Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

User Tools

Site Tools


Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revisionBoth sides next revision
cards:mene_tekel_deck [2013/03/29 11:28] – link and tag added denisbehrcards:mene_tekel_deck [2013/12/03 10:49] tylerwilson
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====== Mene Tekel Deck ====== ====== Mene Tekel Deck ======
  
-Waters in //The Encyclopedia of Magic and Magicians//, p. 227, states that the Mene Tekel Deck was possibly invented by Donald Holmes and not Burling HullThe method is explained on p. 9 of Holmes'1913 book //[[http://askalexander.org/display/14589/Tricks+with+Prepared+Cards/11|Tricks With Prepared Cards]]//. Sam Sharpe in //The Magic Circular//, Vol. 53, p. 49, says the Mene Tekel Deck, also known as the Self-Shifting Pack, was introduced by Donald Holmes. Bart Whaley'//Who's Who in Magic// says Hull invented Mene Tekel Deck in 1910.+Reinhard Müller has traced this deck back to Friedrich Wilhelm Conradi, who describes it in a [[cards:card_at_any_number|Card at Any Number]] trick, "Mundus Vult Decipi," in //Der Moderne Kartenküstler//, 1896, p. 77. The deck was made up of pairs of ordinary duplicates; they were not cut long and short. Burling Hull later developed the same idea, marketing it as “The Devil'Pass,” 1908. In a biographical piece on Hull in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38180/The+Sphinx/3|The Sphinx]]//, Vol. 9 No. 9, Nov. 1910, p. 187it was stated that he privately sold “Improved Devil'Pass” on a limited basis from 1904 to 1906, and that he created the deck when he was 11 years old.
  
-Reinhard Müller's //Marlo on Faked Decks// refers to a 1908 Hull //Sphinx// magazine ad for "The Devil's Pass". Hugard's //Encyclopedia of Card Tricks// says it is not certain who devised it but the title Mene Tekel was first supplied by W. D. Le Roy. Le Roy advertised the deck in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38173/The+Sphinx/19|The Sphinx]]//, April 1910, under the title "Le Roy's Incomprehensible Card Trick". In Nov. 1915 issue of //The Sphinx//, in a biographical piece on Hull, it is stated that he invented the Mene Tekel deck at age 11 and called it "The Devil's Pass". This article also notes that at that time the deck was also called "The Lanigiro Pack". However, Müller found the deck was created by Friedrich Wilhelm Conradi, who describes it in a Card-at-Any-Number trick, "Mundus Vult Decipi", in //Der Moderne Kartenküstler//, 1896, p. 77. The deck was made up of pairs of duplicates, but these pairs were not cut long and short.+The Mene Tekel” name, along with the long and short card addition, was introduced by W.D. Le Roy when he marketed “The 'Mene Tekel' Mystery,” 1910This same deck of cards was described without attribution as "The 'Self-Shifting' Pack" in Donald Holmes's book, //[[http://askalexander.org/display/14589/Tricks+with+Prepared+Cards/11|Tricks With Prepared Cards]]//, 1913, p. 9.
  
-Eugene Gloye seems first to have published the idea of a half-deck Mene Tekel bank sandwiched between banks of normal cards. This was in his //Linking Ring// column, according to Nathan Kranzo in the March 2011 issue of //M-U-M //(Vol. 100No. 10, p. 80). Also see two Mene Tekel variants made with normal decks, one by C. A. George Newmann, described in //The New Jinx//, No. 30, Oct. 1964, p. 126and a second by North Bigbeein the same journal, No. 32, Dec. 1964, p. 134.+Other notable variants of the deck include Eugene Gloye'idea of only using bank of Mene Tekel cards in the center of an otherwise normal deck, mentioned by Nathan Kranzo in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/24841/M+U+M+electronic+resource/334|M-U-M]]//Vol. 100 No. 10,  Mar. 2011, p. 80, and two attempts to create Menel Tekel packs out of a normal deck of cards, one by C. A. George Newmann in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/4458/New+Jinx+Vol+03/24|The New Jinx]]//, Vol. 3 No. 30, Oct. 1964, p. 126and the other by North Bigbee in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/4458/New+Jinx+Vol+03/24|The New Jinx]]//Vol. 3 No. 32, Dec. 1964, p. 134.
  
   * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/show.php?cat=993|Category in Denis Behr's "Conjuring Archive"]]   * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/show.php?cat=993|Category in Denis Behr's "Conjuring Archive"]]
  
 {{tag>prop}} {{tag>prop}}