![Back Williamson's](https://data.docslib.org/img/3a60ab92a6e30910dab9bd827208bcff-1.webp)
jurors’ Magazine N THE CO Genii DECEMBER 2013 • $6 David Williamsons' Back rHe's R idiculous David NOTWilliamson SO RIDICULOUS by David Britland In 1961, in the little town of Xenia, Ohio, some farm- ers found a pod in a field, still smoking. Inside, wrapped in a close-up mat, was a baby from another world. That baby was David Williamson. Xenia was subsequently laid low by a huge tornado which left David’s magical educa- tion to a man going by the name of Quacky the Clown. Or at least that’s what David Williamson said when I saw him interviewed for his new DVD set, Ridiculous. I haven’t been able to verify the smoking pod story. But he was born in Xenia. There was a tornado. And a guy called Quacky the Clown. And, watching David Williamson perform magic, who could possibly doubt that he is from another world? The usual accolades don’t do justice to the talents of David Williamson. He’s an award-winning magician. One of the world’s best and most versatile sleight-of- hand artists. A terrific teacher of magic. A great come- dian and an exceptional stage performer. But for me David Williamson is more than that. He’s a magician who changed the way we do magic. 78 GENII Williamson PHOTO BY JP CEZANNE DECEMBER 2013 79 DAVID BROUGHT TO MAGIC ... a seemingly effortless style in which the magic seems natural and spontaneous. David’s own inspirations were Slydini, Del Ray, and Albert Goshman. but, in the 1980s, David brought a youthful energy to his magic that we were not accustomed to. first heard about him at a magic just happens.” it was many years in the making. lecture by Michael Ammar This is what David brought to magic, Xenia is in America’s Midwest, in 1982. It was hosted by a seemingly effortless style in which the approximately 20 miles from Dayton. Paul Daniels at his home magic seems natural and spontaneous. It was where David Williamson spent in Holland Park. It was an David’s own inspirations were Slydini, his childhood, fighting with his two Iinspiring lecture. Michael Ammar per- Del Ray, and Albert Goshman but, in brothers, climbing trees, and throwing formed and explained some innovative the 1980s, David brought a youthful rocks at passing trucks. The seed for magic, the best of a new generation energy to his magic that we were not change came, as it does for many magi- of magicians. He also mentioned a accustomed to. We’d paid homage to cians, with the arrival of a magic set, a friend of his, David Williamson, the the Stars of Magic era legends, as we Christmas present when David was nine creator of The Striking Vanish, a move should, but it was a rare day when you years old. It was the same year he read a that has since become a standard. A sat down at a table to entertain your book at school about Houdini. The last couple of years later I saw David lec- spectators. David Williamson’s magic chapter described how to do the French ture in London, an event arranged by was built for the “now.” You stood, you Drop. David practiced it, well enough Chris Power and JJ who had already worked the room, the body language for the teacher, Mrs. Moore, to pat him picked him as one to watch. Their was loose and guileless, and the magic, on the shoulder and say, “Maybe some- day you’ll be a magician.” It was, says David, “The first time anyone had said I’d be anything.” “That year Shepherd the Great, a magi- cian, came to our school. He did a great little school program. Mrs. Moore knew I was interested in magic, so she talked to the magician and he allowed me to come backstage and let me load his gear into his van, which had a rabbit and top hat painted on its side. I felt honored. I knew I was in the fraternity then and knew that was what I wanted to do.” David’s magical epiphany came dur- ing Shepherd the Great’s performance of the “Color Changing Plumes.” David describes the plumes being pushed through the tube, “He had a red plume, put it in the tube, and a blue one came out. And he put it back on the stand. Red to Blue. Then he takes a yellow one puts it in the tube and a red one comes out. And I started to see a pattern. Ah ha! I’m on to this guy. Then he takes a green one and puts it in the tube. And I magazine, Opus, later declared him their really did just seem to happen free of turned to my friend and said the green favorite close-up magician, praising his structure and formality. It was a new one is going to come out yellow. And a fluid sleight of hand and the way an way of performing and one that every purple one came out! At that moment, aura of magic seems to surround David magician wanted to emulate. That style I thought wait a minute. There’s some- Williamson creating an impression “that exists because of David Williamson and thing going on here. I need to find out 80 GENII W N W N A A TC H TC H ACE CUTTING ACE CUTTING (PERFORMance) (EXPLanatiON) what’s going on. He sucked me in. He clobbered me. My brain was on fire.” The next milestone on the journey occurred when he was 11 or 12 and read The Amateur Magician’s Handbook. Written by Henry Hay (June Barrows Mussey) it owed much to his travels around the world as a young man where he met the greats of magic like T. Nelson Downs and learned from them. It made concrete the idea that there was indeed a fraternity of magicians sharing secrets. It was a group that David very much wanted to join. David’s grandfather helped him build a magic box, one of his own design. He could show it empty, reach in, and pull out a bunch of silks. He still has it. But its debut at a school talent show didn’t go so well. He reached through a flap in the box to pick up a bundle of handker- chiefs that was hanging on a nail behind the table. Unfortunately the flap closed on his hand and he couldn’t get it free. “I pulled and I couldn’t get my hand out,” says David. “It was almost like a comedy routine.” David performed magic at county shows, birthday parties, and old folks homes. To get more work he took to wearing a T-shirt that had “Magician for Magic Conference in 2012. The tornado and physical wreckage that a bizarre Hire” printed on the front. “Did I ever came at a strange time in David’s life, note of optimism emerged … Quacky get any work from that?” asks David. things were not good at home. His par- the Clown. “No. Did people say, ‘Let me get the ents had been constantly arguing. They When David describes Quacky you number for that?’ No. It was stupid.” got divorced. And now his town had can’t help but imagine Crusty the Clown However, another promotional idea been flattened. It was from this social from The Simpsons. Quacky lived in a did work. His box-building grandfather trailer strewn with beer cans where his had an old fashioned printing press in daughter inflated the modeling balloons the basement. He taught David how to for the day’s show. Then he wandered set type and soon he had his first busi- through the tornado-wrecked streets of ness cards. Xenia, wearing yellow duck feet clown Magic sets, home-built production shoes, doing magic tricks, making bal- boxes, and business cards: all familiar loon models, mooing and barking and waypoints in the journey of the magi- kicking kids away whenever they came cian. But the next milestone was one too close. David loved it. “It was the that few can mark on their map, a tor- most ridiculous, wonderful thing that nado strike. It happened in April 1974 could possibly have happened to me at and was the second largest tornado that point.” outbreak in the history of the U.S.A. David followed Quacky everywhere, David’s home town of Xenia was hit eventually being allowed to assist by with devastating force, 32 people were carrying the net full of inflated balloons. killed, over a thousand injured, and a In a quiet moment inside Quacky’s trail- large part of the town laid waste. er, he advised David never to take up David told the story at the Essential the performing life. It was advice that DECEMBER 2013 81 He was a mentalist. I don’t know who it was. I know it wasn’t Max Maven because I don’t think he drives does he? But Max is the kind of guy who would do something like this. He saved all our stuff and he replaced everything that was damaged. The next day he brought us new copies of all the books we had bought. That made a big impression on me about the fraternity of magicians.” Fraternities have secret initiation rites and David learned that magic conven- tions were no exception. At the TAOM convention in Texas he met Johnny Ace Palmer. “I think we were in our late teens or something.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages15 Page
-
File Size-