I have fairly established opinions on this, and will try to address them. Please don't judge what I am saying - note that this is only my opinion:
There arent many women in magic. I mean there are lots but it's a tiny fraction of the number of men. Why is this?
It is of my opinion that most (though, albeit, not all) magicians became magicians because they had some social issues at some point in their life. This is not to say socially impotent - my personal example would be that I was run over my a truck, ended up with MRSA and put in isolation, and when I re-joined school I ended up as the outcast; by the time that I was allowed out the "cliques" had formed. I partook in "The Lord of the Rings" version of "Warhammer", and took up magic. I was the social outcast, and I needed something that I could do myself. As well as this, magic allowed me to turn into "somebody else". When I was performing at school, I wasn't being insulted. Take a look at Ellusionist, and you will see that pretty much every member is of school-age.
With relation to this and women, I know that a lot of the "socially outcasted" females ended up taking up their own hobbies. Stereotypically, women didn't do magic (stemming from the "Male magician with beautiful assistant" stereotype - when I perform nowadays women will say "do you want an assistant" not "can you teach me?". Men will say "can you teach me" not "do you want an assistant"). Because women never did magic, when socially outcasted younger females, on average, don't see it as an avenue to explore.
I'm sure that most people on this forum (though once again, not all) will probably admit they initially did magic because of a social reason - be it attention, loneliness, or because they had certain social skills that they needed to work on. This may not be the case now, years on, but the
initial reason why they started would probably be down to this reason.
Magic, after all, is a skill, it's something that can be learned. There's no physical aspect of the male anatomy (such as the required musculature which keep's male and female sports segregated) which is in any way advantageous magic. Magic is one of those things seen as all inclusive, there are young magicians, there are old magicians, there are tall magicians, short magicians, fat magicians, thin magicians, bald magicians all competing on a level playing field because the craft and the art is driven by and judged on skill alone, pure ability to perform.
Or is it? (you can make a dun-dun-dun! noise here if you like)
I feel inadequate, not because I am still learning and very very near the start of what I hope will become a long career in magic, but because I fear that if I decide to go pro, ditch in the software biz and try to become a working magician for a living, I will hit a barrier judged not on skill but on waist size?
I am constantly reminded of the fact that when people think of magic they think of men in dapper suits and top hats. The only way a female magician can be considered against this stereotype is by bringing something else to the bargaining table. And by something else I'm talking about corsetry and flirtation.
I see what you are saying, and I agree with certain elements. You will be judged on waist-size yes - but not "you must be a size 10" but more "you shouldn't be unhealthy". Now that I have turned pro I am working a lot more on my body image - not the clothes that I wear, but making sure that I don't become overweight, and try to keep healthy. Take a look on television (for example). Not a single famous magician was ever unhealthily overweight - Paul Daniels, David Blaine, Dynamo, Criss Angel, Derren Brown, etc - they are
all not unpleasant to look at. I agree that to a degree it should be based on ability, but it will always be based on looks as well. In any job that uses face to face contact, somebody who is healthy and not unattractive will always have an advantage over those who are not. This is not necessarily the way it should be, but it's reality.
And with relation to your corsetry and flirtation - I absolutely detest flirty female magicians - I absolutely hate it. I think Penn and Teller: Fool Us brought out the worst persona from female magicians. I hated the "do you want to crack my nuts" and the "tie me up...oooh" rubbish. Can female magicians not use their own personality? I know I do when I perform! I don't say such things as "hold my d!ck...I mean deck"
At this point I feel I should point out that I'm not a prude. I appreciate a nice looking body in sexually suggestive outfits as much as the next person, I just don't feel like the next person would neccessarily appreciate MY body in sexually suggestive outfits.
Though I'm sure no one really ever intended it to end up like this, there is an undercurrent that magic is a field solely judged on ability and performance skill... unless you're a woman in which case you also need to have a smoking hot bod.
And lets face it, if you have a smoking hot bod and you want to become a performer, the current celebrity trend shows you don't need to spend years infront of a mirror practising prestidigitation to win X-factor.
I think this may be keeping women out of magic. It's certainly making me question whether I'll ever go pro.
And this is where, as I explained above, it is of my opinion that you are incorrect. I believe there is a difference between somebody who looks healthy and somebody who is nicely dressed, and somebody who is wearing provocative outfits.
I know we can't exactly go out and change what the public wants, they either want men or sexy burlesque magic and we can't change that overnight, but In the places I brought this up before I was trying to raise awareness of how we might recognise and defeat this attitude within.
The first place I mentioned this was when many people were commenting on a video of a very attractive woman performing card flourishes, many of them saying she wasn't great but made up for it with other assets (yeahh.....)
Socially retarded magicians with no social skills? No? Does this not remind you of what I mentioned above?
Most (though not all) magicians started because they were missing that vital social element. I know I was. I know I now have it. I also know of people on this forum who don't like me or the way I am (yes I have my sources who have fed back to me what gets said behind my back) and that is a part of life. I am lucky to have found this social skill, but the point is there are several people on this forum (and I think we can all think of at least one person.....and if you can't, it's you

) who are still missing that vital element.
Rather than thinking of the few people who made remarks, try thinking of the many people who didn't? It reminds me of the few males who, on a night out, grind up against every single girl until they get a potential lay. Men then get judged. But rather than thinking of the two men that do that, why not think of the 502 men who didn't?
The other was on an introduction of a new female member who was still trying to find a style and one member suggested "Why not use the fact you're a women to your advantage?" When I called him on this, by suggesting that we didn't need to pander to male fantasy to succeed, he said he meant it innocently... but didn't go into what he actually meant. Possibly he couldn't think of an innocent interpretation to offer in its place.
This sort of thing as been addressed before. For example, a women who wears maybe, a tanktop whereby cleavage is showing (something which a lot of women wear day-to-day - I never see showing the top of cleavage as being "saucy or provocative"), you could use said cleavage as a hold out. Most women have longer hair on average than men...why not use that to your advantage? Have certain coins clipped in underneath several layers of hair? Hook something on the bottom of the hair? There are many ways in which you can use being a woman to your advantage, without resorting to stripping and offering yourself on a plate.
I'm not trying to make this personal, I've said no names here, I'm just trying to illustrate the point that while these attitudes are boiling around right under the surface of magic it will retain the image of being a very male dominated environment.
And in response I hope that you don't take anything that I have said personally. I have honestly put a lot of thought into this post and hope that you know that nothing is meant personally.
But hell, I don't know you and wouldn't recognise you if I passed you on the street

Or maybe I'm wrong.
What does everyone else think?
I hope that I have answered this question adequately
