phillipnorthfield wrote:More elegance than traditional magicians
I don't see why you would limit the importance of elegance in magicians.
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phillipnorthfield wrote:More elegance than traditional magicians
mark lewis wrote:I think the most important skill a mentalist can possess is to find some way of doing it without boring everyone to death. Especially me.
Klangster1971 wrote:I think the key skill is the ability to communicate succinictly. As previous posters have mentioned as a mentalist you've got to ensure that everybody understands what is going on at all times.
Someone on a differnt thread mentioned the DB presentation of Berglas' Newspaper Prediction in "Something Wicked..." as a great example of using Equivoke - but, having watched it again, it is so much more than that. It is a perfect example of keeping the audience informed and entertained simultaneously whilst keeping the effect moving at a rattlingly good pace.
By the end of the routine, everyone knows what has happened and everyone know how they got there.
So, in summary, I think communication skills are of paramount importance to a mentalist.
Sean
pcwells wrote:Exactly. But my point was that the silent, purely visual magicians are the ones that need elegance, while a mentalist could be a scruffy klutz, so long as they're articulate and believable.
Part-Timer wrote:I'd say there are a couple of essential things: believability and entertainment.
Everything else is really just an aspect of one of those two main abilities.
Presence, building rapport, holding an audience's attention, charisma, showmanship and not boring the audience to death (for Mark - and he's quite right) are all really just part of someone being a good entertainer.
Magical skill, having the 'right' look (which definitely does not require a nice suit in many cases), being on the ball, having a strong memory, being good at spotting and exploiting opportunities, possessing a solid explanation for one's abilities and being knowledgeable are all things that build believability.
There is a third aspect that is not essential to being a good mentalist, but is very handy if you want to make money at it; you must have a good business head.
The more astute among you will have spotted that there is an overlap between these three things. Good, you're on your way.![]()
There might be a fourth element, but it's arguably less vital. I think a successful mentalist (and indeed a magician) should be willing to learn (indeed, keen to learn), and accept that they don't know it all, and probably never will. Because of this, they should remain a bit humble, even if they don't admit it in public. There is a tension between this and the ego that is often needed to carry a performance largely on one's own. There is a reason I used the word "element"!
By the way, having read the method for an effect is not the same as understanding it, and it's not the same as being able to perform that effect properly.
mark lewis wrote:I think the most important skill a mentalist can possess is to find some way of doing it without boring everyone to death. Especially me.
bmat wrote:mark lewis wrote:I think the most important skill a mentalist can possess is to find some way of doing it without boring everyone to death. Especially me.
Ah men! Although, when I'm forced to watch a mentalist more often then not I get a good nap.
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