Magic Effects
There is much discussion among magicians as
to how a given effect is to be categorized, and disagreement as
to what categories actually exist -- for instance, some
magicians consider "penetrations" to be a separate category,
while others consider penetrations a form of restoration or
teleportation. It is generally agreed that there are very few
different types of effect. There has been disagreement between
some magicians (such as Dariel Fitzkee, Harlan Tarbell, S.H.
Sharpe) as to how many different types of illusion there are.
Some of these are listed below.
Production The magician produces something
from nothing—a rabbit from an empty hat, a fan of cards from
thin air, a shower of coins from an empty bucket, or the
magician themselves, appearing in a puff of smoke on an empty
stage -- all of these effects are productions.
Vanishing The magician makes something disappear—a coin, a cage
of doves, milk from a newspaper, an assistant from a cabinet,
or even the Statue of Liberty. A vanish, being the reverse of a
production, may use a similar technique, in reverse.
Transformation The magician transforms something from one state
into another—a silk handkerchief changes colour, a lady turns
into a tiger, an indifferent card changes to the spectator's
chosen card. A transformation can be seen as a combination of a
vanish and a production.
Restoration The magician destroys an object, then restores it
back to its original state—a rope is cut, a newspaper is torn,
a woman is sawn in half, a borrowed watch is smashed to
pieces—then they are all restored to their original state.
Teleportation The magician causes something to move from one
place to another—a borrowed ring is found inside a ball of
wool, a canary inside a light bulb, an assistant from a cabinet
to the back of the theatre. When two objects exchange places,
it is called a transposition: a simultaneous, double
teleportation.
Escapology: The magician (an assistant may participate, but the
magician himself is by far the most common) is placed in a
restraining device (i.e. handcuffs or a straitjacket) and/or a
death trap, and escapes to safety. Famous examples include
being put in a straitjacket and into an overflowing tank of
water, and being tied up and placed in a car being sent through
a car crusher.
Artistic depiction of a levitation magic trickLevitation The
magician defies gravity, either by making something float in
the air, or with the aid of another object (suspension)—a
silver ball floats around a cloth, an assistant floats in
mid-air, another is suspended from a broom, a scarf dances in a
sealed bottle, the magician hovers a few inches off the floor.
There are many popular ways to create this illusion of the
magician himself being levitated, such as the Balducci
levitation, the King Rising, and the Andruzzi levitations.
Penetration The magician makes a solid object pass through
another—a set of steel rings link and unlink, a candle
penetrates an arm, swords pass through an assistant in a
basket, a saltshaker penetrates the table-top, a man walks
through a mirror. Sometimes referred to as
'solid-through-solid'.
Prediction The magician predicts the choice of a spectator, or
the outcome of an event under seemingly impossible
circumstances—a newspaper headline is predicted, the total
amount of loose change in the spectator's pocket, a picture
drawn on a slate. Prediction forms the basis for most
'pick-a-card' tricks, where a random card is chosen, then
revealed to be known by the performer.
Many magical routines use combinations of effects. For example,
in the famous 'cups and balls' a magician may use vanishes,
productions, penetrations, teleportations and transformations
all as part of the one presentation.
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