The Magic Café
Username:
Password:
[ Lost Password ]
  [ Forgot Username ]
The Magic Cafe Forum Index » » Everything old is new again » » The top 10 classics of magic (7 Likes) Printer Friendly Version

 Go to page [Previous]  1~2
mtstic44
View Profile
Loyal user
280 Posts

Profile of mtstic44
Seems like the last few years I've been getting into the classics like:
Cups and Balls
Torn and Restored Newspaper
Egg Bag
Torn and Restored Card
Linking Rings
Slydini's Silks
Gypsy Thread
gregg webb
View Profile
Inner circle
1564 Posts

Profile of gregg webb
Cut and Restored Rope. Rising Card. Card Tricks (4 Aces, Selected Card Revealed). Producing Silks. More. And as the old catalogs said, "Limited only by your imagination."
mandrax
View Profile
New user
Montreal, Canada
48 Posts

Profile of mandrax
I would add chop cup to the list. It’s a classic and is part of many repertoire.
Mitchael
View Profile
New user
39 Posts

Profile of Mitchael
Hanging Coins - David Roth would be on my list. Monumental step forward in Coin Magic.
Waterloophai
View Profile
Inner circle
Belgium
1369 Posts

Profile of Waterloophai
The history of the Card Sword and the Card Stab.
Free eBook (PDF)
http://maigret.org/cardsword/cardsword.html
Jonathan Townsend
View Profile
Eternal Order
Ossining, NY
27300 Posts

Profile of Jonathan Townsend
Stuff magicians like to play with seems to go in and out of fashion apart from what working performers keep in their repertoires.

For coin items - the HPC trick and copper & silver transposition go on the list.
For card items - the cards across, oil and water, and ace assembly go on the list.
getting into parlor/stage - the milk pitcher w/wo the lightbulb in the lamp is a list item Smile
the 20th century silk trick (the silk winds up tied between two others)
...
...to all the coins I've dropped here
FrankFindley
View Profile
Inner circle
1040 Posts

Profile of FrankFindley
Quote:
On Jun 3, 2013, amakar wrote:
What do you think are the top 10 classic magic tricks?


This is a very interesting question. First, we have to decide what qualifies a trick to be a classic? Looking in the dictionary there are three definitions which seem pertinent:


1. Judged over a period of time to be of the highest quality and outstanding of its kind.
2. Remarkably and instructively typical.
3. A work of art of recognized and established value.

Subjectively putting those things together in magic speak, we are looking at tricks which are:

1. Of the highest quality - fools, surprises, and entertains audiences.
2. Over a period of time - has withstood the test of time, say, 50 years or more
3. Outstanding of its kind - best of breed/quintessential for one or more fundamental effects of magic
4. Remarkably and instructively typical - we as magicians can learn from studying them
5. A work of art of recognized and established value - used by performers of the highest level, A-quality material

In addition, there is the question of venue (parlor/platform, stage, close-up). Based on this, here is my list with one each for the most common fundamental effects (and a grand mention, too):

Parlor/Platform

1. Production: Pulling a Rabbit out of a Hat (or box, etc.)
2. Vanish – Milk in Cone
3. Transposition – Twentieth Century Silks
4. Transformation – Color Changing Silk
5. Multiplication – Multiplying Billiard Balls
6. Penetration – Linking Rings
7. Restoration – Torn and Restored Newspaper
8. Animation – Rising Cards
9. Prediction - Invisible Pack - mental epic is a close contender
10. Escape - Siberian Chain Escape


Stage

1. Production: Flower Act (e.g. Blackstone's Enchanted Garden, Rolf Dinardi)
2. Vanish – Sword Basket
3. Transposition – Metamorphosis (i.e. Substitution Trunk)
4. Transformation – Lady to Tiger
5. Multiplication - Multiplying Bottles
6. Penetration – Cutting a Women in Half
7. Restoration – Cut and Restored Rope, especially Walking Knot
8. Animation – Dancing Handkerchief
9. Prediction - Confabulation/Prediction Chest (really hard to separate "trick" from "effect" for these)
10. Escape - Straight Jacket Escape

Close-up

1. Production: Coin production (e.g. coin from ear)
2. Vanish – Silk vanish in hand
3. Transposition – Ambitious Card (Copper, Silver, Brass is a strong contender too)
4. Transformation – Color Changing Knives
5. Multiplication - Sponge Balls/Bunnies
6. Penetration – Matchbox penetration
7. Restoration – Gypsy/Hindu Thread
8. Animation – Haunted Deck
9. Prediction - Invisible pack
10. Escape - Thumb Cuffs (one of the few escapes done closeup)

Grand Mention: Cups & Balls - This is a rare trick in which routines include the first six fundamental effects almost equally; production, vanish, transposition, transformation, multiplication, penetration. So it really is on a level of its own as being a "classic" of magic.
timph
View Profile
New user
62 Posts

Profile of timph
Edward Claflin & Jeff Sheridan's book Street Magic is a very good read in terms of the earliest effects
FrankFindley
View Profile
Inner circle
1040 Posts

Profile of FrankFindley
Coincidentally, the January 2023 Linking Ring magazine had a very good article on this topic. It is

Magic: In Search of
the Deeper Narrative
A Series of Dialogues between J. Hunter Gaul and Rick Heath
Page 45.

The definition for classic they came up with is:

1. The effect must be wondrous or
astonishing.
2. The effect must have historical
significance.
3. The effect must have endured beyond
the lifetime of its creator.
4. The effect must be considered among
the first rank of its kind.

This is one example list they produced:

1. The Zombie (Levitation)
2. Diminishing Cards (Transformation)
3. Nest of Boxes (Translocation)
4. Zone Zero (Vanish)
5. Square Circle (Production)
6. Twentieth Century Silks
(Transposition)
7. Dagger Head Chest (Penetration)
8. Torn and Restored Newspaper
(Restoration)
9. Siberian Chain Escape (Escape)
10. Invisible Deck (Prediction)
11. Mental Epic (Direct Mind Reading)
12. Hathaway Jumbo Card Rise
(Animation)

Here is a list the author constructed as a starting point for young magicians:

1. The Linking Rings, 12'' stage size.
2. The Professor’s Nightmare.
3. The Zombie.
4. The Multiplying Bottles.
5. The Nielsen-Okito Screen
Production, or Temple Screens
(high quality).
6. The Torn and Restored Newspaper
(Gene Anderson), or Center Tear
(Neil Foster).
7. The Egg Bag.
8. The Five Card Opener with Five Card
Box (Bill Abbott).
9. The Comedy Book Test
(Sean Farquhar).
Dan Ford
View Profile
Special user
Illinois
754 Posts

Profile of Dan Ford
I did not see tissue paper to egg, but maybe I am partial.. Seldom seen I think because of the prep work and after cleanup. Beautiful trick when performed.
Julie
View Profile
Inner circle
3943 Posts

Profile of Julie
Hello Dan,

As I recall the original effect was accomplished by the use of a specially prepared real "egg skin". In later years this was replaced by a very thin latex egg as the feke. (Chop Chop routine etc.)

Julie
FrankFindley
View Profile
Inner circle
1040 Posts

Profile of FrankFindley
Appearing egg on fan is indeed another great classic! Looks great in parlor settings.

Quote:
On Jan 31, 2023, Julie wrote:
As I recall the original effect was accomplished by the use of a specially prepared real "egg skin".


Yep. Have made quite a few over the years.
How
View Profile
Regular user
NJ
103 Posts

Profile of How
I would def say:

(1) Cups and Balls
(2) Linking Rings
(3) Ambitious Card
(4) Thump Tip Magic
(5) Invisible Deck
(6) Professors Nightmare
(7) Newspaper Tear
(8) Milk Vanish
(9) Self Folding Bill
(10) Scotch and Soda
The Magic Cafe Forum Index » » Everything old is new again » » The top 10 classics of magic (7 Likes)
 Go to page [Previous]  1~2
[ Top of Page ]
All content & postings Copyright © 2001-2024 Steve Brooks. All Rights Reserved.
This page was created in 0.04 seconds requiring 5 database queries.
The views and comments expressed on The Magic Café
are not necessarily those of The Magic Café, Steve Brooks, or Steve Brooks Magic.
> Privacy Statement <

ROTFL Billions and billions served! ROTFL