Thursday, November 14, 2024

T. NELSON DOWNS TALKS!

I discovered a little known film of the 1932 SAM Convention in Detroit and wrote about it in my Cardopolis Newsletter. Cardopolis Lab 02 to be specific. I thought it an exciting piece of footage because we get to hear the voices of T Nelson Downs, Nate Leipzig and several other prominent magicians. Someone then republished the information on the Thayer Magic Group without mentioning Cardopolis but adding ‘courtesy of David Britland.’ Which was a complete surprise to me since no one asked me about it. Cheeky devil!

One magician who made magic proud was Thomas Nelson Downs. Here is what was published in Cardopolis Lab 02 together with some additional information about T. Nelson Downs, the King of Koins, one of the greatest manipulators the world has ever seen.


FROM CARDOPOLIS LAB 02

Here’s an interesting magic clip. It’s from the SAM Convention in Detroit, 1932. It shows a rather mischievous Tommy Downs, almost clowning around as he tries to make sure he’s in the movie. Later you’ll see him perform the Coin Star. I’ve never been overly convinced by this trick, but I have to say that Downs has a wonderfully light touch compared to others I’ve seen do it. Makes you realise why he was praised for his coin manipulations. Definitely worth paying attention to.

I do recall discussion as to whether ordinary coins were used for this trick or whether you might cheat and wax one of the coins so it stuck to the fingers. I think the coin on Down’s thumb is, let’s say, firmly placed. Oh, and you also hear Downs talk, which was a surprise for me. Also talking on this film, and performing some cigar manipulation, is Nate Leipzig alongside John Mulholland and Paul Noffke. Noffke demonstrates a little card manipulation.

When you click the link that follows, start your viewing at 01:46:35. The magic segment is at the end of a very long news reel collection. Here is the link at the Historic Films Stock Footage site.


SOME THOUGHTS

Much of what I know about T. Nelson Downs comes from the correspondence he had with Eddie McGuire. I delved into this when writing Phantoms of the Card Table (2003) with Gazzo. Downs was very knowledgeable about card magic, but he became famous for his work with coins. He travelled across the world with his coin manipulation act, an act that was praised as the finest of its kind. It was also copied by other performers, some of them, like Talma Mercedes, making a good job of it.



By 1912 Downs had largely retired from variety and was living in Marshalltown, Iowa when he began his correspondence with Eddie McGuire and became acquainted with the Phantom of the Card Table that was Walter Scott. You can get a sense of his character from the correspondence. He was proud to declare his expertise not only on magic but also cardsharping. He wrote to McGuire:

'I’ve read all the books on Card Sharping and I’ve “been there & helped skin ’em,” and I know from experience that the best thing ever invented for advantage playing at cards is “Second” dealing. It beats all the other devices put together for getting “the coin” in any card game for the following obvious reasons:'

And then went on to list why second dealing, Walter Scott's favoured technique, beats all other sleights when cheating at cards. Downs was exceptionally well-informed, and described riffle shuffle chains of the kind we associate with Charles Jordan and the use of eight perfect dovetail shuffles to bring a deck back to its original order. In the letters he writes of his friendship with Dr Elliott andHoudini

Downs and Houdini had been friends since they met at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893, they later worked in many of the same venues across the US. Downs travelled to London in 1899 where his act was very successful and this encouraged Houdini to do the same because one year later, and without a booking to his name, Houdini was in London trying to sell himself as the world's greatest escape artist. They remained in contact for many years, Houdini regularly sending Downs his latest press releases.

On hearing of Houdini's death in 1926, Downs wrote to McGuire: 'I was very sorry to hear of Houdini’s death. Regardless of his faults Houdini was the greatest booster for Magic that ever lived and probably ever will - his early demise will be a great loss to Magic.'


THE LONG NAIL

Downs explained his manipulations in his book Modern Coin Manipulation, published in 1900 while he was still working the act in the theatres. The book contains photographs of Downs’ hands and in them you can see the overly long nail on the little finger of the right hand. There was no mention in the text as to the reason for this oddity. But Willard S. Smith, writing in The Sphinx magazine (October 1950), said, ‘His hands were not overly large and by way of partial compensation he let the nail on his right little finger grow to abnormal length. Perhaps this helped him to backpalm six half-dollars, a feat which he found not at all difficult.’ Looking at the photographs in Modern Coin Manipulation, this might be true.


It's not clear from the photographs in Modern Coin Manipulation whether the nail on Down’s left little finger is also long. I mention this because Downs also used a long nail to maintain a break when performing card magic. See Greater Magic (1945) where Hilliard describes The T. Nelson Downs Speller:

‘I should record here that Mr. Downs makes use of his famous long little finger nail at this point, by inserting it in the break under the Ace of Hearts and then inviting the spectator to cut off a few cards. He holds the pack in such a way that the cut can only be made by the ends and as the spectator takes hold of the cards he tilts the inner end of the eleven pack with his finger nail thus forcing the cut at this point. This is a very useful method of forcing the cut and can be done, even if the performer does not enjoy the use of an elongated horny appendage on his little finger. It is only necessary to hold a break by squeezing a little of the fleshy part of the tip of the little finger in between the two packets, and not to raise the packet perceptibly as the spectator makes the cut.’

Downs refers to a nail break in a letter to Eddie McGuire (November 23rd, 1929) where he gives instructions to hold a break in the deck, adding that ‘I hold this break usually with the L. finger nail.’ It’s not clear whether the ‘L’ means ‘little’ or ‘left.’ Downs also made use of his thumbnail to hide a blob of wax used in a trick and to nick or scrape the edges of cards so they could be located in the deck.


A MAGICAL GIANT

Let’s return to T Nelson Downs and his coin manipulation act 'The Miser's Dream.' There are plenty of accolades from the press about the act, and Downs featured many of them in Modern Coin Manipulation, but the most enthralling account of Downs’ act that I’ve read was by A. J. Essler and published in Top Hat (Issue 5, 1951), the newsletter of the Portsmouth & District Magic Circle.

I have no information on A. J. Essler but his essay is one of a series called Magical Giants of the Past. Essler writes he was around 18 or 19 years old when he saw Downs perform at his local theatre. And that while 30 years may have passed and ‘distance may lend enchantment to the view,’ he says that, ‘Wherever the truth of the matter lies, to me Nelson Downs remains the most outstanding magical performer of my experience.’ Essler’s description, which mentions Downs' voice, continues:

‘Nelson Downs was one of nature’s fortunate beings, in that he possessed all the attributes which make the ideal stage performer. I say nothing at the moment as to his manipulative ability. He had a really fine appearance, and naturally he was perfectly turned out, happiness exuded from him, and perhaps, next to his very great skill with his hands, his truly magnificent voice was his greatest asset.'

‘I have never seen since then anyone who tripped so likely down to the footlights, who seemed to enter upon his (indecipherable faded text) entertaining his audience with such éclat. He seemed to move not to walk: “Ladies and Gentlemen, I will try and amuse you with some tricks in magic, but before doing so, I’ll remove my cuffs, as it is not my intention for to deceive you (notice the odd phrasing: “For to deceive you”), he goes on: “Now may I borrow a hat?” A topper is passed up from the orchestra. “I was going to show you the rabbit trick, but someone said you have seen it before, so instead I’ll tell you the story of a Miser’s Dream.'

‘From this point the classic Aerial Mint, as he reached into the air and caught a silver piece, he conveyed the impression of having actually caught it, sometimes he caught a single piece, at other times a number, then as he took and pushed it through the hat we were certain that it had, in fact penetrated the crown, then his little catchphrase, “Every movement that picture,“ spoken in almost a whisper but this whisper in that wonderful voice could be heard in every corner of the house. The Coin Catching ended, he then proceeded to show a variety of passes, vanishes, productions, the coin passing through the legs, turn over of 90 coins lying on the palm without visible movement of the hand. What an artist? and what perfect enjoyment his act provided he was truly an actor playing the part of a magician.’

When discussing this with Richard Wiseman, Richard asked a good question. Did Downs use music in his act? There’s no mention of music in Modern Coin Manipulation nor any of the press accounts that I’ve seen. But the sound that is mentioned is what one journalist called 'the melodious jingle' of coins as Downs tossed them into a glass or hat or set them tumbling down a coin ladder. When it came to sound, Essler recalled:

‘When Downs was on the stage, you could truly hear a pin drop, there was no intermittent applause, the spectators were too intent to break the silence - and let me say to you young performers, silence indicates attention, let the applause come in its right place, at the end.’

Essler recalled a friend who had also watched Downs. The friend, who ‘disliked all forms of conjuring,’ had unwittingly gone along to the theatre thinking that the ‘Miser’s Dream’ was a theatrical sketch. On meeting the following day, the friend told Essler, ‘I saw one of the finest dramatic performances last night I am ever likely to see, I enjoyed every moment of it.’

At the end of the show, Essler went backstage with several magic buddies and hung out with Downs in his dressing room. ‘He seemed delighted to see us,’ wrote Essler, and asked them to come again and he’d tell them all about the performance he was about to give for some local dignitaries.

‘He showed us everything he could think of in card and coin work, and was quite generous in his praise. One of my friends was really clever with coins and cards, and he had one or two moves that delighted Downs. He was, he said, “Tickled to death with that, I’m sure going to use it, here’s something in exchange."'

The last paragraph of Essler’s essay pays a touching tribute to T. Nelson Downs:

‘There are others who were much more intimate with Downs than I who say that there were better manipulators than he. On that I am unable to offer any decided opinion, I have seen many: Mersano, Allen Shaw, Talma, Fred Harcourt, Cameron, the younger Dobler, and others. They all did excel in some direction, but none had the acting ability, none the sense of timing, none the spirit of sheer joy and none that wonderful voice. No, there was only one King of Koins, and his name was Tommy Downs.’

THE GREATEST BOOK ON MAGIC EVER!

T Nelson Downs stayed at 4 St. Alban's Place, Regent Street when in London. He published the address in Modern Coin Manipulations. It also appears in a series of advertisements he placed in The Sphinx magazine in 1903 and 1904. I discovered this using the Ask Alexander database at the Conjuring Arts Research Centre, a service I can I thoroughly recommend.

Downs was promoting a book to be written in collaboration with British magician G. W. Hunter. Hunter was a successful comedy performer on stage and a pioneer of close-up magic off stage. Max Holden, writing in The Linking Ring (January 1933), praised his card work, with a special mention of Erdnase, saying, 

'Now first of all let me explain that Mr. G. W. Hunter is one of the greatest inventive magicians of all times and Mr. Hunter was one of the first magicians to master the Erdnase book. Magicians used to say it was impossible but Mr. Hunter showed that it was.'

The book Downs and Hunter were planning would have made it the largest book on magic published at that time. The advertisement, headed 'Special to the Fraternity,' is tantalising:

'As I am daily in receipt of many inquiries re our new book, I wish to state briefly that I have collaborated with Mr. G. W. Hunter, and we are at present, and have been for some time, very busy writing what we promise will prove positively the greatest and most up-to-date work ever produced on modern magic. The book will contain, amongst other features, a complete and correct explanation of all the programs, exactly as performed by our most eminent magicians since the time of Robert Houdin to date; including those of Bautier DeKolta,  Anderson, Verbeck,  Jacoby,  Guibal,  Bertram, Hartz, Fox, Hertz, Nix, etc., etc. These, programs will be described with every attention to detail, and in such a manner that any performer desiring to reproduce them will experience no difficulty in doing so.'

'The book will contain about 700 pages, solid matter, most concisely written: there  will be no 'padding' or unnecessary 'patter.' A chapter will be devoted entirely to Handcuff Trix and will contain a biography and sketch of the famous Harry Houdini, written by himself.'

The book was a work in progress and Downs advised not to send any money until it was completed. Unfortunately, the book never appeared.

Wondering what happened to this magnum opus I found a manuscript by G. W. Hunter titled Mystia, which was the name of Hunter's wife. Fergus Roy published this lost manuscript in volume 2 of The Davenport Story: The Lost Legends (2010). Fergus estimates that the manuscript, which is about a 100 pages, was written around 1899. It does contain explanations of programs featured by many famous performers, as mentioned in Downs' advertisement. Was this to be part of Downs' untitled masterpiece? I'll leave that thought with you.





Friday, September 20, 2024

WHERE IN THE WORLD...

Where in the world did Paul Curry get the title for his most famous card trick, Out of this World? New York magician Paul Curry invented Out of this World in 1942 and it quickly became a favourite of magicians. Fred Braue ran a poll of the Five Best Tricks in Hugard’s Magic Monthly in 1947. Out of this World got the most votes for a single trick, coming third in the top five. Today, over 80 years since its creation. Out of this World is still regarded as unbeatable for its combination of extraordinary effect and simple-to-do method.
The method is so simple that Paul Curry thought little of the trick when he invented it. He was inspired by a trick of Walter Gibson’s called Pay Off (The Phoenix issue 1, February 1942). He and his friend John Scarne saw Audley Walsh perform it, liked it, and set about trying to come up with variations. Curry came up with Out of this World and put it on the market for a dollar only a month after Gibson’s trick debuted in The Phoenix. Curry said it took only 15 minutes to figure the trick out and he didn’t think the method that deceptive but he tried it on his wife and it worked. ‘To this day,’ Curry said, ‘I don’t quite understand why it should fool magicians.’ (Hugard’s Magic Monthly, December 1948). John Scarne’s variation on Gibson’s Pay Off was said to be so difficult ‘even Johnny couldn’t do it.’
Richard Wiseman recently staged a show about Paul Curry, The Invention of Magic, at the Edinburgh Fringe. It paid tribute to Curry's ingenuity. It was this show that set me wondering where Curry got the title for his most famous trick.
The phrase ‘Out of this World’ wasn’t new in 1942, but it certainly wasn’t as common as it is now. Where, I wondered might Curry have heard this novel phrase. We can track the frequency of words and phrases published in books using Google’s Ngram Viewer. The NGram charts shows a rise post 1940.
Here is a chart listing use of the phrase ‘Out of this World’ in US newspapers between 1934 and 1956. It’s not a complete representation of the entire archive but it’s pretty good.
Paul Curry lived in New York and if we examine newpapers in that area, we get this:
There’s a noticeable bump as we head towards and past 1940. When I looked at what was happening in New York, I found something interesting. 'Out of this World’ might have been familiar to New Yorkers because in 1941 it was announced that the famous Mask and Wig Club would present a new production, their 54th, in New York and it was called ‘Out of this World.’
Did Paul Curry see it? There’s no evidence that he did. But the Mask and Wig productions were incredibly popular. They had a new production every year. Later they would even be featured on the Ed Sullivan TV show. And writers Richard Levinson and Bill Link, would write six of their productions before becoming famous for creating the shabby detective Columbo.
Those writers loved magic which explains why it was featured several times in the show. Terri Rogers told me a story. She met one of the Columbo writers, I can't recall which, on a cruise ship she was booked for. Terri was booked for her ventriloquism act but she would often perform magic informally. It was during one of the magic sessions that Terri got talking to the writer who explained that he and his writing partner were so intrigued by Robert Harbin's Zig Zag Illusion that they had one brought to the set for filming. Just so they could examine the prop for themselves. In another version of this story, when the props were delivered the two writers immediately ran down to the set to see the trick. But the illusion wasn't there. The production had ordered the wrong prop. (Magic Magazine, March 2015).
Outside the world of magic, the phrase ‘Out of this World’ became more well known after this time because it was used in several high-profile media productions. 1945 gave us Out of this World the musical, a Hollywood movie starring Eddie Bracken and Veronica Lake. Bing Crosby dubbed the voice of the less musical Eddie Bracken.
The title song had been recorded a year earlier by Jo Stafford. The music was composed by Harold Arlen, who also composed for The Wizard of Oz, and lyrics were written by New Yorker Johnny Mercer who would go on to write classics like Moon River and Days of Wine and Roses. Maybe most interesting for magicians is the Arlen and Mercer has collaborated on The Old Black Magic the same year Paul Curry released Out of this World.

In 1947 we have the thrilling Out of This World radio series. Or one episode at least, a story about a ventriloquist adapted from the British movie Dead of Night (1945). The show featured a spooky Out of this World intro.

These items have nothing to do with Paul Curry. The phrase ‘Out of this World’ could well have been a bit of cool slang that found a place in the language during the 1940s. We shouldn’t forget that Paul Curry was 25 years old when he released Out of this World. Not that anyone ever described him as cool. Curry did not have a university education. He began his career working in the mailroom of the medical insurance company Blue Cross. He stuck to it and rose in the ranks to become vice president in 1964, retiring ten years later. The trick, Out of this World, has been published in books on magic for the public but before that had remained firmly in the domain of magicians for several decades.


Fred Braue wrote in the May 1946 edition of Hugard’s Magic Monthly: ‘So far as we know, no one has yet pirated "Out of this World". Everyone protects Curry on this one, and that's good.’ As we’ll see in a moment, this desire to protect the secret of Out of this World did not last forever.

Magician's Magic, 1965

One year after Curry became vice president of Blue Cross, Paul Curry wrote a magic book for the public called Magician’s Magic. I loved that book, not least because Paul Curry gave a full explanation of Out of this World. But many of the magicians of the time disliked the book, not just because they considered Curry had gone too far in releasing magic secrets to the public but because its contents were also serialised in newspapers.

Francis Haxton, writing to Stewart James, said:

I went into Davenports today to get my copies of the GENII and while I was there Bob Harbin came in. While we were talking to he and Pat Page, Betty Davenport having joined us, Bob Harbin picked a book off the counter, this being Paul Curry's Magicians Magic. After looking through it he spoke very disparaging of Curry for putting this out to the public and said that it was a hotch potch of material - it does not appeal to me either does not compare with the Curry material I am familiar with. John Young, reviewing the book in The Magic Circular, wrote: As Martin Gardner points out in his introduction, this book has been written for the Layman. In that event the professional or amateur magician may be pardoned for expressing concern at some of the disclosures that occur in the book. Admittedly, the sawing in half, the levitation with cranked bar, Stodare's Sphinx and the broom levitation have been described many times before, but one can only hope that those laymen who read the description of Paul Curry's own excellent "OUT OF THIS WORLD" will find the description too detailed to remember.

Bayard Grimshaw, writing in The Stage, and annoyed by a press article promoting Curry’s book, was blunter:

Can anyone explain to me just where the difference lies between picking a man's pocket and " lifting" his wallet, and robbing him of a part of his livelihood for personal gain? Which is what this amounts to.

Paul Curry addressed the question of exposing magic in the book, saying:

Exposing the secrets of professional magicians merely for the sake of letting someone know how tricks are done has little to recommend it. Revealing the prosaic and mechanical means by which a delightful and entertaining illusion has been worked out is deplored and opposed by magicians’ societies for the same reason that parents had rather not have their children made aware, at too early an age, that Santa Claus is partly made up of a false beard and two plump pillows. In the performance of magic, as in the beneficence of Santa, the effect succeeds only as long as the element of wonder is preserved.

He also explained what drew him to magic as a young boy when he saw the head on sword illusion performed at a fairground sideshow and why he decided to write a book about magic:

It was, the boy thought, the most wonderful thing he had seen in all of his nine years. On this day, however, something new was added. Possibly because of the end-of-season falloff in attendance, the barker promised that anyone buying a ticket would be permitted to step up on the platform and see how the trick was done. The youngster couldn’t believe that he had heard correctly. A chance to learn the answer to the wonderful puzzle that had been tantalizing him all summer! He was off like a shot, only to return quickly, half-dragging a reluctant father who dutifully bought two tickets and lifted his son onto the platform so that the boy could steal a behind-the-scenes glimpse of how a head could be made to exist without a body.

And now that the long-awaited secret was revealed, the boy found himself entranced by the sheer brilliance of it all. Why, he wondered, was there so much talk about Edison and Marconi and other so-called great men, when there were geniuses around who could in¬ vent real miracles such as this?

As it turned out, the boy would never forget that first glimpse into the world of magic. The fascination of that moment was to remain with him always, never lessening, but, in fact, deepening as his years and his knowledge of the subject increased.

Then one day there came the idea of sharing some of the things he had learned, an idea that others might also be caught up in the fascination of this most ancient of the arts — the art of magic.

And that is why he wrote this book.

I found Magician's Magic at my local library in the late 60s. It was far from the first book I read on magic, but the writing style conveyed Curry’s enthusiasm for the subject in the same way that Henry Hay had in The Amateur Magician’s Handbook.

Magician’s Magic featured some stage illusions that had inspired Curry including the head on sword trick he saw at the sideshow, but it also contained many of Curry’s own inventions, the jewel in the crown being Curry’s full handling of Out of this World. It was in this book that Paul Curry created something of a myth when he told the story of magician Harry Green baffling Winston Churchill with Out of this World:

It seems that one evening during World War II a group of Winston Churchill’s friends arranged a dinner party in an attempt to lighten, if only for an hour or so, the burdensome responsibilities that went with being a wartime prime minister.

The dinner proved to be a pleasant, relaxing, and welcome interlude in Churchill’s hectic, almost round-the-clock, schedule. But eventually duty called and even as “Winnie” lighted his after-dinner cigar, he realized he was behind time and at that moment he should have been on his way to an evening session of parliament. However, friends prevailed upon the Prime Minister to linger a moment or two, just long enough to permit magician Harry Green to demonstrate a new and baffling card trick.

The card trick was Out of this World and Churchill was so baffled he asked Harry Green to do it six times:

Finally giving it up, Churchill left to keep his belated appointment. The London Times, in reporting the incident, noted that when he finally arrived at parliament at 2 A.M., the Prime Minister was “befogged.”

Curry repeated the story in the book Worlds Beyond in 2001:

My warmest memory concerning this trick goes back to a day during World War II, when the mail brought a note and a newspaper clipping from a magician friend in London. “Congratulations,” the note read, “You’ve done something Hitler couldn’t do - you fooled Winnie.” The clipping from the London Times told how actor-magician Harry Green had, at Prime Minister Churchill’s insistence, performed “Out of This World” six times in a row. Still baffled, the report states, Churchill finally left for Parliament where his delayed arrival prompted the story. It’s something, I think, to know that an effort of yours occupied the thoughts, however briefly, of one of the world’s greatest men - particularly at a time when diversions could not have come easily.

The true story of Harry Green and Winston Churchill is a little different. I told it in Cardopolis 20 but I’ll repeat it here.



The incident occurred in June 1946. The war was over, Churchill had been ousted as Prime Minister and was now Leader of the Opposition. He had attended a show called Fifty-Fifty, a farce starring actor Harry Green who was also famous for his card tricks. According to Hannen Swaffer’s account in The People (June 30th, 1946), it was at a party after the show that Harry Green performed Out of this World. ‘Winston, one of a party of ten taken by the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, his kinsmen, to see “Fifty-Fifty,” went behind the scenes, met the company and then supped with the Greens and the other guests in a private room at the Savoy. Afterwards, Harry produced a pack of cards, shuffled them, and then said to Churchill, “Lay them down in what order you like, backs up and in two rows – trying to put the reds in one row and the blacks in the other.” ‘When Winston had done his guessing, Harry turned the cards over. All the reds and all the blacks were in separate rows!’

Hannen Swaffer was a well-known newspaper columnist and drama critic. He was also a magic enthusiast, serving at one time on the committee of Will Goldston’s Magicians’ Club. He was probably aware of Out of this World, one of the most popular card tricks of the time and sold by UK dealers. He went on to say: ‘Churchill made him repeat the trick six times and then do others, hour after hour, over and over again. It was perhaps with his head full of millions and billions that, at 2.30 in the morning, he felt really capable of going down to criticise the Budget.’

Swaffer said that Churchill had been noted for his recent ‘absenteeism” from Parliament and so it was a surprise when, left ‘befogged’ by Harry Green, instead of going home he turned up at Parliament at 2.30 in the morning! He wasn’t late for work; he was exceedingly early. And perhaps a little worse for wear after a night out on the town.

The ‘millions and billions’ refers to an interesting line that Green used during the presentation. After the trick, he said to Churchill, “If you had bet £1 on being right over the first card, Mr. Churchill, and then doubled your bet each time, you would have won something like £2,000,000,000.” That might be an idea for anyone who wants to apply a gambling presentation to the trick.


Harry Green, real name Henry Blitzer, was, like Paul Curry, from New York. As an actor, he had appeared in many movies and moved to England where he became a popular figure in British entertainment, having his own TV series and even running a club called The Jack of Clubs in Berwick Street, London. You can see Harry Green and the club here Harry Green.

A PARTING OF THE WAYS
As Fred Braue had noted, magicians kept the secret of Out of this World to themselves for many years. Prior to Magician’s Magic, you’ll find the trick referred to in books for the public but all you’re told is that it is brilliant and you can buy it from a magic store for a dollar. For example, Bruce Elliott, writing in Professional Magic Made Easy (1959), said: 'I recommend that you purchase this miraculous seeming trick, since I am not at liberty to reveal it here.’

Paul Curry released Out of this World to the public in 1965, but Paul Clive, a magician in Blackpool, had beat him to it. Paul Clive described the trick under the title of The Parting of the Ways in his book Card Tricks Without Skill. This book was first published in 1946, while Out of this World was being hailed by magicians as the world’s greatest card trick. However, the trick did not appear in Clive’s 1946 book but it did appear in the revised 1959 edition published for the public by Faber & Faber at the same time that Bruce Elliott was saying it was not his to reveal.

Clive did credit Curry, and even give the original title, but there’s no indication he got permission to describe it. Neither did there seem any objection to its description in any of the complimentary reviews of the book I’ve read in the magic press. Card Tricks Without Skill was another book I read as a kid. But I totally overlooked The Parting of the Ways. Maybe it was the way Clive described it. The description in Magician’s Magic was much more inspiring, possibly because of the tale about it baffling Winston Churchill, and that’s where I learned it.


PAUL CLIVE
Time for a little side quest. I met Paul Clive. He ran a magic and novelty shop on the North Pier at Blackpool. As a teenager, I spent a lot of time frequenting the magic shops of Blackpool: The Mark Lewis Magic Studio, Murray’s Magic Mart, and the Paul Clive Magic Shop. I’d read Clive’s book and knew who he was when I saw him but I was far too shy to engage in conversation.

I spent a lot of time in his shop because behind him were a couple of shelves of second-hand magic books. He’d pass them to me, one at a time, to allow me to browse through them in the hope I would buy one. The first thing I’d look at was the pencilled price on the first page. I couldn’t afford most of these, but there was the thrill of browsing their pages and seeing all the illustrations for tricks I’d yet to understand.

While I browsed, Paul Clive walked slowly behind the counter producing bird calls with a little device he had in his mouth called a Ventrilo. People in the shop would pause and wonder where the chirping sounds were coming from. I should add that Paul Clive bore no resemblance to a showman, performer or prankster. The idea that the bird calls came from him was never considered. Eventually, he’d reveal the secret and sell another Ventrilo to a tourist.


I’ve since learned more about Paul Clive. He had been a salesman, selling canned goods, and doing magic shows in his free time. He moved to Blackpool in 1931 and had the shop on the North Pier since at least 1947, and a business address, Paul Clive & Co Ltd, in Cocker Street, Blackpool, since 1949. From there he marketed his ‘Witchcraft’ brand of tricks directly to magicians and wholesaled them to magic and novelty shops across the UK.

Card Tricks Without Skill was originally self-published, and featured some photographs, including photographs of his wife and daughters to whom the book was dedicated The book was universally praised and reputedly sold 3000 copies in 5 months. One year later, 1947, another 3,000 copies were sold of what was called ‘the second edition’ though it might have been a simple reprint. Those are incredible numbers for a book aimed solely at magicians. It was the expanded edition of 1959 that featured Out of this World.

The version I had was the 1968 paperback edition from Faber & Faber. No photographs and a little dull if I’m honest, at least compared to other magic books published by Faber & Faber, even though the tricks were well chosen.


Clive travelled to the USA, around 1949, with his wife Muriel and daughters Gloria and Francis. That trip was announced in Abracadabra as, ‘Starting 18th March, Paul Clive is to make a series of appearances on television in San Francisco.’ He must have liked it because he stayed there, living and performing in the San Francisco area for some years before returning to England in 1958.

A biography of Paul Clive appeared in The Berkeley Gazette (March 2nd, 1949) where it described him as, ‘a round faced chubby Britisher with a delightful personality and keen sense of humor not generally associated with an Englishman’ In addition to performing he operated a magic and novelty store as he had in Blackpool.

Paul Clive told Goodliffe Neale that magician and ventriloquist Douglas Craggs was his brother, a claim also made in the Berkeley Gazette article though Paul Clive also says his father was a John Clive, a chief inspector at Scotland Yard. So maybe Clive was joking with Goodliffe Neale when he said that to avoid confusion it was Paul who changed his name by deed poll. Anyway, when back in England Paul Clive brought out the 1959 edition of his book and added to his income by performing magic and pitching tricks, at homes and garden exhibitions.

That’s enough of a digression. Let’s get back to where we started. Out of this World wasn’t the first trick Paul Curry published. In 1937 he marketed Touch, a prediction effect that proved incredibly popular with magicians. By 1939 his friends were calling him a ‘magical genius.’ One of them, Oscar Weigle, wrote about Curry’s idea of the perfect effect (Genii August 1939), and it wasn’t Out of this World:

A group of us New York magical enthusiasts were having a typical Saturday afternoon gabfest over sandwiches and coffee at a local cafeteria recently, when friend Paul Curry, a magical genius if ever there was one, remarked on what he considered the perfect card effect. A card would be placed face down on the table. The spectator would be asked what he would like that card to be. Having named a card, the one on the table would be turned around and it would be the same!

I wonder if this connects with his development of the Curry Turnover Change which was published the same year (More Card Manipulations No 2). 1941 saw the publication of Curry’s first booklet for magicians, Something Borrowed, Something New. In the Foreword to the book Curry gives us an insight into his thinking in devising tricks:

My purpose, then, was to attempt to make more practical those tricks which I liked best and which I considered open to improvement. In some cases, this meant strengthening a method to allow for a better effect. In other instances, it was the effect which required the going over. in all cases, I tried to make a change for the better. I hope I have succeeded.

The effects in Something Borrowed, Something New are notably very direct. Take the following as an example:

THINK OF A CARD
A spectator fans thru a pack of cards, thinks of one, and the deck is placed aside. The mentalist, after painful (?) concentration, names the thought-of card!

The Curry Turnover Change is described there along with nine excellent uses for it. There is also an effect called Potpourri. Readers of Magician’s Magic will recognise it as The Joker Knows. It was one of my favourite tricks from the book.

Paul Curry’s magic was not only direct but there was always a novel core principle at work that made the effect possible. There was minimum effort for maximum effect. He explored familiar territory but took different routes. The shortest route too and that’s what makes his tricks so practical. I’ve taken a long and winding route to get to the point of this article. Was Paul Curry inspired by a university theatre production in choosing a name for the world’s greatest card trick? I don’t have any concrete evidence that he did. But, like Harry Green’s performance for Winston Churchill, it makes a good story and I like to believe that it might be true.

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

CARDPOLIS 31 IS OUT NOW

Cardopolis Newsletter 31 is published. You can subscribe to Cardopolis here. And here is the trailer:

Tuesday, July 02, 2024

CARDPOLIS NEWSLETTER ISSUE 30

There are now 30 issues of Cardopolis Newsletter online. You can view them here. And there's a new trailer on CardopolisMagic at Instagram