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"Above all, they must also feel that they've been well entertained."
Mandrake wrote:A very good question indeed - I just wish there were an easy answer! How you entertain depends on your abilities and talents - it will be different for each performer. In general I'd say the basic principle would be that the audience feel they are part of the process rather than just watching someone do all sorts of clever stuff. It's not about the performer, it's about the audience and how they perceive the event/show. Plenty of eye contact, aim your patter to the audience as individuals as well as a group. Watch the professionals at work and see how they engage their audiences. I'm not saying you should copy them but perhaps see what they do, how they do it and adapt your findings to the way you present and perform your act. Perhaps others here on TM can post what they think and how they'd answer such an excellent question?
U THINK I KNOW wrote:Mandrake wrote:A very good question indeed - I just wish there were an easy answer! How you entertain depends on your abilities and talents - it will be different for each performer. In general I'd say the basic principle would be that the audience feel they are part of the process rather than just watching someone do all sorts of clever stuff. It's not about the performer, it's about the audience and how they perceive the event/show. Plenty of eye contact, aim your patter to the audience as individuals as well as a group. Watch the professionals at work and see how they engage their audiences. I'm not saying you should copy them but perhaps see what they do, how they do it and adapt your findings to the way you present and perform your act. Perhaps others here on TM can post what they think and how they'd answer such an excellent question?
Oh, that's such a good answer. I started trying that at the begging of a performance to think of it as if I'm trying to make a new friend to really talk to them, not at them, that they should be participants not onlookers (I think I read something like that from Ugean Berger) and it REALLY makes a difference. I never thought of the eye contact idea, I'm gonna try it thanks a lot
U THINK I KNOW wrote:Ok so I've been doing Richard Osterlinds "Perfected Center Tear" for some time (over 50 times)
http://www.penguinmagic.com/p/5536" target="_blank" target="_blank
and this is the second time that the spectator thought I was a "Psychic". How can I make sure that this dose not happen?
magicofthemind wrote:The book Maurice Fogel: In Search of the Sensational goes into some detail about the problems caused for Fogel when he was "accused" of being psychic.
Barry
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