Analogy:
There are many sixteen-year-old metal-heads on the planet who have gained a stupendous level of expertise with the electric guitar.
They can do amazing things with the guitar at lighting speed and never hit a duff note.
Although I don't think they've ever bothered to learn any actual tunes.
If you look at their record collections, you'll probably find loads of stuff by 'guitar heroes', whose work is all technique and no bite. This is stuff that young guitarists drool over, but does absolutely nothing to engage the wider public.
Without thinking about why we do what we do and what our audience will untimately get out of it, we're no different to the current generation of bedroom guitarists.
"Did you see what I did? Did you? No, of course you didn't - it was the pass!"
I bought a lecture DVD from Paul Daniels, in which he argued that magicians are the worst people to judge the work of magicians. This is, he argues, because they look at magic from a skewed perspective. Final appraisal of good or bad should be given to non-magicians, who can easily state whether they were entertained or not. I have to agree.
I found the Nelms book interesting. And useful in that it got me thinking about the performance side of my magic.
It shouldn't be taken as gospel, but then no book should.
As for Mark's comments that all magicians and mentalists with drama training are bad performers, I'd probably argue that the examples he has in mind were either hammy actors to begin with, or they hadn't fully worked out how to apply their skills to something like magic. I suspect that there are a lot of very talented actors that have performed magic for Mark and slipped under his radar by getting the mix right.
And it's also important to remember that acting training doesn't make one a writer or director, and these are all disciplines that the magician hits upon when putting their own performances together.
Knowing what the trick is about and why you're doing it is, to my mind, infinitely more important than knowing how to use your voice and body for dramatic effect. But these concepts, too, are addressed by Nelms. It's like the guitarist learning to write catchy tunes in preference to practicing their shredding...
So... yes, Nelms wasn't an experienced magician, but that could possibly make him
better qualified to comment on the performance of magic.
It's also important to stress that books like this should be used to get you thinking around the subject and addressing their own take on magic. Take it as gospel, and you will tie yourself in hammy knots. Let the ideas percolate in your brain, extraplolate the ideas that excite you and reject the ones that don't. It can only help.
If I were to write a book on the performance of magic, it would centre around one single question:
why should my audience care about any of this?
I'm sure there are more experienced magicians than me that would take issue with that, too...
