Just in time for the holidays, local magician Jeffrey Day presents his take on Christmas magic with his one-man-show magic routine, based on magicians and mesmerists of the 19th century, at Woodruff-Fontaine House Museum this Saturday.
Day knew that the Victorian-era house, which was built in 1871, would be the perfect setting to present the routine he’s been honing for years.
“Magic is older than dance or music,” he says. “It goes back much before then. And in the 19th century, it became very elegant. That’s when magic really, really changed. And I wanted to perform my show in a place that would be suitable for it. The Fontaine House is like no other stage I’ve ever been on, and it’s a beautiful place to perform this kind of magic.”
Kathy Kalagias
Oh, oh, oh, it’s magic!
Day will perform mesmerist and mentalist tricks developed around hidden magic found in books and manuscripts of the 19th century and the works of magicians like Ehrich Weiss (otherwise known as Harry Houdini), Harry Kellar, and Howard Thurston.
During one trick, Day will show his mind-reading talents using the 19th century book A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens as a medium to determine what word a volunteer from the audience is thinking. Between this and other illusions involving more mind-reading tricks and Chinese linking rings, Day says the audience may be able to step back in time, not only to the Golden Age of Magic, but perhaps to their days of innocence, as well.
“I think the audience wants that sense of wonder,” he says. “And magic takes them back to their childhoods.”
The Mesmerist by Jeffrey Day, Woodruff-Fontaine House Museum, Saturday, December 14th, 7-8:30 p.m., $50.
“Let me tell you, it almost never goes up the sleeve.” Veteran educator and practicing sleight-of-hand artist Lawrence Hass drops some information on the audience in a TEDx talk. The PhD and former professor is working toward a philosophical understanding of stage magic. He wonders how magic performance can be so ancient and universal without having ever been seriously addressed by Western philosophy.
Hass was professor of humanities at Austin College before moving to Memphis with his wife, Rhodes College President Dr. Marjorie Hass. In addition to academic duties, he’s been known to teach magic to magicians at Jeff McBride’s Magic & Mystery School in Las Vegas. In his TED talk, he works toward a sturdy definition that separates magic from the the idea of “tricks.” He asks if techniques developed by magicians are somehow more manipulative, deceptive, or dishonest than any other kind of art or stagecraft. Magic, he ultimately determines, is “The artful performance of impossible things that generates energy, delight, and wonder.”
For Hass, who makes his Memphis debut at Beth Sholom Synagogue Saturday, December 1st, the live performance of stage magic constitutes a message of hope and transcendence. “As we live our lives, we constantly confront limits,” he says, listing the usual suspects: sickness, loss, death, and transition — things we want but can’t have, and things we wish were true but aren’t.
Then performers like Harry Houdini come along and show us we can escape. Illusionists like David Copperfield defy gravity and levitate. Magicians get their audience thinking big while working on a smaller scale. Hass is a prestidigitator, a card manipulator, and a conjurer, able to bring inanimate objects to life in his hand.
Impossible, you say? That’s the point. “When everybody wins in the world, that’s real magic,” Hass concludes, after one of his online card tricks. It’s a good line. It also seems to be a reasonable summation of this newly minted Memphian’s performance philosophy.
Intermission Impossible: Memphis is still relatively new for you. How are you adjusting?
Lawrence Hass: We really love it. We came to Memphis because Marjorie was hired as the new president at Rhodes College. We came in June of 2017. Since then we’ve really settled in — both into Memphis, the larger community, and also the Rhodes College Community. We’ve been very warmly welcomed and just love the city. There’s so much energy and culture and art. Memphis is on the rise, and we’re really happy to be a part of it. [pullquote-1] I was surprised to discover you didn’t take up magic until you were an adult with a PhD. And children of your own. There’s so much manipulation— so much manual dexterity required. I think of it like violin: Most of the folks who practice magic started training when they were very young.
That question’s very perceptive actually. You understand there’s this whole physical level to magic. And it has to work at a very high level. I sometimes think of myself, as being like an athlete, or a musician in terms of, there’s all this body work going on. And you have to stay after it pretty much every day. So when I came to magic, I was 34 years old. That’s older than most people, as you say.
I learned over time that, I think I have uncommon coordination. At first I had no perception of it. But as I started teaching magic to others, I realized that I could very intuitively and quickly do things with my hands that other people … they just didn’t have the same facility for. The other part of it, I was a musician back in the 1970s. I played guitar and piano, so obviously that was part of the picture too. I understood practice and rehearsal. Also, I came to magic as a philosopher. I studied art and aesthetics. So already, I was ahead of the game. I had the dedication and discipline to really keep after it, and I also had a vision, or sense of what artistry was. From the very beginning I wanted my magic not to be commonplace, but artistic.
In the TEDx you’re obviously connecting your ideas with narrative. But I also saw a lot of storytelling in your online videos. Is this exclusive to teaching magic or teaching people about magic, or is storytelling a regular part of the act?
It’s a part of the act. Some magicians that we see, it’s all about the props. Here’s the cup and here’s the ball and now the ball is gone from the cup, and so on and so on. And I find that tedious. It’s all purely visual and, “Fooled you! Made you look!” From the very beginning I wanted my magic to be about things that matter to people. In the show I’ll be performing Saturday night, I will have two “Once Upon a Time” kinds of stories that are Illustrated with magic. But even when it’s not about stories, what I do hopefully inspires or affirms the ways in which everyone is a magician.
A Philosophy of Magic: Memphis’s Newest Conjuror Has a Mission
When I watched your TEDx, I was reminded of directing Ubu Roi at Rhodes several years ago, which is an unrealistic piece. I bring it up because students would sometimes fall into traps of “naturalism” and I’d find myself asking, “Why lie to the audience? Do you really think they believe you are this character? That this crazy stuff is really happening?” The challenge to forego pretense gave actors access to problem-solving tools they didn’t have before. And one of your main points is all about breaking down pretense — magic isn’t about lying to the audience, or tricking them — It’s not suspending disbelief, but engaging imagination. I love this, obviously.
One of the things that hangs up contemporary magic is the notion that it’s about tricking people or fooling them.
Theater too, I think.
This is a very old, long association about magic, often from religious authorities and philosophical authorities who were trying to denigrate magic. When we shift to the recognition that magic is a theatrical art, and is engaged in creating astonishment, not lying to people or tricking them, everything about this changes. Because just like the actor isn’t lying to people, the magician isn’t either. What we’re doing is using techniques to create an entire experience — a theatrical experience. I think what happens, both magicians and non-magicians confuse the con artist with the theatrical artist. So, when I teach magicians, this is one of the things I say: ‘You are a theater artist, not a con artist. If you want to be a con artist go out and play three card Monte in the street. But if you want to perform theatrical acts of magic, you need the skills that come along with the theater.’
Right. And obviously performers like Harry Anderson, who built so much of his act around classic geek shows and cons, instinctively get this.
Yes. The ‘street thing’ is the character. And Harry was so smart about that. Penn and Teller are the same way. Their show is about the con games and the fun of the con. But I happen to know Penn and Teller, and they are very smart, dedicated theatrical artists. That’s just part of their presentation. I admire it greatly. My presentation is about helping people connect with magic as an affirmation.
Was that approach something you knew you wanted to do from the beginning, or was it something that evolved as magic came into contact with your other life in philosophy.
I believe the answer is, as a philosopher, I was always concerned with truth-seeking. I didn’t always get there But I was always concerned with revealing more or less true things about the world and how we might live in it. So I never would have gone into magic if it was all about lying to people to take advantage of them. I have zero interest in that. But once I understood that magic wasn’t about truth or lying, it was about creating a rich theatrical experience, then I realized those theatrical experiences could be inspirational and affirmational rather than, ‘made you look!’ And I realized that ‘made you look,’ aspect of it, which some magicians do, was really not essential to magic. It was a choice they made. So this grew out of my deep commitments as a philosopher. And just like Harry Anderson performed as a con artist, I performed as the philosopher magician. So it’s a very different show from what other people do, because there really is no other philosopher magician.
I was also surprised by your discussion that, as ancient and universal as stage magic is, it’s been so widely ignored by philosophy and academics.
It’s such a fascinating part of the story. When you study the history of magic and how we got into this place where there is no academic department of magic, anywhere in the world, that is itself a mystery. Because, as you say, magic is an ancient and universal art form. It’s very primordial in our psychology to conceal things — to make them hide and make them appear. Every infant plays peek-a-boo. Magic is primordial and yet somehow, it’s absent. The story of that, I believe, is the story of authorities not liking the energy and delight, and astonishment that magic creates. Religious authorities, scientific authorities, philosophical authorities, political authorities … and when we look back through the history all the way back to the Greeks, and even earlier than the Greeks, you can see magicians are distrusted. Magicians are held out as ‘the other,’ or the thing we don’t want to be. There are some unbelievable tracts in the history of religion, and the history of science, and history of philosophy, that are polemics against magic. So the modern-day magician has a lot of historical baggage to overcome, to help people appreciate this primordial art form. I’ll be very honest, it’s part of my vision. It’s part of why I do what I do. Because magic — It’s not just fine, it’s great. It’s energy. It’s delight and wonder.
A Philosophy of Magic: Memphis’s Newest Conjuror Has a Mission (2)
The Grizzlies failed to set a new franchise record for consecutive wins this weekend, their eight-game win streak coming to an end Friday night in Miami against the defending champion Heat. But the Grizzlies’ 1-1 Florida road trip was probably as encouraging as anything in the streak.
The Heat were winners of 12 in a row coming into Friday’s game, but the Grizzlies played them tight — neither team led by more than seven points — in their building, despite Zach Randolph turning an ankle on the opening play and being less than full strength the remainder of the game. It was a one-point game with 24 seconds to play when Lebron James hit a straightaway three to put the Heat up four and force the Grizzlies to foul. James’ free throws extended the final scoring margin. Up until that point, James had scored only 10 points on 3-13 shooting, Tayshaun Prince and the Grizzlies’ stellar team defense perhaps more effective against James than any team has been this season.
On the other end, the Grizzlies were able to rebound from their troubling recent offensive slide — it was their first game over 100 points per 100 possessions since before the All-Star break, per NBA.com — despite not generating many points off turnovers. The Heat’s lack of quality size had something to do with that, as Marc Gasol had one of his best all-around games of the season, going for 24-9-4 on 8-13 shooting. One wonders if the outcome might have been a little different if Gasol and Mike Conley had made it back into the game a little earlier in the fourth. (They each checked in at the 5:01 mark.) But it’s easy to second-guess and Gasol and Conley did play 36 and 34 minutes on the game.
Mike Conley, like his team, was just good enough to beat a depleted Magic squad.
The Lead: If the Grizzlies were doing an experiment in how listlessly they could play and still win, they probably cut it pretty close against an Orlando Magic team reduced — by the trade, injury, and suspension — to a seven-man, near-Summer-League assemblage.
Six of the Magic’s seven active players were rookies or sophomores and with a little under five minutes to go in the game two of them — starters Nikola Vucevic and Andrew Nicholson — had fouled out, leaving the Magic with every active player on the floor.
Was it hard to tell your team this Magic squad could beat them?, Lionel Hollins was asked to begin his post-game press conference. Hollins took the question literally and delivered a dry response: “It wasn’t hard to tell them that,” Hollins said, “But it is hard for them to believe this team has a chance to beat them.”
Hollins credited Orlando with playing hard from beginning to end and judged that his own team “did enough to win, and it wasn’t pretty.”
Marc Gasol looks to get his offense back on track against the Magic tonight.
The Grizzlies look to extend their current five-game winning streak at home tonight against the Orlando Magic. As always, when time permits, three thoughts on tonight’s game:
1. A Mismatch, On Paper: The Magic were the most active team in yesterday’s relatively quiet trade deadline, moving four players out — including sharpshooter J.J. Redick — and bringing four players in in two different deals. But, because of the timing of the trades relative to tonight’s game, it seems unlikely that any of the new players will be in uniform. Given that the Magic were already missing players to injury (Glen Davis) and suspension (Hedo Turkoglu), it seems like the Magic might only have eight players active tonight, with the majority of them first- and second-year players.
That’s bad news for a team that was already competing for the league’s worst record, going 3-26 (!) since a 12-13 start. The Magic have only one road win since mid-December and just lost by double-digits at home to the Bobcats. They’re bad — and now getting worse.
So, this should be a mismatch, but while the Grizzlies are one of only eight teams that currently have a winning road record, they’ve been vulnerable at home lately. Since Christmas, the Grizzlies have suffered home losses to the Sixers, Blazers, Hornets, and Suns, all teams with losing records.
“Finger Flicking Frolicking”? Sounds a bit naughty, doesn’t it? But if you want to see expert examples of this act, don’t head to the strip clubs. Instead, catch the Society of Memphis Magicians show on October 13th at the Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference Center.
This year’s show features a cast of nationally and internationally known magicians and illusionists, who will perform “grand stage illusions,” mentalism (mind-reading), juggling, and extreme skills “not to be tried at home.” For “close-up miracles,” a projection screen will let the audience see “the intimate details of Finger Flicking Frolicking.”
That alone, we think, is worth the price of admission.
The event is hosted by the Society of Memphis Magicians, otherwise known as Ring 16 of the International Brotherhood of Magicians. The Memphis group is one of the oldest in the country.
Society of Memphis Magicians, Saturday, October 13th, at 7:30 p.m. at the Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference Center. $12. For more information about the event and Ring 16, go to www.ring16.org.