Magnatone

ORSON WELLES Tannens's MAGIC MANUSCRIPT 1983 RARE Rita Hayworth SALE! FREE TRICK

Description: BUYERS! EVERY DAY IS A SALE DAY WITH MR.E! COMPARE OH BOY! AUCTIONS' PRICES WITH THOSE OFFERED BY EVERY OTHER EBAY SELLER AND YOU'LL FIND MR.E OFFERS THE BEST DEAL ON RARE, HARD-TO-FIND AND MUCH DESIRED COLLECTIBLES!!! OH BOY! AUCTIONS presents: MAGIC from MR.E 043 Tannen's MAGIC MANUSCRIPT Orson Welles Cover BONUS FREE MAGIC TRICK GIFT: Packet Card Mentalism Set and pdf instructions, Mr.E's Simplification of MAX MAVEN’S B’WAVE! ITEM/S MUCH WHITER AND BRIGHTER THAN THE PHOTO/S MAKES IT/THEM APPEAR (and MR.E provide more if you require)! Rare Vintage Magic AND Hollywood Movie Golden Age collectible!!! Perfect for display!!! VINTAGE MAGIC MAGAZINE IN VERY VERY FINE TO LIKE NEW READ CONDITION! 01. Tannen's MAGIC MANUSCRIPT Volume 5 Issue 3 (October/November 1983) -ORSON WELLES Cover and Article with photos of Rita Hayworth, Jay Sankey, Richard Kaufman card magic, Roger Crosthwaite, FANTASIO, Magic Camp Young Magicians, Paul Osborne, MEIR YEDID, David Regal, COPPERFIELD,much more! THE MAGIC OF ORSON WELLES by David O'Connor Orson Welles is best known for his ground-breaking films like Citizen Kane, The Lady from Shanghai, and The Third Man. Even today, cinema students study his innovative film techniques, while historians remember him for the night he terrorised a nation with his radio play, “The War of the Worlds.” Orson Welles was a writer, director, actor, broadcaster and all-around genius. He was also a magician. He loved to perform magic and at this he was superb. Orson Welles was born on May 6th 1915 and got his first magic set at age three. As a child, he saw Harry Houdini perform and was only 11 years old when the great escape artist died in 1926. At the age of 10, he ran away from home and was discovered two days later at a Chicago Street corner surrounded by a crowd while doing a magic act. The stage and theatre soon became a magnetic attraction for Welles and all through school he was writing and acting and even directing on the New York stage. By the time he was 20, he went into radio as a broadcaster and presented the weekly show called “The Mercury Theatre of the Air.” In 1925 when he was only 25, Hollywood beckoned to Welles. He created what many still believe is one of the greatest films of all time, Citizen Kane. Welles continued to work at his magic and some felt that his films were an extension of his magic. When World War II broke out, he decided to put on a major show for servicemen and women. In 1943 in a huge tent in Hollywood, he produced the “Mercury Wonder Show.” Service men and women got in free while the public had to pay. A number of motion picture celebrities presented circus-type acts while Orson Welles did magic. He performed the dangerous Bullet Catching trick, Harry Houdini’s Needle trick, and the Borrowed Bill in an Orange, along with lesser known but dazzling effects. During one of his World War II magic shows featuring his wife Rita Hayworth as his illusion assistant, a newspaper reviewer wrote that Hayworth was sweating profusely as she emerged from a cabinet illusion. Welles took offense and wrote a letter to the editor in response, stating that Miss Hayworth does not sweat….. She glows! In the same year, Universal Studios did a film called Follow the Boys. In this film, numerous stars did vaudeville acts while Welles sawed actress Marlene Dietrich in half. In the 1950’s, Welles did a three-week stint at the Riviera Casino in Las Vegas with his own magic act for which he received the fee of $45,000. Part of his show also included recitations from Shakespearean plays that had growing appeal in America. Welles always had trouble raising money to produce his own films and spent much of his time acting in films of others where he often played the part of magicians. In Henry Jagloms’s film A Safe Place (1971), he played the part of a magician who befriends a young girl. In the film Get to Know Your Rabbit, he taught actor Tommy Smothers to become a tap-dancing magician. In 1973, he directed and acted in the film called F for Fake (which never actually finished) in which he performs a number of magic tricks including an Asrah levitation. Earlier in 1949, in his film Black Magic, Welles played the part of Count Allesandro Cagliostro, who was a 16th century occultist and adventurer of dubious fame. On October 30th 1938, as part of the radio broadcast drama War of the Worlds (which was based upon the HG Welles book), Orson broke into the programme at various intervals to deliver a series of simulated news bulletins with the news of an alien invasion by Martians. In many parts of America, people panicked as the resonant, deep voice of Welles was quite realistic and convincing. The whole thing was a hoax but it certainly established Welles’s fame as a dramatist. As a result of this event, the Federal Communication Commission established strict rules on radio where there was a possibility of a broadcast inducing mass panic. For many years, Welles worked on a film project called The Orson Welles Magic Show but the plot of the film kept changing. A significant part of the movie was meant to showcase Welles’s magic capabilities. It was to be filmed using only one camera angle and no editing cuts. He wanted to prove that his magic was not accomplished by camera trickery or special editing. However, the project was never completed for release. Orson Welles continued to perform magic right until his death. He had a number of television special performances and I have a recollection of him performing at the Magic Castle. He was interviewed on numerous American talk shows and he was a frequent guest on the Merv Griffin Show. He often performed magic on these occasions and the night before he died, he actually performed a card trick on Griffin’s show. He died on October 10th 1985 at age 70. There is no doubt that the genius of Orson Welles was better known in the motion picture industry than in the history of magic. Be that as it may, his magic was memorable and it was something he was involved in all his life. (Grateful thanks to Gale Molovinsky of Ann Arbor Magic Club Ring 210 & SAM Assembly 88 USA) CONTACT ME WITH ANY QUESTIONS!ALL MAGIC IS NON-RETURNABLE! COMBINED SHIPPING AVAILABLE!! I'M SORRY BUT NON-US SHIPPING NOT AVAILABLE!!!

Price: 10 USD

Location: Latham, New York

End Time: 2024-09-24T07:51:42.000Z

Shipping Cost: N/A USD

Product Images

ORSON WELLES TannensORSON WELLES Tannens

Item Specifics

All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

Industry: Movies

Original/Reproduction: Original

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

Recommended

Citizen Welles: A Biography of Orson Welles - Paperback By Brady, Frank - GOOD
Citizen Welles: A Biography of Orson Welles - Paperback By Brady, Frank - GOOD

$4.20

View Details
The Third Man Collector's Edit (4K UHD Blu-ray) (UK IMPORT) (PRESALE 11/04/2024)
The Third Man Collector's Edit (4K UHD Blu-ray) (UK IMPORT) (PRESALE 11/04/2024)

$73.27

View Details
The Lady from Shanghai (1947, Blu-ray) LIKE NEW - INDICATOR - ORSON WELLES
The Lady from Shanghai (1947, Blu-ray) LIKE NEW - INDICATOR - ORSON WELLES

$13.49

View Details
The Third Man movie poster (d)  - 11 x 17 inches - Joseph Cotton, Orson Welles
The Third Man movie poster (d) - 11 x 17 inches - Joseph Cotton, Orson Welles

$13.96

View Details
Necromancy Dvd
Necromancy Dvd

$20.00

View Details
Citizen Kane DVD Orson Welles NEW
Citizen Kane DVD Orson Welles NEW

$8.99

View Details
Tomorrow Is Forever Blu-ray 1946 Claudette Colbert Orson Welles George Brent OOP
Tomorrow Is Forever Blu-ray 1946 Claudette Colbert Orson Welles George Brent OOP

$20.00

View Details
Citizen Kane: 75th Anniversary [DVD] ORSON WELLES STANDARD VERSION
Citizen Kane: 75th Anniversary [DVD] ORSON WELLES STANDARD VERSION

$3.32

View Details
Orson Welles Portfolio: Sketches and D..., Simon Braund
Orson Welles Portfolio: Sketches and D..., Simon Braund

$7.69

View Details
Mr. Arkadin NEW Classic Blu-Ray Disc Orson Welles Orson Welles
Mr. Arkadin NEW Classic Blu-Ray Disc Orson Welles Orson Welles

$21.99

View Details