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Craig Browning wrote:I'd HIGHLY recommend you have some long talks with experiences ESCAPISTS (Not Magicians... there's a MAJOR difference). You also need to get some lectures pertaining to this field and the realities of doing a "nothing but escapes" show...(HINT: not even Houdini did such a program... it's too boring!)
The other thing you need to recognize (as pertaining to something I say above) is that using a Siberian Chain release does not make one an escape artist nor does owning a sub trunk or even a Water Cell. Escape work requires a very unique mind-set that is akin to doing Stunt Work for movies or even some of the more thrill seeking sports that are out there. There is a legit danger to it.
It takes a very special kind of person to do this sort of work and "sell" it... few achieve that level of skill or "audience connection".
Craig Browning wrote:Thanks for the kudos David...
Long, long ago when I was still in High School I set out with the thought of doing more and more escapes and trying to get recognized as the youngest to do things like the Water Cell, etc. Sadly, one of the more "death defying" pieces we pulled together when very wrong and that was the end of my escape career... I took a 1,200 foot fall into Lake Michigan and skipped across the water like a stone... I was one big bruise for about six months and sadly, it was all caught on tape by local news reels (I shutter every time I see the footage). The failure of this stunt is proof that even when you have a crew of pros that are very much in the know, things can still go wrong. I got beat up pretty good, my old chum Michael Rosso ended up with severe brain damage and a rather shattered body attempting a similar bit.
If you were to talk with Mr. Escape (Steve Baker) he will tell you horror stories of honest to god near death situations (including a situation in South America in which another noted Escapist deliberately changed the fire chemicals on him and fiddled with some of the shackling system in hopes he'd fail...getting rid of the competition as it were.)
I had a very short lived five or six years doing genuine escape work in my mid and late teens. I've done the Water Cell a few times since the accident but always as an illusion vs. legit... the last time we did it we made it vanish.
Mandrake wrote:The thing is, in magic if you make a mistake the worst that can happen is you get laughed off stage and have to work you way back up to standard whilst worrying about where your next appearance will be. If you foul up in escapology, you already know where your next appearance will be. In the cemetery.
pcwells wrote:Not an escapologist myself, but what I always find problematic with escapology is credibility.
Magicians are obviously doing tricks, and don't need to prove anything - the good ones just suspend your disbelief for a while.
Mentalism feeds well off the ambiguity of not knowing what's real and what's trickery.
With escapology, audiences are familiar with the concept of fake handcuffs and dodgy locks, stolen keys... They don't know the technical details of how stunts are achieved, but they'll always suspect gaffed gear.
Unless you're playing an Ann Summers Party, there's little chance of you borrowing all the restraints you need to be completely above board. (come to think of it, that's a great idea - I'll have to suggest it to my local store!).
So your big challenge is to sell the reality of your escapes. Even if it's all genuine stuff, you're going to have to go several extra miles to convince your audience of it.
Showmanship, anyone?
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