by Grimshaw » Jul 4th, '10, 12:37
While i address this mainly to the performers among you, i guess if you've ever seen any magic first hand you're welcome to put your tuppence in too.
T'other night i was doing some magic for some people i'd just met at a friend's flat-warming party. I'm not of the ilk that shoves the whole 'I KNOW MAGIC, ME' in people's faces as i know it can be a bore, it was only a friend of mine that brought it up and i was pressured into performing some effects.
I say pressured because i'd had a few drinks and would really rather not have bothered.
Aaaaanyway. I did a few things that went down very well. It was after i'd finished (i think 3 good, solid, powerful tricks are enough incidentally - just thought i'd throw that in) that someone there said that i come over as a smart *rse when i do the tricks.
Now, i've never had that before and it disappointed me. I like to present magic tricks as a puzzle to be solved. I perform Derren's version of OOTW, because it is a huge puzzle to people, and i like watching them back track, either out loud or just in their heads. I know Stephen Fry called magic ' the revenge of the nerd ', but i don't like presenting it as such.
It's simply something for people to marvel over. I don't grin smugly and i don't act superior after an effect.
Or at least, i never thought so.
Am i giving too much credence to a comment that may have been made in jealousy? If it was a male who made it i may think so, as i know that some men can feel threatened if they can't explain something in front of females. This was a female's opinion though, and to me that adds weight to it.
Though i accept magic is not for everyone, it has made me re-think the way i perform. I've not taken such a knock as to want to stop, and as i said this is the first time anyone's said this to me.
Have any of you regular performers experienced such a thing? I've seen some magicians come over as very superior, smarmy and smart *rse and i've made a conscious effort to avoid such a character, hence my disappointment and my request for advice or tales of similar experience from you. By all means tell me to man up, and it was just one person's opinion in a room of ten or twelve. The rest seemed to enjoy it.
Are we, as magicians, doomed to be graduates of the school of smart-arsery? Or is it all in the presentation?