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Many years ago David Devant, the great English conjurer, was approached by an acquaintence new to sleight-of-hand with cards. “Mr. Devant,” said this young man, “I know three hundred tricks with cards. How many do you know?” Devant glanced at the youth quizzically. “I should say,” the magician responded dryly, “that I know about eight.”
Devant was making a point with which all professional magicians are familiar. To perform card tricks entertainingly you must not only know how the tricks are done, but how to do them. There is a vast difference between the two, and if proof were needed, one need only watch the same feat performed by a novice and by an expert card conjurer. The novice knows the mechanics of so many tricks that he cannot do any one feat really well; the professional performs a smaller number of tricks which he knows how to present in such a way as to create the greatest possible impression upon those who watch.
We cannot emphasize too strongly that knowing the secret of a trick is not the same as knowing how to perform that trick; and that knowing the secret of hundreds of tricks is of little value unless each can be performed smoothly and entertainingly. It is far better to know only a few tricks which can be performed with grace, skill and effect.
Carlos75 wrote:Same here, about 7-8 tricks in a 'routine', 3-4 card tricks, a couple of coin/money tricks, and a couple of mentalism effects.
If I'm down the pub and asked to show a few tricks though I'll go through pretty much everything I can remember!
robstanley1 wrote:Hey bud!
If you check the preface to RRTCM, you'll probably find the following little story, which addresses part of your question very well indeed:Many years ago David Devant, the great English conjurer, was approached by an acquaintence new to sleight-of-hand with cards. “Mr. Devant,” said this young man, “I know three hundred tricks with cards. How many do you know?” Devant glanced at the youth quizzically. “I should say,” the magician responded dryly, “that I know about eight.”
Devant was making a point with which all professional magicians are familiar. To perform card tricks entertainingly you must not only know how the tricks are done, but how to do them. There is a vast difference between the two, and if proof were needed, one need only watch the same feat performed by a novice and by an expert card conjurer. The novice knows the mechanics of so many tricks that he cannot do any one feat really well; the professional performs a smaller number of tricks which he knows how to present in such a way as to create the greatest possible impression upon those who watch.
We cannot emphasize too strongly that knowing the secret of a trick is not the same as knowing how to perform that trick; and that knowing the secret of hundreds of tricks is of little value unless each can be performed smoothly and entertainingly. It is far better to know only a few tricks which can be performed with grace, skill and effect.
Since I first read this, at the tender age of 13, it's a story - and an ethos - I've never forgotten
jbauerctu wrote:I got to admit, I'm becoming interested in Mentalism. Only because of Derren Brown mind
robstanley1 wrote:jbauerctu wrote:I got to admit, I'm becoming interested in Mentalism. Only because of Derren Brown mind
Of course, those of us already into Mentalism already knew that...
robstanley1 wrote:... whilst another section will almost literally curse you to remember 20 words (for the rest of your life), beginning with, 'Telephone, Sausage, Monkey, Button...'
monker59 wrote:...I could think up 30-40 tricks that I know fairly well...
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