Lady of Mystery wrote:I totally agree, as long as you just treat everything as unimportant or as if it doesn't matter then 99% of the time your audience is going to do exactly that. People do worry about being caught out buut one thing to remember is that most of the time, your audience doens't know what's going to happen anyway so have no idea what they're looking for.
I totally agree with this, but I think it is important to add, (although it should be obvious) that the only thing that should really matter, where all your attention should be, is on the spectator. Don't talk to the cards, coins or props. Don't watch your own trick. Pay all that attention to the spectator.
And as said above, they don't know what is going to happen. It took me a long time to learn this lesson. But because they don't know what is going to happen, chances are they won't know your mistake is even a mistake. So don't point it out. Just keep on going.
I once read an article in the New York Times by Ricky Jay, quite possibly the best magician of our time, (and a lot of other times), he was on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and produced the wrong card. And while he admits it took him a few seconds to recover he realized that nobody knew that he had made a mistake. He just used the mistaken card to find the real card and nobody was the wiser.