Hiding the Elephant: How Magicians Invented the Impossible and Learned to Disappear

by Jim Steinmeyer

Hardcover, 2003

Status

Available

Call number

GV1543 .S84

Publication

James Bennett Pty Ltd (2003), 352 pages

Description

Now in paperback comes Jim Steinmeyer's astonishing chronicle of half a century of illusionary innovation, backstage chicanery, and keen competition within the world of magicians. Lauded by today's finest magicians and critics, Hiding the Elephant is a cultural history of the efforts among legendary conjurers to make things materialize, levitate, and disappear. Steinmeyer unveils the secrets and life stories of the fascinating personalities behind optical marvels such as floating ghosts interacting with live actors, disembodied heads, and vanishing ladies. He demystifies Pepper's Ghost, Harry Kellar's Levitation of Princess Karnak, Charles Morritt's Disappearing Donkey, and Houdini's landmark vanishing of Jennie the elephant in 1918. The dramatic mix of science and history, with revealing diagrams, photographs and magicians' portraits by William Stout, provides a glimpse behind the curtain at the backstage story of magic.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member oblongpictures
An interesting overview of the development of the stage magician's art around the turn of the twentieth century. Although Steinmeyer reveals a number of the secrets behind famous effects, one of the points he keeps returning to is that the trick itself is secondary to the conjurer's delivery of it.
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There are some nice anecdotes along these lines, my favourite of which is the recounting of Thurston's method for producing an expression of shocked amazement from children viewing his levitation effect up close.
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LibraryThing member johnnylogic
Lively history of the golden age of magic, recounting the evolution of techniques of trickery.
LibraryThing member aadyer
A great overview of the Golden age of Magic & the characters that inhabited it. Very good on their interactions, their inventions but less so on the "wonder" of what was, probably the finest age to be a magician. You don't have to have a particular interest in magic to enjoy this, just the need to
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be captivated and enjoy peformance art. At times flabby & that is what stopped me giving it 5 stars
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LibraryThing member ben_a
Terrifically enjoyable history of magic. You may have heard the line "they do it all with mirrors." That turns out to be quite accurate.

True in India. True here
LibraryThing member kalinichta
This is a wonderful history of the high points of stage magic, centering around the early 1900s, within a framework of explaining how Houdini vanished an elephant on the stage of the Hippodrome. Woven throughout are real-life stories of intrique, espionage, jealousy, creativity and love (of magic)
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- along with the secrets of how some of the most memorable stage illusions actually work.

Very readable and edifying.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2004

Physical description

352 p.; 9.25 inches

ISBN

0786712260 / 9780786712267

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