Saturday, February 23, 2008

Max Maven

PhotobucketMax Maven (born Philip Goldstein in 1950) is an American magician and mentalist. He often appears on television magic shows to perform "interactive" mind reading tricks that work for the television audience.

While his public persona and performances fall squarely within the genre of mentalism, Maven's contributions to the magic community span far wider. He is respected within the industry for being a prolific author, and innovating many of the magical and mentalist effects that are used by other magicians. He has been a magic consultant for such performers as David Copperfield, Penn & Teller, Siegfried & Roy, and Doug Henning, and is a frequent contributor to industry journals such as Genii, The Linking Ring, and MUM. He has also been the featured magician at the annual conventions of both the Society of American Magicians and the International Brotherhood of Magicians.

Maven occasionally plays a magician character (often as himself) on various television series, such as, "Magic", "The Art of Magic", "Something Strange with Max Maven", "Fresh Prince of Bel Air", and "The MAXimum Dimension".

Having performed often in Japan, he is quite fluent in Japanese, although by his own admission his literacy in the language isn't as proficient [1].

His name has been legally changed to Max Maven, but he still uses "Phil Goldstein" as a pen name for technical writings.

In 2007 he won The Magic Woods Award for Best Teaching Video for his mentalism DVD 'Nothing'.


[edit] Selected works
Max Maven's Book of Fortunetelling, 1992, Prentice Hall General. ISBN 0-13-564121-7
Max Maven's Mindgames (video)
The Art of Magic (book co-written with James Randi)
VideoMind - Phases 1-3: Mentalism (3 volume DVD)

[edit] External links
Official Max Maven site
Max Maven at the Internet Movie Database
Interview with Max Maven
This magic-related article is a stub. Please help Wikipedia by expanding it.

Mac King

Mac King is a comedy magician who has performed on television specials, often as a co-host. He has his own family-friendly show, "The Mac King Comedy Magic Show," at the Harrah's Las Vegas in the Clint Holmes Theater.

On the NBC The World's Greatest Magic specials, King taught the audience a minor effect before and after each commercial in segments referred to as the Mac King School of Magic. He is the only magician to be in all five of the network's specials.

In addition to the TV specials and Harrah's performances, King performs at more than 60 private corporate events each year. Some of his better-known effects involve goldfish, Fig Newtons, and a yellow raincoat he claims is a magic cloak of invisibility.

One of King's most memorable moments occurred while performing his cut-and-restored rope routine. King has said that one of his biggest pet peeves is that some magicians use dull scissors, and he makes it a point to keep his scissors razor sharp. While performing the routine, he accidentally severed the tip of his thumb. He quickly tried to stop the bleeding by wrapping his thumb in tape, but the injury was too severe. He asked the audience if there was a nurse present, and, luckily, a nurse did step forward. She managed to stop the bleeding. King continued with his show and finished his second show later that evening before going to the hospital to have his injury treated.


[edit] Personal life
King was born December 2, 1959 in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. He was a student at the J. Graham Brown School. He has a wife of over 20 years, Jennifer Sils,[citation needed] whom he met when she was an audience participant at one of his shows. In his younger years he performed with fellow Kentuckian Lance Burton over the summers they had off between college semesters. He is also friends with Penn & Teller.


[edit] TV Shows and Specials
An Evening at the Improv
Comic Strip Live
The World's Greatest Magic
The World's Greatest Magic II
The World's Greatest Magic III
The World's Greatest Magic IV
The World's Greatest Magic V
Houdini: Unlocking His Secrets
The World's Wildest Magic
Penn and Teller's Sin City Spectacular
Donny and Marie
The Other Half
King's home was also featured on HGTV.


[edit] External links
King's official Page
Las Vegas Online: Review of his show
Vegas.com: Eeview
Press Kit and Bio Information

Cyril Takayama

Cyril Takayama (cousin of Liam Takayama) (born 1973) is an American illusionist, born and raised in Hollywood, California, USA. He is perhaps best known for his street magic performances in Japan. His father is of Okinawan descent, while his mother is Moroccan-French, both of whom were beauticians. He was a member of the short-lived television series T.H.E.M. In 2007 he won first place in The Magic Woods Awards, Best Magician Category.[1]

Cyril became interested in magic when he was 7 years old, when he went to a magic show in Las Vegas where he saw a guest magician levitate a woman and cut himself in half. The first time Cyril ever performed magic in front of people was during his school's talent show. At the age of 12, he entered the junior program at the Magic Castle in Hollywood.

Some of Cyril's signature tricks include the hamburger in the menu trick, having his head fall off his shoulders, and the card in the window trick. His most dramatic trick was above a Las Vegas hotel, where he bungee jumps into the hotel pool with a sword and spears the chosen card of his co host from a deck floating in the water.

Because of his large popularity in Japan, Cyril frequently goes out in a disguise, his most notable one being "Sero jisan" or Old Man Cyril.


[edit] Performances in Japan & Korea
Cyril has been very active in Japan. Since 2005, he appeared in

three "Super Street Magic Magazine" episodes (broadcast on TV Tokyo)
five "Magic Revolution" episodes (broadcast on FujiTV)
June 30, 2005
January 10, 2006
June 20, 2006
January 23, 2007
July 24, 2007
One 90 minute Korean magic special (October 2006, September 2007, February 2008)
Since 2005 Cyril has been steadily increasing in popularity in Japan as well as on the Internet, due to many of his magic shows being uploaded and viewed on the popular video-sharing site YouTube.

In his 2006 magic specials, Cyril visited Thailand to put on a show for orphans with HIV. He also did the same with orphans in Nepal.

Cyril appears on the new MTV series called Room 401 where magicians prank unsuspecting victims.


[edit] References
^ The Magic Woods. Retrieved on 2008-01-09.

[edit] External links
Official site
Cyril Takayama at MySpace
Magic X
Magic Revolution website
Metropolis Japan Interview
Videos

Monday, February 18, 2008

Ehud Segev

Ehud Segev (born 1979) is an Israeli performer. He recently was eliminated from NBC's reality competition, Phenomenon.

Ehud Segev
Born 1979
Safed, Israel
Residence New York, New York
Early life
Ehud Segev was born in 1979 in the Israeli city of Safed.

In the summer of 2004 Segev premiered his "Mentalizer Show" in Theatre Row at 42nd street. In January 2006, Segev had the debut of his play "ANOMAL", which tells Segev's life story.

On August 9th, 2006, while Ehud was performing his tour through Mexico, his only brother, Nimrod, was killed in combat in Lebanon. Ehud returned to Israel and soon established "Cafe Nimrod," a restaurant in the Tel Aviv Seaport, to commemorate his brother. At the same time he also founded Free Freedom, a movement that attempts to forge an anti-terrorist alliance consisting purely of civilians.

In December 2006, Ehud starred in the Israeli Reality TV series "Ha Yoresh". This series, which aired weekly on the Israeli network Keshet, was set to declare an official successor to Uri Geller.[citation needed]

Segev competed in NBC's primetime TV series "Phenomenon", which is based on his earlier Israeli TV show, "Ha Yoresh".


[edit] External links
Official website
Anomal - featuring Ehud Segev
Free Freedom
Ehud Segev Interview On Montell
NBC's Phenomenon
Ha Yoresh on Keshet-tv.com
Mentalist

[edit] References
Ehud Segev: "The New Horatio Alger" in the Jewish Post
Live interview with Ehud Segev for Good News Broadcast
This Israeli biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

This article about a Middle Eastern actor or actress is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehud_Segev"
Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since October 2007 | 1979 births | Living people | Israeli magicians | People from New York City | Israeli people stubs | Middle Eastern actor stubs

criss angel

PhotobucketChristopher Nicholas Sarantakos (born December 19, 1967), better known by his stage name Criss Angel is an American magician, musician, mentalist, hypnotist, escapologist, stunt performer, and actor. He is best known for starring in his own television show, Criss Angel Mindfreak

Criss Angel

Criss Angel at the 2007 Scream Awards
Born Christopher Nicholas Sarantakos
December 19, 1967 (1967-12-19) (age 40)
East Meadow, New York, U.S.
Residence Paradise, Nevada (Luxor Hotel Presidential Suite), West Islip, New York
Occupation illusionist, musician, mentalist, hypnotist, stunt performer, actor
Spouse JoAnn Winkhart (married 2002, separated in 2006).
Website CrissAngel.com

Contents [hide]
1 Early life
2 Magic career
3 Criss Angel Mindfreak
4 Other projects
5 Books and music
6 References
7 External links



[edit] Early life
Criss Angel was born on December 19, 1967, raised on East Meadow, Long Island, New York and is of Greek descent. Angel grew up loving music, had a love for playing drums, and has always had an interest in magic. His parents are John and Dimitra Sarantakos. His mother hails from Mystra, Greece. He has two brothers, Costa and JD, as well as two cats, Minx and Hammie (short for Hamlet). One of Criss's biggest influences has been his father, who died from carcinoma of the stomach.[1]

According to his interview with Larry King before Halloween in 2007 he was an altar boy in the Greek Orthodox Church as he was growing up.

Criss Angel first became interested in magic at the age of 6, when his Aunt Stella showed him a magic trick.[2] Two of his biggest magic influences are Harry Houdini and Aldo Richiardi.[2] As a teenager, Angel performed at birthday parties, at night clubs, at home to entertain his family, and at private events.[2] Early in his magic career, magician James Randi designed Angel's professional business card.[3] The first person who actually taught him the art of magic was Ian Wagner.

Angel played in an Industrial music band called AngelDust with friend Klayton Scott (Celldweller, Argyle Park) who produced, co-wrote, and helped arrange the music for his show, Mindfreak.

In 2002 he married JoAnn Winkhart. She filed for separation in 2006 and in 2007 she filed for divorce.[4]


[edit] Magic career
Angel performed World Of Illusion at Madison Square Garden in 1998. Criss then scored an off Broadway show titled "Criss Angel Mindfreak," which ran up until January 6, 2003 following a run of 600 performances at The World in The World Underground Theater in Times Square. He also starred in several television specials.

Criss Angel won the Academy of Magical Arts' Magician of the Year award in 2005[5] and the IMS Magician of the year in 2001 and 2004.[6]

He has even revealed the methods for many of his tricks to viewers at home on TV and in videos, although the effects revealed are usually very simple such as making a toothpick disappear, picking a pocket, or making a Styrofoam cup float. Angel discusses magic and his life in Mindfreak: Secret Revelations (published April 24, 2007), which became a Los Angeles Times best seller.

Angel is scheduled to appear in a new illusion-based Cirque du Soleil production at the Luxor Hotel in Las Vegas, with an expected opening date in August 2008.[7] Although the countdown clock featured on Angel's official website continues to point to later and later dates. As of 1/8/07, the clock is counting down to September 30, 2008. Angel has recently stated that there are plans for this attraction to run for 10 years, including 4,600 shows with a possible 5 year renewal option of his contract.

In July 2007, NBC signed Angel and Uri Geller for Phenomenon, a show airing on October 24 that searches for the next great mentalist.[8] Angel does not believe Geller has any paranormal abilities.[9]


[edit] Criss Angel Mindfreak
Main article: Criss Angel Mindfreak
Criss Angel is the star and creator of the A&E Network show Criss Angel Mindfreak. Seasons 1 and 2 were filmed at the The Aladdin in Las Vegas, with Season 3 at the Luxor Hotel. Premiering on July 20, 2005, the illusions have included walking on water, levitating above the Luxor Hotel, floating between two buildings, causing a Lamborghini to disappear, surviving in an exploding C4 Crate, cutting himself in half in full view of an audience and getting run over by a steamroller while lying stomach down on a bed of glass.[10] Criss is scheduled to begin filming Season 4 of Mindfreak in October 2007, and the show is scheduled to run for two more seasons after that.

He attempted to jump out of a prisoner transport vehicle before it fell off a cliff in season 3. Criss made it but, as revealed at the end of the episode, injured his neck. Production was stopped for two weeks while he recovered; in the meantime, he has sworn never to attempt this stunt again.


[edit] Other projects
Angel was the featured guest star on CSI: NY on February 28, 2007 in an episode titled "Sleight Out of Hand" as the character of Luke Blade, a famous magician whose assistants die in unusual ways that are strangely related to the illusions he performs in the episode. [11] In the episode, he performed three illusions (being sawed in half, being set on fire, and a version of his "Submerged" illusion).

Angel's more notable television appearances include but are not limited to Las Vegas, The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, as well as VH1's Rock Honors Awards performing and introducing legendary Honoree Ozzy Osbourne. In June 2007, Angel appeared on the cover of the DUB Magazine. He also appeared on CNN's Larry King Live on July 12, 2007 and October 30, 2007. On June 8, 2007, he stated on the Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson that Richiardi was one of his greatest influences.

Starting in October 2007 he appeared as a judge on "Phenomenon," and in a CNN interview about the show he told Larry King "no one has the ability, that I'm aware of, to do anything supernatural, psychic, talk to the dead. And that was what I said I was going to do with "Phenomenon." If somebody goes on that show and claims to have supernatural psychic ability, I'm going to bust them live and on television."[12]

Wikinews has related news:
Criss Angel challenges Uri Geller and Jim Callahan over paranormal claimsOn the October 31, 2007 episode of the reality show Phenomenon, Paranormalist Jim Callahan performed a summoning, purportedly of author Raymond Hill, to help discover the contents of a locked box.[13] Although fellow judge Uri Geller praised the performance, Angel called it "comical" and subsequently challenged both Callahan and Geller to guess the contents of two envelopes he pulled out of his pocket, offering a million dollars of his own money to whomever could do so. This led to an argument between Callahan and Angel, during which Callahan accused Angel of being an "ideological bigot", and after Angel rose from his chair and approached Callahan, the two were pulled apart as the show promptly went to a commercial break. Angel has since revealed the contents of one envelope and at the unveiling he challenged Geller one more time. Geller unsuccessful, and the envelope was revealed to contain an index card with the numbers "911" printed on it for September 11, 2001. Criss' explanation was this "if on 9-10 somebody could have predicted that 9-11 was going to happen, they could have saved millions of lives". The other envelope's contents will be revealed on the first episode of Season 4 of Criss Angel: Mindfreak.[1]

Criss has just signed for a film version of the depression-era comic strip Mandrake The Magician. Written by Lee Falk, the story centers on a magician with hypnotic powers and a penchant for fighting mad scientists and criminal king-pins. Criss' role is Mandrake's father. Mandrake will start shooting in March of this year.


[edit] Books and music
Books

Mindfreak: Secret Revelations. HarperEntertainment (April 24, 2007) ISBN 0061137618 and ISBN 978-0061137617
Music

Main article: Criss Angel discography

[edit] References
^ Criss Angel, Mindfreak: Secret Revelations. HarperEntertainment (April 24, 2007) ISBN 0061137618
^ a b c Karlin, Susan. "The Daredevil", Forbes, July 4, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
^ Paul Harris's show on KMOX interview with James Randi, 26th July 2007 http://www.harrisonline.com/audio/jamesrandi-geller-nbc.mp3
^ Ann Givens, "Criss Angel Taken to Nassau Divorce Court", Newsday, 29 June 2007
^ "Criss Angel Named 2005 Magician of the Year", magic.about.com, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
^ "Where Criss Angel dares to tread", Newport Mercury, May 31, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
^ "Magician Criss Angel in New Cirque Show", happynews.com, August 3, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
^ "NBC Offers Reality Show For Wanna-Be Mentalists With Uri Geller, Criss Angel", Tampa Tribune, July 17, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
^ Paul Harris's show on KMOX interview with James Randi, 26 July 2007 http://www.harrisonline.com/audio/jamesrandi-geller-nbc.mp3
^ "That Gaze! That Hair! Those Trippy Tricks!", New York Times, July 20, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
^ "CSI: NY" Sleight Out of Hand (2007)
^ "Larry King Live: Mindfreak Criss Angel", CNN, October 30, 2007.
^ "Angel sparks altercation on ‘Phenomenon’", MSNBC, November 1, 2007.

[edit] External links
Find more about Criss Angel on Wikipedia's sister projects:
Dictionary definitions
Textbooks
Quotations
Source texts
Images and media
News stories
Learning resources
Official website
Criss Angel at the Internet Movie Database
Official Criss Angel Mindfreak website at A&E
Criss Angel at MySpace
Penn Jillette interviews Criss Angel on "The Penn Jillette Radio Show"

Lance Burton

Lance Burton (born William Lance Burton on March 10, 1960 in Louisville, Kentucky) is an American stage magician who performs nightly in his own show at the Monte Carlo Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. He has appeared on numerous television programs, and also performed for Queen Elizabeth and President Ronald Reagan. He has also appeared on the 2006 Labor Day Weekend Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon.

PhotobucketLance Burton
Born March 10, 1960 (1960-03-10) (age 47)
Louisville, Kentucky USA

Contents [hide]
1 History
2 Awards
3 See also
4 External links



[edit] History
Son of Las Vegas entertainer Dave Burton and raised in a secular Jewish family in Louisville, Kentucky, He first became interested in magic at the age of 5, when he was one of the volunteers at a performance of Harry Collins's during a Christmas party at the factory where his mother worked. The trick was The Miser's Dream, where Collins "pulled silver dollars out of the sky" and Burton's ears. The young Burton was fascinated, and a neighbor, hearing of his interest, gave him a book, Magic Made Easy, which her own (then-grown) children had used. It contained ten tricks, all of which young Burton quickly learned. His first performances were for neighborhood children, charging them a nickel each.

Collins, a full-time magician, noticed the interest, and became his mentor when Burton was in his teens, teaching him the fundamentals of the trade. In 1977, as a teenager, Burton entered his first magic competition and won first prize. In 1980, shortly after his 20th birthday, he was awarded a "Gold Medal of Excellence" from the International Brotherhood of Magicians. After that, he moved to Southern California, where within a week he appeared on The Tonight Show. Host Johnny Carson watched him in rehearsal, and allowed him to do an unprecedented 12-minute routine. Through the course of Burton's career he was invited back for a total of ten performances while Johnny Carson was host, and another five performances during Jay Leno's tenure. Burton has also appeared on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.

He performed an initial eight week trial at the Folies Bergere show in Las Vegas, and this was then extended for a record-breaking nine years. In 1982, he competed at the international Fédération Internationale des Sociétés Magiques (FISM) competition in Lausanne, Switzerland, and won the "Grande Prix" prize, (the main event of the FISM competition) the youngest person to ever win the main event, and the first American to do so.

In 1986 he appeared in Nickelodeon's Halloween Special Mystery Magical Special.

In 1991, he produced, directed, and wrote his own show, which opened at the Hacienda Hotel and ran for five years.

His second marriage was to female magician Melinda Saxe in August 1993, but they divorced shortly after.

In August 1994, Burton signed a 13-year contract (the longest contract given to any entertainer in Las Vegas history) with the Monte Carlo Resort in Las Vegas. The 1,274-seat "Lance Burton Theater" was built to Burton's specifications for his show, cost $27 million US, and opened on June 21, 1996. Entertainment Today magazine lists it as the #1 family magic act, and according to USA Weekend, during the 13-year run Burton is expected to earn more than $110 million USD.

At Buffalo Bill's Hotel & Casino in Primm, Nevada, Lance Burton escaped the path of a speeding roller coaster while on the tracks of "The Desperado". The Desperado is one of the tallest and fastest roller coasters in the United States - taking one minute to climb, and 3.5 seconds to descend to where he was on the tracks. The blue, magenta and yellow trains are custom coaster coaches in a bullet-train style. He avoided the coaster by a mere tenth of a second, the trick having apparently gone wrong. After the narrow escape, he looked at the camera and said "That was stupid... That was really stupid." [1]

Lance Burton celebrated his ten-year anniversary at the Monte Carlo by introducing his newest illusion entitled "Solid Gold Lady" in which he utilizes $10 million in gold.


[edit] Awards
He has twice been awarded "Magician of the Year" by the Academy of Magical Arts.
He won the Grand Prix Award at FISM in 1982 for his performance, where Burton stood in a street scene in traditional top hat and tails and spectacularly produced doves, candles and gentleman's walking canes, seemingly from nowhere.
1998 Blackstone Theatre Award

[edit] See also
List of famous Louisvillians

[edit] External links
Lance Burton's website
TV.com biography
FISM Grand Prix winners
Lance Burton review & video
"Interview with Lance Burton", January 10, 2004, CNN
USA Weekend, June 27, 2004, "This magic man soars"
Internet Movie Database

Darren Brown

Derren Victor Brown (born 27 February 1971) is a British magician, psychological illusionist, mentalist, and skeptic of paranormal phenomena. He was born in Croydon, South London, and studied Law and German at the University of Bristol.[1] While there, he attended a show by the hypnotist Martin Taylor, which inspired him to turn to illusion and hypnosis as a career.[2] Around 1994, he worked as a conjuror, practising the traditional skills of close-up magic. In 1996, he started performing stage hypnosis shows at the University of Bristol under his then stage name of Derren V. Brown.

Later, Brown became interested in mind-reading.[3] Shortly after, he was commissioned to do a pilot for his Channel 4 television series, Mind Control. Aside from his main work, he is an artist who paints caricatures.[4] Brown is also interested in taxidermy, as he states in episode 1 of his Mind Control series.

Derren Brown


Born February 27, 1971 (1971-02-27) (age 36)
Croydon, London, United Kingdom
Nationality British
Occupation Psychological Illusionist/Mentalist
Website www.derrenbrown.co.uk
Contents [hide]
1 Television and Stage Shows
1.1 Mind Control
1.2 Russian Roulette
1.3 Séance
1.4 Messiah
1.4.1 Psychic Powers
1.4.2 New-Age Theories
1.4.3 Evangelism
1.4.4 Contacting the Dead
1.5 Trick Of The Mind
1.5.1 Waking Dead
1.6 The Gathering
1.7 The Heist
1.8 Something Wicked This Way Comes
1.9 Trick or Treat
1.10 Mind Reader, An Evening of Wonders
1.11 Mind Control with Derren Brown
1.12 The Enemies of Reason
1.13 The System
1.14 Future
2 Other productions and publications
3 Criticism
4 Personal life
5 References
6 External links



[edit] Television and Stage Shows

[edit] Mind Control
Since the first broadcast of his Channel 4 television show Derren Brown: Mind Control in 2000, he has become increasingly well known for his "mind-reading" act. Derren Brown states at the beginning of his Trick of the Mind programmes that he achieves his results using a combination of "magic, suggestion, psychology, misdirection and showmanship". Using his knowledge and skill he appears to be able to predict and influence people's thoughts with subtle suggestion, manipulate the decision making process and read the subtle physical signs or body language that indicate what a person is thinking.

He began his television work with three sixty-minute specials over two years which led up to the six part series Mind Control, which incorporated new footage with the best of the hour long shows. Selected highlights from the first series are available on DVD and video entitled Derren Brown - Inside Your Mind.


[edit] Russian Roulette
On October 5, 2003, Brown performed Russian roulette, almost live on Channel 4. The stunt was ostensibly performed at an undisclosed location outside mainland Britain, in Jersey, because of British laws banning the possession of handguns. A volunteer, James, chosen from 12,000 who applied for the task, and whittled down to five by the day of the stunt, loaded a single shot into a revolver with six numbered chambers, after Brown had said "choose one of those numbers, keep them to yourself, choose one, it doesn't matter which one it is, settle on a number, are you thinking of one now", James then counted from one to six. Attempting to predict the location of the bullet, Brown pulled the trigger on chambers 3 and 4 with the gun aimed at his head, before appearing to decide on chamber 5 and firing the gun away from himself. When that chamber proved to be empty, he paused for over one minute before aiming at his head again for chamber 6, then immediately firing the round in chamber 1 away from him, striking a sandbag.

The programme was initially condemned by senior British police officers, apparently fearful of copycat acts. However, when the filming location was revealed to be Jersey,[5] many accused Brown of perpetrating a hoax. Several days later, the Jersey police said they had been consulted about the programme in advance, and revealed: "There was no live ammunition involved and at no time was anyone at risk."[5] On the other hand, as demonstrated earlier in the programme, firing a blank cartridge at point-blank range can still be extremely dangerous, even fatal.

Brown himself defended the programme, saying, "It probably sounds odd. But as a magic-related performer to have that even being asked: Was it real? Was it not real? That lifts it to a level that I'm very comfortable with. What's left is the fact that it was a terrific piece of television."[6]


[edit] Séance
Brown's next project aired on Channel 4 on 31 May 2004. In Derren Brown: Séance, he brought students from Roehampton University together for a live séance. He held the event at Eltham Hall, claiming the location had a history of paranormal activity after 12 people killed themselves in a suicide pact in 1974. Brown then proceeded to demonstrate the methods used by spiritualists.

The show attempted to involve the television audience with interactive activities, the first being to identify one of the members of the suicide pact by looking at photographs. The 12 pictures were shown on screen in a set pattern, with half of them in colour and half black and white. The viewer was instructed to choose one of the colour images that they "feel a connection with". Brown then directed the viewers in a movement pattern between the photographs (for example, move left or right to one of the adjacent black and white photographs). The positioning and movement instructions were carefully planned to ensure that no matter which photograph was initially chosen the viewer would finish on the picture of "Jane". Ten of the students also chose Jane. During the following Ouija board scene, the "spirit" guided the students to spell the name Jane.

Two of the students, along with the television viewers, were asked to write the name of a city. Both students chose London.

The final scene, the séance itself, saw the group "contact" Jane. One of the students spoke as if she were Jane, giving details of her life. A letter and short film confirmed the accuracy of the details.

Brown went on to explain some of the manipulations he had used, including the photograph positioning/instructions and the use of the ideomotor effect during the Ouija board scene. The suicide pact had not taken place and "Jane" was introduced to the students at the end of the show. In his book, Tricks of the Mind, Brown reveals that, contrary to claims when the show was aired, Séance didn't go out live. He said it was necessary to make people believe that it did at the time.

Channel 4 received 700 complaints, most before the episode was aired. Viewers who felt "something unusual" were invited to call a phone number, and callers were told that the show was carefully planned, and that no paranormal activities were taking place. Brown also warned viewers about the impending Ouija board scene, advising those who objected for "religious reasons or otherwise" to stop watching the show.


[edit] Messiah
Shown on 7 January 2005, Derren Brown travelled to the United States to try to convince five leading figures that he had powers in their particular field of expertise: Christian evangelism, alien abduction, psychic powers, New Age theories and contacting the dead.

Using a false name each time, he succeeded in convincing four of the five "experts" that he had powers, and they openly endorsed him as a true practitioner. The fifth expert, the Christian evangelist Curt Nordheilm, whilst impressed by Brown's performance, asked to meet him again before giving an endorsement. The concept of the show was to highlight the power of suggestion with regard to beliefs and people's abilities, and failure to question them. Brown made it quite clear with each experiment that if any of the subjects accused him of trickery he would immediately come clean about the whole thing, a rule similar to one of the self-imposed rules of the perpetrators of the Project Alpha hoax. His conclusion was that people tend to hear only things that support their own ideas and ignore contradictory evidence; this is known in psychology as confirmation bias.


[edit] Psychic Powers
Derren Brown asked a leading figure at a psychic training school to go into another room and draw a number of simple pictures on any topic she wished. After each picture had been completed, Brown would have his prediction of what the picture was of written down by the other members of the training school in the room with him. He was mostly correct, the one slight error being a cross instead of a Star of David (though he did state it was some kind of religious imagery - maybe a cross?). On one occasion when Brown was telling the participant to draw the next picture, he instructed the lady to "let some ideas sail into your mind" and not to go "overboard on detail". She drew a boat on water.

[edit] New-Age Theories
Derren Brown instructed a leading new-age theorist to sleep with a machine attached to her pillow for five days. She was told that this machine used crystal technology to record her dreams. In fact it was simply a box with a switch which turned an LED on and off. Brown recalled the dreams correctly, including the fact that some were in black-and-white instead of colour. The participant was so impressed that she invited Brown to appear on her radio show the next day, which he declined.

[edit] Evangelism
Brown performed seemingly 'instant conversions' on a group consisting of members of the public, almost all of whom were atheists. After the first 'instant conversion' many of the group reportedly chose to leave, concerned by what they had just witnessed. Brown then attempted to 'convert' another individual and then the remainder of the group at once. After this, most participants were questioned and declared a belief in God, or in "something". At the end of the segment, a notice on screen announced that the participants had all been "de-converted" before they left. Brown did not gain an endorsement from the Christian pastor overseeing the session, Brown saying "to his credit, he wanted to meet again before he'd offer a full, public endorsement".

[edit] Contacting the Dead
Brown believes that all successful mediums use a technique called cold reading. To illustrate this he arranged a clairvoyant demonstration with "fairly skeptical New Yorkers". During the séance Brown tricked three women into believing that he was in contact with deceased loved ones and during the performance many tears were shed. Afterwards it was explained to the participants that it was a trick, and those appearing agreed to broadcasting the event. However, the programme did not offer any explanation as to Brown's specific methods.

[edit] Trick Of The Mind
Trick of the Mind was the title for Brown's next series, which ran for three consecutive series. Unlike Mind Control it is all completely new material. The second series started on E4 on 11 April 2005 and was repeated on Channel 4. The third series started on 26 March 2006.


[edit] Waking Dead
In June 2005, a clip from the second series was widely circulated on the internet. In this clip, Brown claims to have created a video game he calls "Waking Dead" which "is able to put roughly 1/3 of the people who play it into a catatonic trance". In this episode he places the video game in a pub, to lure a supposedly unsuspecting patron into playing the game. He then "kidnaps" the catatonic "victim" and places him in a real-life recreation of the video game, having him fire an air gun at actors, pretending to be zombies and outfitted with explosive squibs.

The episode raised considerable controversy. Mick Grierson, credited in the episode as "Zombie Game Designer", put up a website linking to various articles about the episode.


[edit] The Gathering
The Gathering was a specially recorded as-live show at a secret location (hidden from the audience) with an invited audience of students from Roehampton University, celebrities, psychologists, psychics, taxi-drivers and magicians. It was filmed on 18 May 2005 and broadcast on 29 May. As part of the show Brown recalled streets, page numbers and grid references from the Greater London A-Z map. Also pseudo-psychic "mind reading" and "remote viewing" activities were recreated. During the show, Brown hypnotised the audience as a group and convinced them that for approximately half an hour after leaving the room, they would have no memory of the events. Furthermore, the word "forget" was intermittently flashed very briefly on the backdrop throughout the performance. A variety of audience members were interviewed afterwards; some of them couldn't recollect anything (but were nevertheless very impressed); brief clips of these interviews were shown. One of the most memorable stunts was getting a London taxi driver to choose a street in London and then choose and mentally drive a random route. This was achieved by drawing a line on a map of London made of stuck together A-Z pages. He started in Buckingham Palace and ended up in Shepherd's Bush Green, the street in which the secret performance took place.


[edit] The Heist
The Heist was shown on 4 January 2006 at 21:00, on Channel 4. In the show, Derren Brown used his skills on selected participants who answered an ad. "Under the guise of a motivational seminar" (where they would allegedly learn Derren Brown's skills) Brown eventually got participants to rob a security van - in what was ultimately an elaborate set up. The robbery involved holding up a security van and guard (played by an actor) with a realistic-looking toy pistol that Brown had given them earlier, and taking a case filled with real money from him. Four people were selected to carry out the robbery from an initial field of thirteen, with three of them actually carrying out the "robbery". The idea was that after the conditioning they received, they would voluntarily rob the van of their own accord. There was no mention of the 'crime' to the participants, and they were not (directly) instructed to do it. The three that did it did so as a result of the conditioning and their own choice, not instructions from any third party including Brown.

Brown associated colour, music and phrases to build the participants into a highly-motivated state, converging all of those psychological empowerment tools into a single set up. The seminar subliminally anchored freedom, childhood, opportunity and romance into various criminal acts. After having previously been convinced to steal sweets from a shop based in Codicote High Street in Hertfordshire (for real), they were shown the euphoria that could be gained from criminal acts.

This programme also contained a reenactment of the Milgram experiment carried out by Stanley Milgram in the 1960s with the aim of selecting four of the most obedient of the group. The majority of subjects in this experiment were willing to administer lethal electric shocks to another person on the instruction of an authoritative figure (unbeknown to the subjects, the electric shocks were not actually real); these were the same results as Milgram himself found.


[edit] Something Wicked This Way Comes
Brown's live stage show, Something Wicked This Way Comes, toured around the UK following its success in the West End. The tour started in March at the Cambridge Theatre and finished in May at the Hammersmith Apollo. The show won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Entertainment Show 2006. The show was co-written and directed by his long time collaborator Andy Nyman.

The show was performed and filmed for a final time at The Old Vic Theatre at the end of the tour in mid-June 2006. A 90 minute edit of this show was broadcast on December 29, 2006 and June 10, 2007, on Channel 4[7]; a longer version is to be released on DVD.[8]

The title is a direct quote from William Shakespeare's Macbeth. (Act 4, scene 1, line 45)


[edit] Trick or Treat
Main article: Trick or Treat (TV series)
Trick or Treat started on Channel 4 in 2007. The focus of the show is on one volunteer that either receives a good experience or a bad experience. The experience the volunteer receives is decided by which card they choose. If they choose the card that says 'Trick' they receive a bad experience and if they choose the card that says 'Treat' they receive a good experience. The volunteer has no choice over the matter though as the card is an ambigram.

Episodes of Trick or Treat are not preceded by Brown's usual claim that no actors or stooges were used in the filming of the shows. Indeed, some participants (such as the ambulance crew in the last episode) are declared to be actors.


[edit] Mind Reader, An Evening of Wonders
Brown's 2007 tour around the United Kingdom, "Derren Brown, Mind Reader - An Evening of Wonders", started April 29th in Blackpool and ended June 17th in Bristol. The last shows in the tour were scheduled to be filmed, possibly for a later television special.

The show will tour again from February until April 2008 throughout the UK, and conclude with a West End run in June.


[edit] Mind Control with Derren Brown
On July 26, 2007, the US based Sci Fi Channel began showing six one hour episodes of a series titled Mind Control with Derren Brown. Andrew O'Connor and Michael Vine will serve as executive producers for Objective Productions. Journalists in New York at the press announcement were shown preview clips of Brown "manipulating human behavior" and given the promise of more surprises to come. Sci Fi's press release describes the show as an "original US produced version", and early previews show a mix of new segments and older clips shown in earlier UK TV shows. The current first showing release schedule is listed as:

Episode 1 "Shopping Mall" July 26
Episode 2 "Lying Car Salesman" August 2
Episode 3 "Exotic Dancers" August 8
Episode 4 "Receptive Children" August 15 - with a guest star Simon Pegg
Episode 5 "Assault Course" August 22
Episode 6 "Disappearing Sun" August 29



[edit] The Enemies of Reason
An interview with Brown was featured in Richard Dawkins' two part documentary series The Enemies of Reason. Brown explained various psychological techniques used by alleged psychics and spiritual mediums to manipulate their audience. The most notable is cold reading, a technique to which Brown devoted a whole chapter of his book Tricks of the Mind. Some video footage was also used from Brown's TV special Messiah.


[edit] The System
The System, a Channel 4 special in which Brown shared his "100 per cent guaranteed" method for winning on the horses, was first shown on Friday 1st February [9] [10].

The show was based around the idea that a system could be developed to predict the outcome of horse races with total accuracy. Cameras followed an ordinary member of the public, Khadisha, as Brown anonymously sent her correct predictions of 5 races in a row, before encouraging her to place as much money as she could on the 6th race.

To demonstrate the system to the viewer Brown tossed a coin showing 10 heads in a row to prove it was not impossible, just improbable.

After Brown had placed a bet of £4,000 of Khadishia's money on a horse in the final race, he explained that The System didn't really exist. He had started by contacting 7,776 people and split them into six groups, giving each group a different horse. As each race had taken place 5/6ths of the people had lost and were dropped from the system. Far from Derren knowing which horse would win, he had a different person backing each horse in each race, and it was simple logic that meant that one individual, who happened to be Khadishia, won five times in a row. This was similar to the coin flipping earlier: rather than having a predictive technique, Brown had simply tossed a coin repeatedly until 10 heads had come up in a row, taking over nine hours to produce the required film. Brown used The System as an example of the reasoning which makes homeopathic medicine, and alternative medicine in general, appear effective: "The System is ... a belief system".

After the selected horse in the final race lost, and Khadishia was convinced that she had lost all her borrowed money, Brown told Khadishia to look again at the betting slip in her hand. The ticket showed the winning horse's name, meaning Khadishia kept her stake and received winnings of £13,000. Brown did not reveal how this was achieved.


[edit] Future
Pre-production has also begun on the second series of Trick or Treat, scheduled to air in Spring 2008.[11]


[edit] Other productions and publications
He has written three books on magic: Absolute Magic, Pure Effect, and Tricks of the Mind; another is planned.[12]

Absolute Magic is not so much about magical methodology as about how magicians can make their performances magical; it is written in a variety of styles: sometimes humorous, sometimes serious. He warns against an act that conveys the feeling of "Here are some tricks I've bought" and urges magicians to make their performances experiential and memorable by involving the audience. In some respects a lot of what he says is in Darwin Ortiz's Strong Magic but his book expresses it in the context of his experiences, performance style and theories of how performance should be. (Out of print)

Pure Effect is a more traditional book of trickery and technique and offers an insight into some of the methods that Brown employs, and offers a starting point for development for the reader's own use. (Out of print)

Tricks of the Mind is a wide-ranging book in which Brown reveals some of the techniques he uses in his performances, delves into the structure and psychology of magic and discusses hypnosis. He also applies his insight to the paranormal industry, looking at the structure of beliefs and how psychology can explain why people become 'true believers'. He also offers autobiographical stories about his own experiences as a Christian, and makes his skepticism about religion, mediums and sundry other belief systems plain.

The Devil's Picturebook is a near 3 hour home-made video. The first half explains in detail some classic card routines from his earlier career as a conjurer, all of which rely on sleight of hand. The second looks at psychological card routines and shows a distinct move towards mentalism, for which he is now known. It is an instructional video for aspiring magicians and not an entertainment piece. For this reason it is only available to practitoners through his website.

International Magic Presents: The Derren Brown Lecture is an 80-minute DVD of close-up mentalism and subsequent discussion of various aspects of Brown's performance.

In 2007 Derren Brown took an acting role in the short film Medium Rare.[13]


[edit] Criticism
In a Daily Telegraph article published in 2003 Simon Singh criticised Brown's early TV appearances, arguing that he presented standard magic and mentalism effects - such as the classic Ten Card Poker Deal trick - as genuine psychological manipulation.[14] On Brown's television and live shows he often appears to show the audience how a particular effect was created—claiming to use subliminal imagery, body language reading and so on. Singh's suggestion is that these explanations are dishonest. Furthermore, Singh took exception to the programme's website being categorised under Channel 4's "Science" section. The minisite was moved to Entertainment for later series.

In his book Tricks of the Mind, Brown writes, "I am often dishonest in my techniques, but always honest about my dishonesty. As I say in each show, 'I mix magic, suggestion, psychology, misdirection and showmanship'. I happily admit cheating, as it's all part of the game. I hope some of the fun for the viewer comes from not knowing what's real and what isn't. I am an entertainer first and foremost, and I am careful not to cross any moral line that would take me into manipulating people's real-life decisions or belief systems."

Brown claims he has never used actors or stooges in his work. In Tricks of the Mind he offers the defence that such a ploy is "artistically repugnant and simply unnecessary"; furthermore, he "would not want any participant to watch the [TV] show when it airs and see a different or radically re-edited version of what he understood to have happened".[15] Certainly, during stage performances, Brown chooses participants at random by throwing an object (a frisbee or stuffed animal) to the audience and having them pass it around; whoever ends up with the object joins him on stage.[16]

In response to the accusation that he unfairly claims to be using NLP whenever he performs, Brown writes "The truth is I have never mentioned it". Brown does have an off-stage curiosity about the system, and discusses it in the larger context of hypnotism and suggestion.[17][18]


[edit] Personal life
Brown had been in the spotlight for several years before coming out in an interview in a Sunday newspaper supplement in September 2007.[19][20] Previously, he had made several references to using his skills as "speed-seduction techniques to impress women".[21][22][23]


[edit] References
^ Derren Brown - Master Mentalist. Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
^ Derren Brown - Master Mentalist. Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
^ Endorsement by Brown in Rowland's book
^ http://www.derrenbrown.co.uk/pictures/gallery/artwork paintings
^ a b "Roulette gun stunt 'a hoax'", BBC News, 7 October, 2003. Retrieved on 2006-12-03.
^ "Magician defends gun stunt fake", cnn.com, October 8, 2003. Retrieved on 2006-12-03.
^ Episode information for Derren Brown : Something Wicked This Way Comes. DigiGuide. Retrieved on 2006-12-26.
^ http://www.derrenbrown.co.uk/news
^ [1]
^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml;jsessionid=M0HNFQZ5HM0UTQFIQMFCFFOAVCBQYIV0?xml=/arts/2008/01/26/nosplit/bvtvsunfeat26.xml
^ http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article3233325.ece
^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml;jsessionid=M0HNFQZ5HM0UTQFIQMFCFFOAVCBQYIV0?xml=/arts/2008/01/26/nosplit/bvtvsunfeat26.xml
^ http://www.mediumraretheshortfilm.com/
^ http://www.simonsingh.net/Derren_Brown_Article.html
^ Brown, Derren: Tricks of the Mind, 2006, ISBN 9781905026265, p.18
^ http://www.dooyoo.co.uk/theatre-musicals-national/derren-brown-live/441161/
^ Brown, Derren: Tricks of the Mind, 2006, ISBN 9781905026265, p.175
^ http://straightdope.com/mailbag/mnlp.html
^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20070930/ai_n21060652
^ http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article3233325.ece
^ Brown, Derren: Pure Effect, 2000, p.28
^ http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/webchats/article207610.ece
^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/communicate/derren_brown.shtml

[edit] External links
Official site
Channel 4's Mind Control page
Derren Brown at the Internet Movie Database
Simon Singh's Daily Telegraph article: "Spectacular Psychology or Silly Psycho-babble?"
Extended interview with Brown from Genii magazine, including responses about Singh's article
Complete Episode Guide and Effect Listing from all TV specials and series
Derren Brown Interview
Derren Brown Info
SCI FI Channel's official Derren Brown show site
Derren Brown Plays Russian Roulette Live article at SCIFIpedia
Sanders The Great: Book review of Pure Effect

David copperfield

David Copperfield (born David Seth Kotkin on September 16, 1956) is an American magician and illusionist best known for his combination of illusions and storytelling.

PhotobucketDavid Copperfield
Born September 16, 1956 (1956-09-16) (age 51)
Metuchen, New Jersey
Died N/A

Occupation magician, illusionist, director, Producer, Writer
Salary US$57m[citation needed]
Net worth US$265m[citation needed]
Religious beliefs Jewish
Website www.dcopperfield.com
Contents [hide]
1 Biography
2 Personal life
2.1 FBI investigation
2.2 Lawsuit
3 Achievements and awards
4 Television specials
5 Famous illusions
6 Filmography
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
Biography
Born in New Jersey as David Seth Kotkin[1], Copperfield began practicing magic at the age of 12, and became the youngest person ever admitted to the Society of American Magicians.[2] By age 16, he was teaching a course in magic at New York University.[3] At age 18, he enrolled at Fordham University, and was cast in the lead role of the Chicago-based musical The Magic Man (directed by Holland, MI's John Tammi) three weeks into his freshman year,[citation needed] adopting his new stage name "David Copperfield" from the Charles Dickens book of the same name. At age 19, he was headlining at the Pagoda Hotel in Honolulu, Hawaii.[4]

David Copperfield played the character of Ken the magician in the 1980 horror film Terror Train. He also made an uncredited appearance in the 1994 film Prêt-à-Porter. Most of his media appearances have been through television specials and guest spots on television programs. His illusions have included making the Statue of Liberty "disappear", "flying", "levitating" over the Grand Canyon, and "walking through" the Great Wall of China.

In 1982, Copperfield founded Project Magic,[5] a rehabilitation program to help disabled patients regain lost or damaged dexterity skills by using sleight-of-hand magic as a method of physical therapy. The program has been accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Association, and is in use in over 1100 hospitals throughout 30 countries worldwide.

Copperfield was engaged to the supermodel Claudia Schiffer, but the couple parted ways in 1999 after a six-year relationship.

David Copperfield at one time was ready to open a theme restaurant called "Magic Underground." There were to be two locations, one in New York City and one in Walt Disney World (built in the shape of a Hidden Mickey). These locations would allow "D.A.V.I.D" (Digital Audio-Video Interface Device) to remotely interact with the guests in the restaurant. It was basically a high tech videophone system. Other things such as the very table you were sitting at might "Float" around the room and even the waiters were to be involved performing magic as they brought your order to you. Eventually the New York project ran into trouble and the Walt Disney World location was aborted.

In 1996, Copperfield joined forces with Dean Koontz, Joyce Carol Oates, Ray Bradbury and others for “David Copperfield’s Tales of the Impossible,” an anthology of original fiction set in the world of magic and illusion. A second volume was later published in 1997, called “David Copperfield's Beyond Imagination.”

Copperfield has also attempted to preserve the history of the art of magic for present and future generations by providing a safe, permanent home for antiquarian props, books, and other historical ephemera related to conjuring. His vast collection, known as the International Museum and Library of the Conjuring Arts, is housed in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Forbes Magazine reported that Copperfield earned $57 million in 2003, making him the tenth highest paid celebrity in the world. It also estimated that he made $57 million in 2004 (35th) and $57 million in 2005 (41st) in merchandise and tour revenue.[6] Copperfield performs over 500 shows per year throughout the world.[7]


[edit] Personal life
In February 2006, David's father, Hy (who often accompanied David on his many tours around the world), died in San Diego, CA. David set up a website, Remember Hy, so fans and friends could pay tribute.

In April 2006, Copperfield and two of his female assistants were robbed at gunpoint after a performance in West Palm Beach, Florida. His assistants gave the robbers their money, passports, and a cell phone. However, according to his police statement, Copperfield did not hand over anything. (He later claimed to have used sleight-of-hand to hide his possessions.[8]) One of Copperfield's assistants wrote down most of the license plate number, and the suspects were later arrested.[9] Seventeen year old Terrance Riley pleaded guilty and was sentenced to two years in prison for three counts of robbery with a weapon and one count of attempted robbery. Riley was also ordered to testify against his two co-defendants, his brother eighteen year old Dwayne Riley, and seventeen year old Markeith Jones.[10]

David Copperfield said in August 2006 that he has found the "Fountain of Youth" in the southern Bahamas, amid a cluster of four tiny islands called Musha Cay, which he had purchased on July 14th of that year. He claims that the water brings dead leaves back to life, and brings near dead insects back to life[11]. He said he has hired biologists and geologists to examine its potential effect on humans. [2] [3] This claim echoes the precursor to many of his previous illusions and seems to predict what his next illusion will be.


[edit] FBI investigation
On October 18, 2007, the website TMZ.com reported that David Copperfield was being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The raid reportedly stemmed from an ongoing case in Seattle. KTNV-TV Channel 13 in Las Vegas reported that 12 agents stormed a warehouse belonging to Copperfield. The agents seized a computer hard drive, a digital camera system and—according to early reports—nearly $US2 million ($2.25 million) in cash.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal printed a story confirming the raid at the warehouse in an investigation of possible sexual misconduct by the illusionist, citing a source with knowledge of the investigation.[12] Copperfield’s accuser, a 21-year-old Seattle woman, claimed she was raped, assaulted and threatened by Copperfield while alone with him on his private island in the Bahamas, described as a $50-million private retreat at Musha Cay, in a tiny string of white-sand islands 85 miles southeast of Nassau, Bahamas.[13] The young woman told Seattle police, and later the FBI, that Copperfield raped and struck her during her two days on the island, said sources familiar with her allegations. She said that, afterwards, Copperfield threatened her, telling her she'd better keep quiet, and then escorted her onto a plane.[13] A rape kit was assembled, and a federal source has confirmed that some of her clothing was taken into evidence.

The case is under the FBI’s jurisdiction because the accuser is a U.S. citizen and did not report the incident while staying in the Bahamas.[14]

Copperfield later issued a statement through his attorney denying all allegations of misconduct.


[edit] Lawsuit
In November 2007, promoters sued Copperfield for nearly $2.2 million, after he pulled out of 48 shows in the face of rape claims. Filed November 6 in Los Angeles County Superior Court, the breach of contract suit names Copperfield, his company and one of his attorneys.[15] The new lawsuit claims Copperfield backed out of a deal involving 10 performances in the United Arab Emirates and 38 shows in Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore this autumn because he did not want to face questioning by reporters. An attorney for Copperfield said last month that the shows were cancelled after Asian tour operators defaulted on their contracts.

The lawsuit was filed by California-based Viva Art International Ltd. and Maz Concerts Inc. of Ontario. They claim they gave Copperfield approximately $2.2 million to cover his costs before he cancelled the shows.


[edit] Achievements and awards

The handprints of David Copperfield in front of The Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World's Disney's Hollywood Studios theme park.David Copperfield's success has been recognized by a number of awards. The illusionist has been nominated 35 times for Emmy Awards and has won 21 times[verification needed].

The Guinness Book of World Records has calculated that he has sold more tickets in his career than any other solo entertainer. Other Guinness World Records held by Copperfield include being the most awarded magician in history and being the first living magician to receive a star on the Hollywood 'Walk of Fame'.

Madame Tussauds Wax Museum in London created a wax likeness of Copperfield.

David Copperfield has a French knighthood, received the Living Legend Award from the Library of Congress and appears on postage stamps in 6 countries.[verification needed]

He is the founder of The International Museum and Library of the Conjuring Arts, the largest museum of its kind.[16]

He starred in “Dreams and Nightmares," the Broadway show that set box-office records[17], including the most tickets sold in a week. He has been featured on the cover of Forbes[18], Architectural Digest[19] and Esquire[20] .[citation needed]


[edit] Television specials
The Magic of ABC Starring David Copperfield (1977)
The Magic of David Copperfield (1978)
The Magic of David Copperfield II (1979)
The Magic of David Copperfield III: Levitating Ferrari (1980)
The Magic of David Copperfield IV: The Vanishing Airplane (1981)
The Magic of David Copperfield V: Vanishing the Statue of Liberty (1983)
The Magic of David Copperfield VI: Floating Over the Grand Canyon (1984) (with special guest Bonnie Tyler theme Holding Out For A Hero)
The Magic of David Copperfield VII: Familiares (1985)
The Magic of David Copperfield VIII: Walking Through the Great Wall of China (1986) (with special guest Ben Vereen)
The Magic of David Copperfield IX: Escape From Alcatraz (1987)
The Magic of David Copperfield X: The Bermuda Triangle (1988)
The Magic of David Copperfield XI: Explosive Encounter (1989) (with special guest Emma Samms) Filmed at the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Orange County, California
The Magic of David Copperfield XII: The Niagara Falls Challenge (1990) (with special guest Kim Alexis) Filmed at the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Orange County, California
The Magic of David Copperfield XIII: Mystery On The Orient Express (1991) (with special guest Jane Seymour) Filmed at the Broward Center for Performing Arts in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
The Magic of David Copperfield XIV: Flying - Live The Dream (1992) (with special guest James Earl Jones) Filmed at the Broward Center for Performing Arts in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
The Magic of David Copperfield XV: Fires Of Passion (1993) (with special guest Wayne Gretzky) Filmed in part at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada and the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center in Tampa Bay, Florida
David Copperfield: 15 Years of Magic (1994) (with special guest Claudia Schiffer)
The Magic of David Copperfield XVI: Unexplained Forces (1995)
The David Copperfield: The Great Escapes
The Magic of David Copperfield XVII: Tornado Of Fire (2001) (with special guest Carson Daly) - Filmed at the Mid-South Coliseum in Memphis, Tennessee
The Magic of David Copperfield XVII: Tornado of Fire (2001) - European Edition - Filmed at the Mid-South Coliseum in Memphis, Tennessee

[edit] Famous illusions
David Copperfield passes through The Great Wall of China
Statue of Liberty Disappears
The Laser Illusion
The Death Saw
Levitation
Escapes An Imploding Building
Grandpa's Aces

[edit] Filmography
Terror Train (1980)
Scrubs (2002) TV - 'My Lucky Day'

[edit] See also
Vanishing the Statue of Liberty
David Copperfield's laser illusion
David Copperfield's flying illusion

[edit] References
^ Witchel, Alex. " A Maestro of the Magic Arts Returns to His Roots", The New York Times, November 24, 1996. Accessed [{December 6]], 2007. "David Seth Kotkin was born in Metuchen, N.J., 40 years ago; David Copperfield was born when David Kotkin turned 18, at the suggestion of the wife of a New York Post reporter. Which is why his passport reads David Kotkin, a k a David Copperfield."
^ A&E Biography - David Copperfield Bio
^ Short bio from Chicago Gigs on Copperfield
^ Short bio from Chicago Gigs on Copperfield
^ USA Today [1]
^ Forbes.com 2005 listing and 2004
^ Basquille, Mark. "David Copperfield to Captivate Seoul Audience", The Seoul Times, May 2004.
^ "Copperfield's sleight of hand keeps wallet from robbers", Indy Star, 2006-04-27.
^ David Copperfield Robbed At Gunpoint. The Smoking Gun (2006-04-26).
^ Thief tricked by David Copperfield pleads guilty. CNN (2006-11-10).
^ David Copperfield's Fountain of Youth.
^ "Copperfield raid related to Bahamas incident".
^ a b Grand jury investigates Copperfield allegations. Seattle Times (2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-28.
^ "FBI raids Copperfield's warehouse", reviewjournal.com.
^ Promoters Sue David Copperfield for $2.2 Million. Voice of America (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-11.
^ Houdini in the Desert. Forbes (2006-05-08). Retrieved on 2007-12-28. “The greatest collection of magic in the world lies hidden inside a nondescript Las Vegas warehouse.”
^ New York Times article reviewing Dreams and Nightmares
^ Picture of David on Forbes cover
^ Picture of David on Archictectural Digest cover
^ Picture of David on Esquire cover

[edit] External links
David Copperfield at the Internet Movie Database
Official website
Official website of Copperfield's Private Island Resort, Musha Cay at Copperfield Bay
TheMagicOfDC - Largest Unofficial website
David Copperfield Media Site
Selected Internet Resources
David Copperfield Spain (Blogger fan in Spanish)