Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

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cards:card_diary [2014/07/22 10:22] – adding range to pages to test new feature denisbehrcards:card_diary [2017/08/01 09:40] (current) – link updated denisbehr
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 A precursor of this effect can be found in "The Mysteries of the Zodiac" in August Roterberg's //[[http://askalexander.org/display/20169/New+Era+Card+Tricks/126|New Era Card Tricks]]//, 1897, p. 116, in which playing cards are associated with birthdays. A precursor of this effect can be found in "The Mysteries of the Zodiac" in August Roterberg's //[[http://askalexander.org/display/20169/New+Era+Card+Tricks/126|New Era Card Tricks]]//, 1897, p. 116, in which playing cards are associated with birthdays.
  
-Max Maven has constructed this further history: First came Roy Walker's "The Weather Test" in //Magic Wand//, Vol. 21 No. 136, Dec. 1932, p. 189, which was a pseudo-memory test in which the performer demonstrated that he had total recall of the weather entries for every date in a "weather diary." This inspired Tom Sellers to create a variation in which card hands were listed for each day in a diary, published in //Magic Wand//, Vol. 24 No. 166, June 1935, p. 67. Then followed Arthur F. G. Carter's "Diary of a Yogi" in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38902/The+Magic+Wand/79|Magic Wand]]//, Vol. 42 No. 238, June 1953, p. 59, in which a freely named card matched the one entered on a spectator's birthday in a datebook. Nearly two decades later, Ted Danson contributed "It's a Date" to //New Pentagram//, Vol. 2 No. 1, Mar. 1970, p. 1. This became known and was marketed as "Danson's Diary." From that point, many other approaches have been published or marketed by Elmsley, Cassidy, Duffie, Cornelius, Paul Green, etc.+Max Maven has constructed this further history: First came Roy Walker's "The Weather Test" in //Magic Wand//, Vol. 21 No. 136, Dec. 1932, p. 189, which was a pseudo-memory test in which the performer demonstrated that he had total recall of the weather entries for every date in a "weather diary." This inspired Tom Sellers to create a variation in which card hands were listed for each day in a diary, published in //Magic Wand//, Vol. 24 No. 166, June 1935, p. 67. Then followed Arthur F. G. Carter's "Diary of a Yogi" in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38902/The+Magic+Wand/79|Magic Wand]]//, Vol. 42 No. 238, June 1953, p. 59, in which a freely named card matched the date of the performance listed in a datebook. Nearly two decades later, Ted Danson contributed "It's a Date" to //New Pentagram//, Vol. 2 No. 1, Mar. 1970, p. 1. Danson's presentation had a card found listed next to a spectator's birthday in the performer's pocket diary match a predicted playing card sealed in an envelope. This became known and was marketed as "Danson's Diary." Many other approaches on the birthday-playing card variation have since been published and marketed by Elmsley, Cassidy, Duffie, Cornelius, Paul Green, etc.
  
 (For a history of this effect, see also //[[http://askalexander.org/display/13104/The+Collected+Works+of+Alex+Elmsley/431-432|The Collected Works of Alex Elmsley, Volume II]]//, 1994, p. 433.) (For a history of this effect, see also //[[http://askalexander.org/display/13104/The+Collected+Works+of+Alex+Elmsley/431-432|The Collected Works of Alex Elmsley, Volume II]]//, 1994, p. 433.)
  
-  * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/show.php?cat=737|Category in Denis Behr's "Conjuring Archive"]]+  * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/list/category/737|Category in Denis Behr's "Conjuring Archive"]]
  
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