Are Stooges Magic?

Can't find a suitable category? Post it here!!

Moderators: nickj, Lady of Mystery, Mandrake, bananafish, support

Are Stooges Magic?

Postby JAlexBrown » Jul 10th, '07, 00:29



I've been wondering for a long time if a trick involving stooges is really magic at all. I know this forum is big on saying any camera trickery isn't magic, so I'm curious if you consider the use of stooges to be magic or not. On one had there's nothing magical about reading someone's mind if you've planned the whole thing out, but the audience will never know any better and they'll still get their enjoyment out of it, and isn't that what magic's about - the spectator's enjoyment? So which is it? Are stooges magic or not?

JAlexBrown

JAlexBrown
Full Member
 
Posts: 88
Joined: Jul 2nd, '07, 02:24

Postby Craig Browning » Jul 10th, '07, 01:27

Anything used in moderation and in a manner that is practical which enhances the entertainment pleasure of our audience is "legit". Catch is, not everything some summarize (assume) as being done with a "stooge" works in said manner.

Sure, if I'm doing the DeKolta chair in a stage show I must employ a stooge on the other hand, I do have a Vanishing Lady routine that uses a real audience helper that is absolutely not "in" on how things work... she still vanishes and returns (ok :oops: I should say that these are things I did long ago, when I worked grand illusion, not material I do today).

When it comes to Mentalism, which is more main area of work now days, I loathe and do not encourage the use of the "Instant Stooge" methods popularized by Dunninger and others of his day. I feel such tactics are akin to exposure and cheapens both, the performer as well as our craft.

The reality of it all is simple however... there's far too much out there that we can do WITHOUT ever needing to depend upon an audience plant, so why worry about it? :wink:

User avatar
Craig Browning
Elite Member
 
Posts: 4426
Joined: Nov 5th, '05, 14:53
Location: Northampton, MA * USA

Postby Marcus » Jul 10th, '07, 04:24

as long as you're not performing the trick on the stooge, I think's its ok. Its fun to do some mentalism with them

Marcus
Junior Member
 
Posts: 35
Joined: Apr 9th, '07, 16:37

Postby chryles » Jul 10th, '07, 17:40

I'm going to use someone to flip half the deck while i've got my eyes shut for a triumph effect next weekend (party). although he will be a stooge because people will think i don't know what he's done, that's his only involvement in it. I think it'll work well.

User avatar
chryles
Preferred Member
 
Posts: 206
Joined: Mar 27th, '07, 16:14
Location: Sheffield: 34, AH

Postby Craig Browning » Jul 10th, '07, 19:11

chryles wrote:I'm going to use someone to flip half the deck while I've got my eyes shut for a triumph effect next weekend (party). although he will be a stooge because people will think I don't know what he's done, that's his only involvement in it. I think it'll work well.


:shock: Why? :roll:

User avatar
Craig Browning
Elite Member
 
Posts: 4426
Joined: Nov 5th, '05, 14:53
Location: Northampton, MA * USA

Postby Lord Freddie » Jul 10th, '07, 20:01

I have never used stooges before and never felt the need to. The only thing on similar lines I am considering doing it a two person telepathy act which technically isn't a stooge (as in someone pretending to be a complete stranger) but a two performer routine.

User avatar
Lord Freddie
Elite Member
 
Posts: 3657
Joined: Oct 8th, '06, 15:23
Location: Berkshire

Postby chryles » Jul 11th, '07, 19:56

Craig Browning wrote:
chryles wrote:I'm going to use someone to flip half the deck while I've got my eyes shut for a triumph effect next weekend (party). although he will be a stooge because people will think I don't know what he's done, that's his only involvement in it. I think it'll work well.


:shock: Why? :roll:


it's the triumph story happening in front of them rather than just being a story. i think it would work well as a sucker way of doing triumph, everyone will think a simple pick a card trick has been messed up, then i magically sort it out. also a few of the guests have seen me do triumph before.

User avatar
chryles
Preferred Member
 
Posts: 206
Joined: Mar 27th, '07, 16:14
Location: Sheffield: 34, AH

Postby Mandrake » Jul 11th, '07, 22:48

Strange isn't it? If a magish uses a confederate in the audience, it's called a stooge and usually frowned on. If same magish uses a lovely assistant in skimpy garments to assist with the funny biz, it's considered quite normal :? .

User avatar
Mandrake
'
 
Posts: 27494
Joined: Apr 20th, '03, 21:00
Location: UK (74:AH)

Postby bananafish » Jul 11th, '07, 23:36

Magic is the experience not the method.

User avatar
bananafish
Veteran Member
 
Posts: 5821
Joined: Apr 22nd, '03, 09:43
Location: Simon Shaw. Suffolk, UK (50:SH)

Postby mark lewis » Jul 12th, '07, 08:58

I agree with Bananafish but stooges are a methodology in which great care should be used since there are some practical disadvantages using them. The use of a secret confedarate can be very effective if done right but it is a very dangerous method and I believe it should be used sparingly.

I will even use one myself on occasion but the technique has it's hazards. If the audience has the slightest suspicion that you are using a stooge the whole act will go down the tube and there is no recovery. Sometimes stooges overact and audiences sus them out. Sometimes audiences sus out the stooges even when they don't overact since audiences can be quite intelligent animals. Perhaps the trick is too impossible and a stooge is the obvious solution.

One major disadvantage is that stooges talk over a period. They will recount their secret help as an anecdote to people and this doesn't do you any good at all.

Using stooges is a judgement call. Some great results can be achieved with such but be very careful indeed. Sparingly does it in my opinion.

mark lewis
Elite Member
 
Posts: 3875
Joined: Feb 26th, '05, 02:41


Return to Miscellaneous

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests