Tamworth Magician
A Brief History of Magic
Considered
the "second oldest profession", Magic has been recorded as far back as
2600 B.C. Though this is still disputed, in an Egyptian tomb there is a
hieroglyphic which seems to depict the Cups and Balls trick. Some
scholars interpret this painting as just a couple people playing a game.
The
honour of the first "Magician" is usually bestowed upon a character
dating back to the Westcar Papyrus (1700 B.C.) by the name of Dedi. He
was noted for decapitating fowl and restoring them to perfect health.
Some
of the first practitioners of Magic used it to sway the religious
beliefs of people. The high priests of Greece rigged temple doors to
open and fires to light without any apparent human intervention.

Harry Houdini in one of his many Famous poses
The theatrical aspects of Magic began to be formalized through the performances of a Frenchman by the name of Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin around the 1840's. Called by many as the "Father of Modern Magic", Robert-Houdin enthralled the people of his era with many mechanical wonders he invented. He also has the distinction of stopping a revolution. In Algiers during 1856, the marabouts or religious leaders were inciting the people to break their ties with France. As an envoy of Napoleon III, Robert-Houdin created the Light and Heavy Box which terrified the strongest men the marabouts could find. Robert-Houdin could control this small roughly 8" by 12" box so that though the weakest child could pick it up, the strongest man could not. Though modern audiences would be bored by this simple display of electromagnetic principles, these concepts were totally alien to 18th century Algerians. Robert-Houdin died at 65 in 1871.

The Father of Modern Magic
Magic
in America actually started with the Indian shamans. They would "cure"
disease by spitting out chicken blood and bones from their mouth after
acting like they had "sucked" the diseased organs out of the sick
person. They would also "float" arrows using horse hair as the secret
levitating ingredient. (Amazing what you can do around the old
campfire.)
Theatrical magicians were itinerants during the late
nineteenth century. Among these were Alexander Herrmann and John Henry
Anderson, who billed himself as "The Wizard of the North". In Colonial
times, Richard Potter would travel and perform feats which fool even
today magicians.
Things really started happening in the early 1900's
with the emergence of Vaudeville. This launched that little known
magician named Houdini and Blackstone, Thurston, and P.T. Selbit, whose
claim to fame was "Sawing a Woman in Half"!
As Vaudeville declined,
so to a degree did Magic. It received its next leap in the 1970's
thanks to the successful television series The Magic Land of Alakazam
with its Texas star, Mark Wilson.
Like the tides, Magic's popularity
seems to ebb and flow. So it was in 1974, a young Canadian in jeans and
tie-dyed t-shirts turned The Magic Show into a huge success on
Broadway. Doug Henning went on to dominate the Magic scene on stage and
television due to his "hippie" look and high tech illusions. His
pinnacle of Magic was the critically panned Broadway show Merlin which
brought the wrath of theatre critics, but the praise of Magic lovers.
His recreation of the ancient illusion The Gypsy Moth was worth the
price of admission in and of itself.

Then
Magic really started to heat up with the introduction to the television
screens in 1977 of a young New Jersey illusionist by the stage name of
David Copperfield. It took him just a couple years to topple the
reining Henning for supremacy of the Magic world. His "disco" image and
illusions built around storytelling routines captured the imagination
of American and then the world. Today he still is the most recognized
magician, evident by the recent shows he performed in New York City
during the winter holidays that broke all box office records!
You
probably know the rest. There's Siegfried and Roy (Lions and Tigers,
but no bears in Las Vegas), Lance Burton (a Gentleman's Magician with a
lot of birds), Jeff McBride (I'm turning Japanese), Rudy Coby (the
Coolest Magician in the World with four legs), and Penn and Teller (non
magician Magicians. Yeah, right!) (Please note that these side comments
are not intended to be derogatory, but just a quick way of associating
something in their acts that you can remember the next time you pick up
the TV Guide and see their show listed.) And don't forget Derren Brown,
the man that took mentalism to new levels of greatness.

Derren in a poster in the style of earlier Magicians like Houdini
1996 was a banner year for Magic. More TV specials were broadcasted then ever before. 1997 is already looking to match that record. So stay tuned. Or go to see it live in a theatre, restaurant or here. Ultimately, Magic is the only theatrical art which needs to be seen live in order to truly appreciate it.Or maybe you will write the next chapter in the never-ending saga of Magic!?