Fredrick Turner

Reflections


Orson Welles on the State of Magic

In 1948, magician and mystery author, Bruce Elliott published the first his of four books for the general public. I don’t believe if any of them are still in print. They are available in the second hand book dealers. I’m certain that an ebook is available at Lybrary.com for a small fee, All are worthy of study. I am a little biased as Elliott was one of my favorite characters in the first half of the 20th century.

Magic As A Hobby contained a variety of close-up magic by some of the best names in magic at the time: Al Baker, Walter Gibson, UF Grant, L. Vosburgh Lyons, and Paul Curry to name a few. It also had a foreward by one of Hollywood’s directors, writers, and actors: Orson Welles:

It is entirely possible that this excellent book should never have been published – not like this; anyway, not for general sale.

There are two kinds of magic books, you know. The kind they give away with the box top off a breakfast cereal, and this kind of book, which tells explicitly and with pictures – so the reader can really get the hang of them – valuable secrets of professional magic.

In brief, I’m sorry that this one is so very good but I’d be honestly sorrier if it were bad.

At the outset it should be explained that the author of these prefatory sentiments is one of that dwindling and gloomy body of cranks who wish magic could have been kept a mystery. In his view magic’s worst enemies are that spreading section in any audience who know how the trick is done. It should be granted that a puzzle solved before it’s shown is just about as publicly attractive as an unmade bed. A real magician’s task, it seems clear, is to abolish the solution, the possibility of any solution in the minds of those he seeks to amuse.

And this is certain: He’ll fail to amuse if he doesn’t amaze.

Removing from magic the element of wonder is no less disastrous than music without the element of pitch.

There are some fine entertainers who use magic props in the sole service of comedy, but they are no more magicians than the clown with the breakaway fiddle is a violinist.

In magic’s golden age magicians offered laughter as a part of the show but never permitted disenchantment. For a marvellous hour or two they elevated their most adult audiences to the status of delighted children.

This art has fallen into decadence.

Wizards, deposed from the appropriate gilt and glamour of the playhouse, work their wonders these evenings in the frowzy hubbub of the cabaret, competing with bad whiskey for control of their beholders’ minds. The children are all home asleep, and of course the children are magic’s source and meaning, magic itself being, after all, no more than a formal and serious approach to the important business of playing with toys.

Comic papers and even magazine advertisements assail the young with diagrams and legends laying bare the most cherished secrets of the wizard’s trade. A child is so completely informed today or so completely bored with the whole subject that he finds a magic show no more entrancing than a stale joke.

Unless of course, he wants to do the magic himself.

For in this, the least interesting and least secretive of all the ages of magic, the most interesting and most secretive magician is the amateur. This is a fairly new and immensely important development.

Our world is crowded with eager gentlemen busily begging somebody, anybody, “please take a card,” and this is only sad because so small a part of the remaining population has any wish to take a card, or indeed, wants ever again to see another card trick. Yet each year hundreds of “new” tricks fatten the magic catalogues. Subtleties and sleights beyond possible count or practical usefulness are printed monthly. We are told that never before has there been such an interest in magic; but this, I’m afraid, is simply interest in magic by other magicians – and would-be magicians at that.

Not that the would-be’s aren’t often skillful enough to be the real thing. But you don’t get to be a magician by joining a magic club or living in a magic store. You can only be a magician by putting on a magic show, you can only put on a magic show by getting an audience to come to see it. The bad news is that the dealers are selling more tricks while the theatres are selling less and less tickets.

Now, I can’t persuade myself that wholesale dissemination of magic’s backstage lore hasn’t contributed heavily to this present plight.

The profession – and with it the art of magic – is most surely done for unless secrets like the ones to be found in this book are more carefully kept from the attention of the merely curious. That’s where you come in – you, the serious reader. There is enough in these pages to equip a thoughtful student with half a career of real performances. An idle hour or two with this remarkable work, however, will also fully equip mutton-heads and hecklers to spoil much of the best magical entertainments. The purpose of this foreward is to suggest that this should happen just as seldom as you can possibly help.

For I come not to bury magic but rather to point out that a very high respect is due these following effects; that the reader proceeds at magic’s risk. If all he wants to know is how the magician does his stuff, let him shop elsewhere. But the reader’s intentions are honorable, we’re sure; and here, if he pleases – in spite of years of syndicated exposes – are miracles. Let him learn them carefully and perform them to their credit. Well executed they are sure to astonish and delight.

Magic is starving for a new audience. If astonishment and delight won’t bring an audience into a playhouse any more, then of course something is rotten in the state of the Union, and it isn’t only magic that is doomed.

Orson Welles, Magic as a Hobby

By the way, the book was reviewed in the July 1948 issue of Genii by Dariel Fitzkee who praised the book but said this of Welles’ introduction: “The foreward by Orson Welles doesn’t contribute a thing, to my way of thinking, but maybe it adds prestige.” Sounds like a bit of an ass.