JUST AN IDEA FOR YOU TO THINK ABOUT...
You don't start planning your holiday material two weeks prior to the holiday; even two months prior is cutting it rather close in that "new" routines will not yet be second nature and thus flow naturally for you when presented and your older "known" routines might just suffer the ordeal as a matter of habit vs. practicality.
When it comes to the suggestion made by Abraxus we are confronted with another critical issue; the art of creating suspense and enchantment using nothing other than our words and our ability to not only manipulate them but our own character and voice as well. The world of the Storyteller is filled with more challenge when it comes to creating wonder than anything any one of us can do with a deck of pasteboards or a few coins e.g. we need time to not one learn the script we are to lean on, but to gain technical direction -- coaching if you would, in how to be most effective just in the telling of the tale, allowing out magic to punctuate the story much in the way special effects punctuate action in a film.
Yes, this is most certainly "our season" but it is an area of performance some of us do year round which is the third reason those of you who wait till the last minute to contemplate such things will find yourselves falling short. I'm not saying that you can't do bizarre styled routine and have some fun, Eugene Burger has a ton of them (including one of my favorite card routine involving Dracula's visit to a college campus...) On the other hand, I am encouraging you to plan your goals around each holiday or event several months in advance. If you are working towards pro then you will be pitching and confirming Halloween show dates in February and March followed by Xmas programs you are scheduling in April & May... 4-6 months out is normal and many of the bigger named pros are scheduled as much as 18 months ahead on deals.
I'm not trying to rain on your dreaming and scheaming, just trying to shine some light on things so that you can be better prepared on down the road.
