Michael Kras wrote:In talking about us "doing magic", you make it sound as though we should all drop the goofy, or fun personas and become Gandalf... correct me if I'm unclear.
This is always a matter of personal opinion, I'm not about to tell anyone that their presentational style is wrong. However, my feelings on the matter are as follows:
Every time I hear someone use the word goofy, wacky, zany, *random*, kooky or mad to describe their performances style it makes me want to perform smash and stab with my face, and deliberately get it wrong.
Perhaps this is a British thing, but I hate the ridiculous broad smiles, the horrendous one liners and the awful, cheesy looks and clownish faces pulled by so many frightfully mediocre magicians who are more interested in making people laugh than doing anything particularly magical. (By the way Mike, I'm not saying you're like that, just that you have some of the same "gaggy" tendencies).
For me, magic is all about belief. For a short while, even if only for a few seconds, I want my audience to believe they've seen something magical happen. That is the first thing they should say when my name is mentioned - they should be telling everyone they know that I did something completely impossible, that blew their mind. I hope that, if questioned, they will also say that I was engaging, and funny, and incredibly handsome (I'm still working on the last one), but all of those things come second to the fact that I should be magical.
Because I'm a magician.
If I talk to someone who has recently seen a magician and all they say is how funny he/she was, then what they saw was a comedian, but possibly one that used tricks to fill the time.
Magic has the power to really affect people. You can make people laugh, but you can also make them cry, or you can scare them, or you can put them in touch with a sense of wonder they thought they had lost.
The comedy pianist Tim Minchin, who I highly recommend listening to, always says that when he writes a song he tries to make it the best song he can. The lyrics may well be very funny, as may the delivery, but the music itself is never the joke. Musically, they are always excellent. Watch some videos of Penn and Teller, or Derren Brown (especially if you can find footage of him on stage). They are very funny performers, with hugely entertaining shows, but they never use gags, or hokey one liners, and the magic is always presented as magic. The humor comes totally from their personalities, they say funny things but never tell jokes - and it all feels genuine. It doesn't feel scripted or rehearsed, even if it is. And most importantly, when it comes to the magic, it is still treated as being important and being magical.
Sorry, I've rambled a little. I hope I've got across a little of what I wanted to.