Your Best & Worst Performance Pieces

Tower of Lunatic Meat

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Sep 27, 2014
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I asked this question on a Tenyo forum earlier in the week and now I am curious about a large range of magic.

What are your best and your worst performance pieces?

Not exactly your favorite trick. But what is it in your repertoire that really works that you enjoy.

On the other side of the coin, what have you tried to perform and just really hasn't worked out for you no matter how much or how hard you try?
 
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Gabriel Z.

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Apr 26, 2013
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Not exactly my favorite trick but I would have to go with Dai Vernons Cutting the Aces. I nail it almost 85-90% of the time.

One trick on my youtube channel that I'm not so proud of how I performed is The Slow-Motion Four Aces. I would give myself an C- if I were to grade my performance on my Youtube Channel , I keep it on there for reflection sake. So that I can say 5 years from now , man I really sucked at performing this trick.
 

RealityOne

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Nov 1, 2009
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It is interesting that you use the term "performance pieces." I like Larry Haas's definition of a performance piece in his book Transformations-- "every perfomance piece includes trickery, the secret technical method, as one of its components. However, a performance piece also involves all the psycological and theatrical elements such as attention management, audience management, persona, showmanship, blocking, and script." As Larry says, "Tricks become magic through powerful presentation."

I tend to play with tricks for a while until I come up with a presentation that makes it interesting. Fitzke talks about dressing up magic with dancing girls and music, but to me, the presentation has to compliment the trick rather than merely accompany it.

My best performance pieces? Margarite's Wishes - my egg bag routine, my performances of Jim Steinmeyer's Pasteboards Under Glass and Fan Mail, Tamariz's Paradise Lost, "the Adventures of Z" -- my children's Zombie Ball routine, my Cups and Eyeballs routine and my children's Mismade Zebra Safari routine.

What makes those the best?

The effort that I put into each of them to get them to fit my style. My egg bag is a custom made Lynette Welch bag (a Malini bag made to Tarbell bag dimensions), I have a wooden basket that I put the eggs in a the end, the music is selected to match the presentation and the presentation is my own script about a girl living with her mother in Nazi occupied France.

Steinmeyer's Pasteboards uses props that I made myself, variation on certain methods and rewriting the script to fit my style. Fan Mail also involves hand made props as well as a different method (using a custom gimmick made by Lynette). There is something about Steinmeyer's scripts that works for my personality and I don't have to make a lot of changes.

Tamariz's Paradise Lost was almost perfect as written up. Nonetheless, I've modified the script to make it fit with my style.

My children's routines are just fun. The zombie ball routine is about how the ball (named "Z") is being trained to disappear -- but actually can be seen by the kids floating behind my back. The ball is truly animated because it takes on a personality (much like a kid!). The Cups and Eyeballs routine has a great ending where three large eyeballs are produced from the cups. The Mismade Zebra routine involves a change bag, silks, a jumbo wand, safari hats and a camera to take pictures. It has a lot of interaction and funny moments.

My worst performance pieces -- everything that I haven't developed into a performance piece. I have a couple of older routines on Vimeo that were really the first draft of the performance pieces.

I'm working on a bunch of new routines that are going to be my own versions of classics -- a linking rings routine, a miser's dream routine, two new cups and balls routines (one using olives and talking about when I used to bartend while in law school and the other producing six pool balls (#3 though #8) as the finale), a sands of the desert routine, Steinmeyer's Dining Out, a bill in lemon routine and my variation of Tom Stone's Benson Burner using sponge bunnies. The props for all of those effects have a professional and custom feel (Proline rings, RNT brushed stainless cups, Redheart and Mohagany wand, a crystal bowl and glasses for sands of the desert, menus purchased from a restaurant supply company (along with table cloths and napkins), a lemonade picture that can perform airborne and hundreds of sponge bunnies. More importantly, the scripts are my own and the routines feel personal to me.
 
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Oct 19, 2015
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Good stuff being shared here! As a novice and one who only performs for Grandkids, my favorites are rope tricks. I love to do the Professors Nightmare, after a bit of practice I can do it very well and it does amaze all my GK's including the twin 19 year olds! I also like the Cut Rope and Repair. I think I love these as I can do them well and I always loved them when watching magicians perform them. Also, I should mention Scotch and Soda coin trick. I put it in the hand of one of my GK's and when they open up, WaaaaLa.....it is magic!

Based on recommendations from members on this forum I did purchase a copy of Mark Wilson's Complete Course in Magic! Wow is this a good book for newbies. Although I am still pouring through it I am working very hard on learning to use sponge balls/ squares. I need to learn to use my hands and be natural. I also have a good DVD on sponge balls, I am getting better, but still a long way to go. My hands are small and heavy with some bad joints...but I am determined to add this to my tricks to perform...when I can do it for my wife and she doesn't see my doing anything "funny" then I know I am ready for the GK's!
 

Tower of Lunatic Meat

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Sep 27, 2014
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Ta-Da! I'm going to mention some Tenyo because that's what I have and I know it the best.

Best performance pieces:

- Super Cubio - The way I have the routine set up, the 'Super Cubio' (Which is this cube with a sting running down the middle of it) is made out to be a 'magician tester'. I've only tested this out on family so far, bear with me. The prospect of me telling someone that they are actually a magician is met with disbelief and curiosity. I tell them that magicians can make the cube stop on the string--to which they are able to without fail. It's quick, and try to do it 2-3 times just to get the point across enough and then move onto another trick to show their abilities as a magician.

- Magical Sneakers - it's a packet trick that is done completely in their hands. You have 6 pairs of brightly colored shoes, and through a complex sequence that mixes all the shoes together (that I colorfully guide them through), they are capable of finding the only pair of matching shoes.

I have routines written for: Mysterious Dog House, Prison Box, Magic Butterfly, Shrinking Pen, Ghost Camera, and Undercover Cube; but I haven't had a chance to test them out. All with the premise that the magic happens in their hands. I REALLY like how it looks on paper, but I haven't had a chance to work them out yet.


As far as worst piece goes, ta-da! Tenyo again!

- Magician's Clock - This was a packet trick I wanted for the longest time. It's a packet trick whose ending reveals the current time. I love it! I scripted what I thought was a neat routine, made an alternate handling; so what's wrong?
There are a couple...nuances that make the trick next to impossible to use in practical applications. I figured it would take me a very long time to get the routine to actually work, and even then, I was completely stressed out to get the trick to work (because of the unavoidable nuances) and didn't have NEARLY as much fun with it as I thought I was going to. It's a very high-risk trick and I didn't find it fun to work anymore; I lost my confidence in it to an irreparable point.
 
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WitchDocIsIn

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Sep 13, 2008
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My best performance piece? Hard to say. I am most well known for my Energy Transfer routine - it's a routine I have done for years, in almost every show I have ever done. It has grown over the years, and emphasizes the connection between two people. It has always done well for me.

Another great routine is my Sin Eater routine - It started a psychic surgery and has developed into a completely different piece. None of the original methodology remains at this point, but the story I use is still the same. I like this one as it is completely unique.

I had a living and dead test I really liked. It had an interesting presentation (to me) and a fun method (to me). Turns out, though, on stage - way, way too slow and dragged the whole show down. Consequence of wanting to do a routine just to include a particular thing. I've re-written it and the new version is much better.

I also have another routine I really liked, but it turns out it just doesn't work well on a stage situation. One on one, still a great routine with good imagery. But on stage, once again, it drags things down. Too slow. So I dropped that from my parlor show and replaced it with two other routines.
 
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My favorite trick is the blaine hand sandwich and my not that favorite.... Whell i like it but is hard and need a lot of practice my effect P.T.A you can see the performance on mh YouTube channel youtube.com/ftloko
 

RealityOne

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Nov 1, 2009
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Although I am still pouring through it I am working very hard on learning to use sponge balls/ squares. I need to learn to use my hands and be natural. I also have a good DVD on sponge balls, I am getting better, but still a long way to go.

Just don't point like Mark teaches... his book is AMAZING but the pointing in the sponge ball and coin routines is really bad form. I've never seen anyone else do that.
 
Oct 19, 2015
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Just don't point like Mark teaches... his book is AMAZING but the pointing in the sponge ball and coin routines is really bad form. I've never seen anyone else do that.

Thanks, I saw that in his book, but I am also using a DVD that shows a number of techniques. I am slowly getting it so it looks natural, that is the challenge after all with all hand work, is that it must be smooth, quick, and natural....takes tons of practice.
 

RealityOne

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Nov 1, 2009
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Thanks, I saw that in his book, but I am also using a DVD that shows a number of techniques. I am slowly getting it so it looks natural, that is the challenge after all with all hand work, is that it must be smooth, quick, and natural....takes tons of practice.

The key with any "move" is to practice what it looks like without the move. If you are doing a retention vanish, start by practicing actually putting the ball in you hand and moving your hand away. Pay attention to how you do it and then when you do the false transfer imitate what you did when you actually transferred the ball. Feel free to PM me if you have any issues with the moves (I'm pretty sure I've got whatever DVD you are working from and actually have Frank Garcia's Encyclopedia of Spongeball Magic book which really teaches the moves properly).
 
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