted by participants in the symposium, held in the 1980's. Although most of the material is close up magic, there are a few stage and parlor type items. Each volume has some good material, and represents an interesting look at magic in the 80's. The last volume was to be Collection #6, but instead was published as Spectacle, by Stephen Minch.
Contents:
9 Foreword by Richard Kaufman. Intro to book
11 Close Up Performers
12 Paul Gertner B&W Photo
13 Tobacco Road (Paul Gertner): borrowed bill in borrowed
cigarette.
Uses TT
16 Penetrating Dice Stack (Paul Gertner): dice stacking with a
magical
effect. During stacking, the dice penetrate up through the cup one
at a
time. For the last die. the penetration reverses itself, and the
three
dice on top end up underneath
20 Patrick Martin B&W photo
21 Hard to Swallo (Patrick Martin): a carrot is cut into the shape
of a
fish and turns into a live goldfish
24 Phil Goldstein B&W Photo
25 Short Jump (Phil Goldstein): Ace through 4 of spades are shown
and 4
red cards are shown. cards are assembled on the table with Ace
through
4 spread out and 3 reds in one pile. The Ace through 4 assemble in
one
packet
27 Area Code (Phil Goldstein): Black Kings removed. Three cards
selected and returned to deck. Kings placed on top of the deck.
Kings
capture the selections one at a time
28 Frank Garcia B&W Photo
29 Reversible Mix Up (Frank Garcia): Card is selected and returned
to
deck. Deck is ribbon spread face down. Spectator picks his card
from
the face down cards, but gets the wrong card, which is placed to
the
side. Deck is gathered up, and top two cards are shown, but fail
to be
the selection. Finally the rejected card is inserted face up into
the
deck, to locate the selection. When spread face up, neither side
card
is correct, but the face down card is!
30 Big Fooler (Frank Garcia): using a crimp to locate a card
32 Michael Weber B&W Photo
33 Floored (Michael Weber): Performer hands deck to spectator as
they
enter the elevator. Spectator deals cards singly into performers
hands
and stops whenever he wants and is shown the selected card. When
the
two step off he elevator, the selected card is posted on the wall!
Uses
a Al Koran 5 Star Deck
34 20th Century Ten (Michael Weber): Magician takes 2 $1 bills and
staples them at the corners, and puts them in the spectator's
shirt
pocket with the ends out. He borrows a $10 bill and places it in
his
wallet for "safe" keeping. As a waitress passes by, he shouts Stop
Thief and the $10 bill has vanished, to appear stapled between the
$1
bills! Uses a Himber Wallet
36 Terry Seabrooke B&W Photo
37 Keyring Card (Terry Seabrooke): a novelty packet force: one of
5
tiny cards on a keychain has a sticker "why do they always choose
me",
and just happens to match the card selected from a packet
38 Charlie Miller B&W photo
39 Torn Transformation (Charlie Miller): red card selected and
magician
states he will divine the card using just a corner, which is
ripped
off. The three quarter card is inserted in the deck, and the
magician
states the card is black. When the spectator says no, the torn
card is
removed from the deck and is found to be black, as is the
torncorner.
The black card is transformed into red, and the corner is now red,
too
42 John Kennedy B&W photo
43 Watch (John Kennedy): coin vanishes and reappears under a
napkin.
Napkin moves each time. Finally, coin changes to a watch
45 Card Missile (John Kennedy): card selected and returned to
packet.
Packet is thrown through a sheet of newspaper, which when dropped,
reveals he selection embedded in the wall
47 Close Up Guest Contributors
48 Switch on Elmsley (Derek Dingle): 4 Aces are removed from the
deck
and the order remembered. They are then mixed up and dealt into 4
piles. Spectator points to one face down card, and three more
cards are
placed on top, after showing which Ace it is. The other Aces are
returned to the deck. The four cards in the pile now become the 4
Aces
50 Got You Under My Skin (John Carney): a stapled index card is
said to
contain a prediction. Spectator states a number or word, and the
card
predicts the number or word (boon writer)
51 Reversi (Mark Lefler): a reverse card & coin matrix using
only
two cards
54 Poor Man's Card in Balloon (Mike Gall): no special props needed
56 Morlock's Revenge (Larry Jennings): red and blacks separated,
then
shuffled together, then half the deck shuffled face up into rest
of
deck face down. Black card shown and inserted into deck, then red
car
stuck halfway into deck. Magician goes back in time to black card
halfway in deck nd red card on top, then all the cards face down,
then
the reds & blacks separate
60 Your Best Suit (Larry Jennings): packet of Ace through Ten and
a
Joker shown face up, while magician state how difficult to flip
one
card over. Spectator picks number between 1 and 10 and performer
deals
to that card. It is indicated and the rest of the cards dealt,
with the
Joker going to the performer's pocket. With a snap of the fingers,
the
cards are spread and one is reversed: the Joker! The selected card
is
now in the pocket
62 Tenkai Pennies Perpetuated (Sol Stone): Tenkai Pennies with an
alternate grip
64 The Pop Top Catch (Piet Forton): a pretty card change
66 Dollar Bill Coin Fold (Steve Dusheck, Jr.): a coin fold using a
dollar bill
68 Transfusion (Mono) (Jay Sankey): a double backer is shown and
claimed to be stuck together simply with suction. Two cards are
selected and signed and returned to the deck. The double backer is
shown, pried apart, and the face to face cards are the signed
selections.
70 Transfusion (Stereo) (Jay Sankey): Four card version of
previous
effect, good as a lead in to a four of a kind routine
71 Under My Spell (Tom Mullica): a four card spelling routine
73 Sympathetic Fans (Gene Maze): red backed deck is fanned,
spectator
points to a card which is outjogged. Rest of deck is turned upside
down
so outjogged card is face down in face up deck. Deck is turned
over and
fanned to show the single card face up. This is repeated with a
blue
deck, and two surprises are found: the cards match, and they both
have
different colored backs!
74 Okito Copper Silver (David Roth): copper silver transposition
inside
an Okito box
76 Any Floor Elevator (Jon Racherbaumer): an Ace is dealt to the
table,
and the spectator deals three more cards on top (Ace is face up).
Ace
is placed on bottom, but moves to the first floor, then 2nd floor,
then
top floor. Spectator is asked which floor to descend to. This can
be
repeated. Finally all the cards are shown to be the same: the
Kings
78 Surprise Blue Intruder (Jon Racherbaumer): spectator shuffles
deck
and names a card. Deck is divided in three packets, and two cards
are
chosen and lost. Cards are shuffled and spread face down. An odd
backed
card shows, on either side are the two selections. The odd backed
card
is the named selection! Requires perfect faro
80 Flying Collectors (Ben Harris): Aces are removed and
distributed in
the deck. The Aces then jump from the deck. Three cards are
selected
and returned, and the Aces inserted in the deck again. Deck is
faro
shuffled (not perfect) and again the Aces fly from the deck, this
time
with the selections between them
82 As Ye Sew, So Shall Ye Reap (Harry Anderson): coin production
during
a hand sewing pantomime
83 Last Licks (J.K. Hartman): spectator deals off 10 cards, and 5
of
these to a spectator 2. Each packet of 5 is shuffled, a card in
each is
peeked and shuffled again. The packets are handed to the magician
who
is holding some envelopes. The card packet is placed in a
envelope,
handed to spectator 2, and sealed with a rubber band. 1st
spectator
counts off 10 more cards, which the performer places in a 2nd
envelope
and gives it to spectator 1. Envelopes are opened, one has only 8
cards, other has 12: the 2 selections traveled
85 Close Up Host Contributors
86 Paul Harris B&W photo
87 License (Paul Harris): the performer's license changes places
with
the spectator's
90 Daryl B&W photo
91 Sunrise (Daryl): Tens are removed from deck, reds on top. Cards
are
counted from hand to hand. Reds are place beneath the blacks, but
the
reds rise to the top. This happens twice. Next the cards are mixed
red
black red black, are pulled out, and are found red red black black
94 Richard Kaufman B&W Photo
95 Every Everywhere (Richard Kaufman): (requires clean pass)
Spectator
1 and 2 each take a card from opposite halves of a shuffled deck
and
the cards are replaced in the deck. The deck is cut. Magician
states
card on top of 1 half looks like spectator 2's card, as does the
card
on the bottom, and a card in the middle (as each card is shown).
This
is repeated for spectator 1's card in the other half. Finally,
each
half is ribbon spread to reveal one card is the only red in a
black
half deck and the other card is the only black in a red half deck
98 Michael Ammar B&W Photo
99 Topitized Silk to Egg (Michael Ammar): the silk to egg trick
utilizing the topit effectively
101 Stage Performers
102 Vito Lupo B&W photo
103 Visual Color Change (Vito Lipo): visual transposition between
two
different colored billiard balls with a wine glass, silk, white
and red
balls
106 Jonathan Neal Brown B&W Photo
107 One Hand Vanishing Cane (Jonathan Neal Brown): the vanishing
cane
with no tape, thread, and the cane is held in the center
109 The Record with the Movable Hole (Jonathan Neal Brown): a
"record"
is shown in a sleeve with a silk through it. The silk is removed,
and
the record is removed from the sleeve. Next, the hole in the
middle of
the record is visibly slid up and around the record. Magician
pokes his
finger through it. The silk is draped over the record and then the
silk
can be seen through the hole. The hole is slid completely around
the
record where it becomes permanent.
112 Stan Allen B&W Photo
113 Sealed Cutter (Stan Allen): a silk is removed from a folded
paper,
and then stuffed back into the end of it. The middle of the paper
is
cut, severing the silk in the middle. The ends are put back
together
and the silk is pulled out: restored! Lead in to Phoa's Cut &
Restored Silk from Tarbell 7
115 Clean Sweep (Stan Allen): a cute vanishing ring effect. A
borrowed
ring turns into gold filings and must be vacuumed up with the
magician's mini vacuum. When the bag is opened, inside is found
the
ring!
117 Oral Gami (Patrick Martin): torn paper is placed in the mouth
and
"tied together" with the tongue. Paper expands into huge wad, and
with
a sneeze a bouquet of flowers appears. A dove appears out of the
flowers!
119 Positive ID (Phil Goldstein): In wallet is an envelope, yellow
or
pink? Spectator guesses right. On it is a drawing, X or triangle?
Spectator is right. Inside is red or blue paper. Again right. On
paper
is an odd or even number. Right again. Finally, spectator is
correct
about guessing a message left in the wallet
120 Scissoring (Phil Goldstein): a cute Himber ring routine.
Magician
will remove a ring from a rope, but fails, so the rope is cut
while the
ends are held by the spectators. Although the removal failed, the
rope
is instantly restored
122 Havanish (Charlie Miller): a box of cigars is shown, one is
removed
and lit. The rest vanish.
124 The Croquet Cabinet (Charlie Miller): a die box for a croquet
ball
126 Cards Across (Terry Seabrooke): Three cars transfer from one
spectator's pocket to anothers. Designed for stage.
129 Stage Guest Contributors
130 Revenge of the 20 Foot Silk Worm (John Ferrentino): a can of
peanut
brittle is opened and two silks removed. Small silk is vanished,
and
large silk is placed back into the can. small silk reappears and
is
lost again, to be found with the large silk in the can. When the
can is
opened, a snake pops out with the small silk attached.
132 Semi Impromptu Silk Production (Levent): plucking a silk from
the
air
133 Time Piece (Leslie Anderson): 6 people write number from 0 to
69 on
a pad. Page is torn off and handed to spectator, who picks 2
numbers to
form hour and minute. Spectator 2 is handed your watch, spins the
stem,
and watch and time read the same
134 List of NYMS Performers