The Magic Of The Illusionist

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Ever been mesmerized by a magician? I have.

If you ever went for a magic show at the local fair as a kid, and was shocked to see a woman being “cut” in half using a saw and then sighed in relief when she was “joined” again and brought back to life, or was amazed by the guy who got into that empty trunk and just vanished, only to re-emerge from the crowd, am sure you know what am talking about.

Magic is every man’s fantasy. It could be just to amuse people or, for those who don’t believe it’s just an illusion, to make their every wish come true. Who wouldn’t love to make the nasty, useless politicians just vanish with the snap the fingers? Ok, that’s just my wish, ‘coz I just hate them. My point is, everyone has some wish they really wish they could make come true, by magic.

But this post is not about those wishes and how to make them come true. This is about a guy, a cool dude… named David Copperfield. Oh no, not the David who had a tragic and dramatic childhood, fell in love with Emily and Dora and finally married Agnes, as in the Charles Dickens classic. Am talking of that David Copperfield who can make that pesky neighbor of yours vanish in the blink of an eye. The illusionist! The magician!

Both the audiences and the critics alike have hailed David Copperfield as the greatest illusionist of our time. And I agree. This guy is amazing. He has vanished the Statue of Liberty, walked through the Great Wall of China, levitated himself from the Grand Canyon and made audience members disappear and reappear in places they never ever expected. They say he became the first person to escape from Alcatraz, something that Al Capone and Machine Gun Kelly attempted but never succeeded.

I had a VHS tape of his show where he made an airplane surrounded by a ring of spectators, disappear. But the main number was making the Statue of Liberty disappear from the eyes of hundreds of people watching it, from the multiple cameras taking continuous snaps of beautiful women with the Statue in the background from different angles , and the news and TV crews flying in the helicopters around the statue. And an estimated home TV audience of 50 million watched this live. It was one breath taking moment, even on a video.

Now isn’t that amazing? A guy whose résumé lists Statue of Liberty, an airplane, a 70 ton Orient Express train car, apart from the many people and himself as the “things” he’s vanished; and escaping from the Alcatraz prison, from imploding buildings, and a plunge over the Niagara falls, unhurt, as some of his best adventures. How cool is that!

I grew out of the fantasies of being a magician as a kid itself. After watching a handful of guys doing the same stuff… cutting and stitching, floating babes and the here’s the card you picked numbers, I was bored. But later, when I watched this guy in action, I was like…WOW! Magic and illusion can be this exciting? I’ve totally lost interest in those stupid card tricks and the across-the-table magic doesn’t excite me at all. But David Copperfield’s tricks? They are different, and he never stopped making the world gasp.

If you never saw this guy in action, try to. Videos are good enough. And to give you a gist, here’s a clip from 15 years of his amazing shows.

Remember. Magic… is just an illusion!
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11 Replies to “The Magic Of The Illusionist”

  1. hmmmmm…think i’v seen dis guys show sometime…he is good..exceptionally good i guess…ya like a kid i used to sit with my mouth open wondern how do they do that…guess i still wonder…wish there wuz real magic..harry potter kinda magic..now that wud be awsome… ;o)
    ya..ya..i’m one of the harry potter geek too…he..he..

  2. somebody please please tell me how he does that!!!!!!!how how how how how!!!!!!!
    yeah..iv heard of him nd seen his shoes..he is awesome awesome awesome!

  3. I had the good fortune of seeing this guy live when he was here. He is INCREDIBLE! He made this whole bunch of people in the audience disappear and suddenly they were on stage! :O

  4. Well david cooperfield has it…but isn’t it ahem…a bit too grand and pretentious….i mean david blaine…comes across so naturally…so approachable…so real…but then who am i to interfere in the dreams and fascination of a child,of a hero,left far behind and grown out,but still so fresh???!!

  5. I did learn some card tricks from card-trick.net. It’s a nice site with free card tricks using a normal deck of cards (tricks are explained with photo’s and videos).

    card-trick.net

  6. Nah. It’s not real magic.
    Just using science to simulate the illusion of “magic”.

    I sometimes wonder, is there really another dimension where magic exist and not just a “trick”.

  7. Yes I agree, David Copperfield is the most amazing illusionist of our times. I never had a chance to watch him live (cant afford it :P)

  8. Yes, I do agree that Copperfield is more “unnatural” when compared to Blaine. And that’s why he’s a highly paid entertainer! I mean..even though people know it’s all just tricks, they still get awed by even the simplest ones. And that’s what the magicians were doing for a long time. The “real” magic, as we see in Harry Potter these days, doesn’t exist. Another dimension where it may really exist is sure a wishful thinking.

    The USP of David Copperfield is that he did those same things in a much larger scale which actually gave the simple tricks the larger than life magical feel. Takes us closer to the idea of “real” magic, i feel.

  9. I love that Jack Dee joke about going to see Copperfield perform, and David pretends to fly onstage. You can see this pants being pulled taunt from the support wires attached to this belt. David is saying “look at me, I can really fly, I’m doing it” and Jack Dee shouts “Yeah? if you can really fly, let’s all go out to the parking lot and see you fly! Come one everyone, Davey Boy is going to fly for you! Balls you can fly!”

    Regards, Col.
    (check out my blog in return please!)

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