Quite Soon Now…

Opus Readers will be able to obtain the complete range of EMC Box sets from us.

You will be able to order from us and have your purchases sent to your home post and packing free!

 

 

12th Annual Championships of Street Magicians Sankt Wendel. 2011. A report by Nick Nickolas…

Sankt Wendel is a small town in north-eastern Saarland Germany, first settled during the Merovingian period (late 6th century).

It is the home to Georg Laur a jolly bonny event/festival organiser with a bad knee, creator of the International Street Magicians Championships, now in it’s 12th year.

I arrived a week earlier from Melbourne Australia to perform at a small lakeside gig in Boatsalee. Two days of enjoyable shows delivered between rain showers.

Georg then accommodated me wonderfully at his house for the next 5 days.

Now my residency is a hotel painted like a rainbow curlywurly 4 blocks from the site.

Acts were scattered in various lodgings around town others in their vans camping.

 

Wandering to Café Journal the magic meeting point I see Brando and Silvana from Argentina whom I had met in Spain a few years earlier. They have many routines, she normally impish in character and Brando a bemused Stan Laurel, great to see them again.

 

They had driven from Spain with another couple, Magic Sergio and his girlfriend. Sergio performed polished classic magic, producing a dove at the beginning and finished with the rings. We had discussions later regarding the dove;

Dove production early indoors may be all-good but methinks for the street the dove should be at the end of the show when you have capacity crowd not early while you are building your edge.

 

Magicians From multiple countries were appearing from all directions filling the empty chairs talking in numerous languages, Sebastien Desjardins from Italy and Philippe Lelouchier from Belgium sat opposite me and started chatting in French. There were Catalanos, Italianos, Lithuanians, Moroccans; numerous conversations in multiple languages surround me.

As well as the 16 participants of the festival there were 40 plus other magicians from all over just to hang out and to play on the open pitches on Sunday.

Ten-year-old Joscha Goethe came over to say hello, I had met Joscha before 2 years previously, great little performer big on charisma and the understanding of showmanship.

As the pack of magicians began to grow we got ushered inside, long banquet tables, roses hanging from the ceiling, and waiters taking orders.

Ben Zuddist a Londoner residing in Antwerp I’d last seen in Auckland sat down next to me, Ben performs cups and balls as Italian Gangster Benny Formaggio, olives as balls and bunch of grapes finale. Good to see him and have someone I can speak English with, my brain was tired trying to solve the language linguistics around my air space.

We were served food and given liquids of choice also envelopes with the usual, food tickets, town promo and the show schedules, 2 shows a day and extras on Sunday.

 

There were 4 main pitches.

Starting from the top of the town behind the church there was a decent size pedestrian space flanked by cafes. I was to follow Trabuk from Italy there on the first day in fact I was to follow Trabuk everyday. Sporting a smile that can cross borders, he has stunning misdirection with a shoe, a fluffy owl and a cell phone. Very clever original ideas delivered with captivating charisma, always leaving the crowd in good spirits, a great act to follow.

The weather had been looking dodgy; rain showers came in, as the first acts were to start. Trabuk and I were lucky we had back up, the ‘tunnel pitch’ a small walkway between rows of shops and some steps on the side –capacity 50 people. Rain gave Trabuk no choice but to tunnel it. I sat back and contemplated as the showers came in and out.

 

I tried to get a shopkeeper to open up his outside blinds for shelter, “Nien” he said as they were sunshades not rain covers! Got to love those Germans.

I took the gamble and played outside the tunnel grabbing a few exiting tunnellers to start an edge. Gamble paid off I got lucky; rain held and didn’t start until I was just hatting.

Not so much for Mario Morris I later found out, wrapped up in a straightjacket and chains when the heavens opened and people scattered for cover, he was left wriggling, dripping and wringing. “Still got a hat out of them,” he tells me afterward holding up a few wet fivers.

I’m not at all surprised his background was as a grafter and pitchman before a becoming a street performer.

 

As you walk around the church down the hill you come to the next pitch. People funnelled up from a walking street to the church, then split, meandering around a circle of cobbles in front of church steps.

I’d played this place before, standing up on the flat steps looking down, capacity crowd looking up at you.

This time I decided to reverse that and play looking up at the church trying to fill the front and then lock it in behind to work the round, my plan didn’t really work. Table was on a slope, balls rolling around bouncing at oblique angles off the cobbles, the edge and focus remained scattered throughout.

Later Sira aka Miss Minetti from Holland came into the backstage tent soaked, with trolley, props and wellies. Sira’s been on the scene for years doing an escape act she’s now trying a new magic show. Maybe it was good she wasn’t doing the escape, must ask Mario.

 

Tonight was paddy pub night, a tradition in these parts is they get as many magicians into an Irish pub to drink as many free Guinness’s as it takes for them to twirl the diddle i doe. Swinging around mimicking a tea-set in a tsunami I twirled, they twirled, we all twirled the diddle i doe.

During a particular twirl I bumped into Dan Berlin a young German street magician I met a couple years ago in Auckland, he’d just got back in Germany after being away in Asia and Indonesia for 2 years, great to see him and have a pint.

It was the wee hours when all diddle I doed off to various dwellings in the raindrops.

 

Waking up mid morning sometime during a hot shower. I towel, dress, go downstairs and ingest a variety of breads, cheeses, meats, coffee and juices, get my kit and go to work.

Milling in and around the backstage tent were a congregation of conjurers and crew, rain was patchy, sunbursts few.

To our right the setting for tonight’s gala show. A 10m2 stage that fluoro vested, hard hatted men had spent most of last night constructing.

 

As the clouds were clearing I see Sebastien Desjardins, a street performer for many years starting up. Earlier he’d been telling me he wanted to design a 10/15 min self-contained street magic act.

Well he certainly has done that, a waist high box containing a speaker and a 7ft lamp, (Lit for night shows) a remote within easy reach. Manipulation routine with cigarettes, pipes and multiple beer bottles. Great misdirection and crowd control certainly fooled me.

Up the hill I saw Tobi van Deisner working the church steps correctly, holding up a massive multiballoon motorbike looking down at a capacity crowd.

 

The bottom pitch in the Square had terraces of cafes along one side and the gala stage on the other.

I watched German Indian, Jadoo take the ‘badness’ from someone’s knee and Jardoo it into a chosen coconut, proving so by cracking it open to show it all dirty and bad inside whereas the other unchosen ones were clean and white. Later mentioned to Georg to go and see him.

 

The Gala was tonight 8pm, the rain started to come down hard at 6ish, a smattering of people under umbrellas occupied few of the hundred or so benches filling the square.

Georg appeared with raincoat, wellies and clipboard saying that a decision has been made, gala’s moving inside.

People streamed up the hill to a theatre/hall. Crew were running around with leads, boxes and lights and of course the rain was slowing down.

 

The show went on about half an hour later than scheduled. Hosted by a comedian Jojo Weib and his juggler partner Andreas Wessels, they started to play table tennis Andreas catching and popping balls with his mouth. Very funny, very skilful, culminating in multiple ball mouth juggling.

Albi Zauberfuzzi from Lichtenstein came on and performed a routine in German which involved a telephone call with magic Christian, big laughs from the German speakers, chosen card eventually came out of the mobile phone/fax machine he had.

 

Herz Konig did a vent act with 2 people from the audience great technique and very funny. There are some long words in German with a lot of b’s and his lips weren’t moving.

Silvana linked juggling rings and did a wonderful confetti from water snowstorm routine.

Spanish Guitar music started up and out came the matador of juggling, Andreas Wessels. With full size footballs and a guitar case he blew the crowd away moves I had never seen before, all perfectly bang on to the music. He closed his set juggling five footballs whilst balancing a ball on one foot and turning circles, skipping rope. Great act to end the first half.

After intermission out came Jakob Mathias who did a wonderful skipping rope cut and restored then produced a couch, turned himself into an old man and appeared from the back of the theatre in swimming trunks soaking wet, excellent stuff.

Andreas and Jojo came on again with an interesting routine where they tried to out do each other using matches’ candles and drinks, once again crack hot juggling skills combined with flawless German precision.

Mathias Romir performed ‘pinball paranoia’ dressed in white, looking somewhat like Alex from A Clockwork Orange. Original-yes. Quirky-yes finishing with a juggling puppet created out of his left knee crowd loved him.

Whole show was great, though for my liking a little long, The people gave a standing ovation and were clapping along as the artists took their final bow to Freddy Mercury singing “We will, we will rock you.”

I was knackered and one of the first to leave the theatre, back to the curlywurly by midnight and sleeping not long after.

 

Sunday was a more open affair as regards to the spots. We met up at 11am and Georg handed out the schedule, there were extra pitches creating room for additional magicians to perform.

I had a small gig at a sports club in the afternoon so did the early one, a nice flat area to the side of the church, crowd and me chilled out and relaxed went great.

After at a terrace café I decide to use one of my free food tickets and order a meal, I can’t read German so chose number 26. Minced bovine balls clad in mashed potato and flour with cabbage and gravy appeared on the table, it had taste it filled the gap.

Down by the stage a crowd of 60 or so had gathered, I walk down and see 10-year-old Joscha working the edge. A 15 year old twice his size was his volunteer. Joscha played him, did a change bag routine took the applause then bottled the money out of them pitching for bills, it made me happy.

‘Toot toot,’ my ride to the sports club gig had arrived. It was the 150th anniversary of the club and I was the entertainment, in the car I had visions I was to be playing after some sort of luncheon speech. We arrived, walk across the running track past high jumpers and through cheerleaders practicing pyramids into a gym, where people

were tumbling, swinging and stretching.

After discussing the best place for the show the curve of the running track outside was decided.

I set up in a demographic that I have never encountered before, on the inside corner of a 400m track. Staff dragged crash mats from the high jump area for people to sit on others lay stretching on the grass. Show went well, I think everyone was as shocked as me with what was happening in the middle of there training sessions.

They laughed and clapped then reset trampolines and teeter boards before continuing to balance and bounce as we drove off.

 

Back on the site Miss Minettti was performing her escape show to a large circle under the trees. Ted McCoy a crowd favourite was pushing his kit up the hill, a river of eager folk in tow.

The balloon twisters after an early morning feud had teamed up and were twisting their way into the hearts and wallets of punters by the steps.

My last show was in the square and I pulled a monster out the bag a very satisfying closer for me.

 

 

At the wrap party backstage sausages and various meats were being bbq’d by the Burgermeister (town Major) while tricksters, dignitary and crew dealt to crates of beers and bottles of wine.

A characture artist was cartooning everyone between drinks; I began to notice the more liquid consumed the more real the pictures looked.

People were leaving; I said goodbye to the whiskered Scotsman Ted McCoy, Albi, Trabuk and their families’ also local magician Magic Pete and crazy Rono Kertini.

Georg led the remainders of the pack to Café Journal. Sebastien Desjardins, Dan Berlin, Jardoo, Cie Santini, Mario Morris and Veronica and a Russian bloke who had driven for days in a Lada to attend the festival. Card tricks came out as we tried to misdirect each other between sips, gulps and laughs.

Georg left, glasses were empty, tricks and bribes were directed to the waitress but she wouldn’t budge, we leave no take-outs hustled.

We walk, the last three, Mario, Veronica and me sipping from the half glasses previously hidden in our sleeves, discussing that in any town, anywhere, a late night drinking place is open somewhere.

Walking we asked someone, they pointed yakking German- we followed the finger, and yes there it was. The Curazon, a small funky bar, piano at rear, cool drapes and funky collectables adjourning shelves and corners. We were immediately recognized and bought beers and shots.

The next few hours were spent in a kaleidoscope of tricks, gags, laughter and booze.

 

Waking up at around 10am I look out over my pillow, bags are all packed! Then remembering with joy that I had done them in a jagermeister haze a few hours ago.

Downstairs I drink half a carton of orange juice, eat an egg and sniff a coffee, Mario’s across the way compiling a cheese, yogurt and salami sandwich. Piles of coins were counted and room bills paid.

I Drag my self and gear to Café Journal to meet with Georg and Ben Zuddist (my ride to Antwerp), Mario came along for the stagger it was great to meet him and put a face to a name I have known for years. That’s the fantastic thing about this life travelling around meeting new and old friends, after hugs and goodbyes I get in Bens truck he drives. Great festival, not so big on hats but a great craic with great hospitality I’ll be back.

 

Nickolas 2011

 

Opus would like to thank Nick for this review and photos… brilliant stuff in our view giving a  true flavour of the Festival/Contest.

If I knew how to do a proper link I would but for the moment check out Nick Nicolas at…    www.nicknickolas.com

Look What I Found in the Opus Cupboard

Strange what one comes across when browsing through old external hard drives…

Enjoy…

Some One Else Living My Dream

On a gentle trip up the west coast of Portugal just north of Lisbon and nearly at Perniche, I came upon the small beach town Consolasao. After parking the Opus Mobile Office by the beach, I strolled through town and in a small square saw the stage set for an outside “circus”. There was a back drop, lights and sound system together with rows of chairs all laid out in rows. The back drop was secured to the back of a medium sized, long wheel based Iveco truck (similar to the Wagon.) It had a top hat and wand motif… “This must have some magic content” I thought.

Many, many years ago I dreamt of roaming Europe in a “live in” wagon of which one side would hinge down to form a stage and you would perform a “street show” from it.

It appeared that here was some one actually doing something similar.

The show started at ten o’clock and featured a lot of magic in the first half.

As far as I could tell the “circus” featured Mum, Dad and three sons. The youngest son started the show by applying some clown make up on in view of the audience to a commentary provided by Dad. There then followed the young lad doing some standard bits of business to elicit applause from the audience. It worked a little bit.

Dad then did some general prop magic done very casually but in a manner that displayed he had done it many, many times before. I am guessing that his expressionless face and lack of eye contact with the audience was done on purpose to fit his “on stage” character. Or he was bored to death… but I think it was the former because the performance was really pretty well done.. Ok simple prop tricks but the audience were amazed and loved it.

He and his wife (?) then did the broomstick levitation which really surprised me for she was a lady of considerable size.  Despite this it was performed smoothly and effectively.

There followed a sub trunk with Dad going in and a “son” doing the “on top of the trunk” bit. Once again the economy of movement, the smooth handling of the equipment and the considerable speed of the change itself displayed a large amount of work had one into the rehearsals and regular performances had honed the piece. The people in the audience loved it. The commentary of this section of the show (with backing music) was initially provided by mum and then was taken over by older son as mum was needed on stage.

 

Next the young “clown” with his make up removed did a standard but polished juggling display with balls (up to four) clubs (three) and brightly coloured rings (four) and he only dropped a couple of times.

The first half now closed with the elder “son” doing doing a bit of trapeze stuff. While he was up there mum was now in a small trailer with a glass front parked by the side of the audience making the… popcorn. When the trapeze act was finished mum left the trailer and the three lads and mum, now wearing red jackets with Circus Cristal on them, went among the crowd and collected €3 euros each (I guess kids were less) and issuing “tickets” as receipts.  Dad left the music running and went into the trailer and sold the popcorn. This was truly a family affair.

I loved it. In my romantic imagination I pictured this happy family wandering from place to place making a fairly good living from performing a variety show. No family feuds,  jealousies or tantrums… just harmony.

Dreams hey?

 

A Sample from Volume 2

Here is  a Tales From the Wagon Article from Opus Vol 2 first published in October 1988. It is “warts and all”… We have resisted the temptation of correcting all the typos and spelling mistakes… It is here in the original form except for the column layout which I haven’t learnt how to do yet!!!

Enjoyed  it?

Well you can buy the whole Volume 2 with a couple of clicks of your mouse…

 

 

Yes, a subtle change of title, designed to allow the author more leeway. The fact that the Wagon has been sold and therefore the tales from it have dried up had something to do with it.

At the end of July, as regular readers will know, I did a five minute spot for New Faces 88. (For our overseas readers this is a national TV talent show). By a combination of many things it seemed to go quite well. The panel must have been in a good mood, the audience was packed with supporters and the rehersals had been a pleasure thanks to the camaraderie of the competing acts.

The results for me seem to be far better than I ever dreamed and the show hasn’t even been screened yet.

On one of the rare, sunny days this summer I was on my front piece of grass, I’m not allowed to call it a lawn, in my shorts, when a red Mercedes pulled up and out got  The Agent complete with cigar.

I couldn’tbelieve my eyes. It was the manager of one of the acts that had appeared with me on the programme. (I was the only act not to have a manager or agent representing me at the recording). He wanted to have a chat, so on with a shirt and down to the local where, thanks to the friendship of the landlord and an item known locally as The Slate’, transactions can be made without the inconvenience of cash. (The shorts did’nt have any pockets.)

I was in a daze but slowly the message sank in. The Agent had liked what he had seen, not only of the ‘act’ but also the off stage behaviour, and would like to discuss the possibilty of ‘taking me on’. After years of ironing silks, packing pack-flat tricks into my box-table and going off to some distant village hall to do forty minutes for some agency that had never even met me, someone from the ‘other side’ of the business had shown an interest in me.

The first feeling was that of total gratitude, I wanted to givehim a hug, he could have any deal he wanted, 50% no make it 90%, I don’t care, I would have a manager and my problems of finding work were over. The phone would go once a month and the manager, or his secretary, would read out the places I would be going next month, Blazers, Lakeside, Las Vegas, Atlantic City, what’s more, the plane tickets were in the post!

Slowly my brain simmered down and reality fought its way back. For once I managed to stop talking and listen to what was being offered. Luckily there were one or two cards up my sleeve. I had spent a long time talking to the ‘act’ that this man managed, (it was in the middle of a six night a week, 26 week summer tour, it had just come back from Germany and was fully booked until March 1989. By contrast my diary looked like the snow covered slopes of the lower Alps),the Agent didn’t want to finalise anything until I had visited his office and seen his operation and perhaps for me the most significant ‘card’, I liked the guy.

To cut an unfinished story short, I went over to see the operation and while listening to all the phones ringing I asked myself, “Will this team get me more work than I’m getting now?” and duly agreed to the package on offer.

People have told me I’m mad and that I should have waited until the programme was shown after which much bigger fish than this guy would be offering me the moon, but I say an agent outside your front door is worth fifty on the other end of a silent telephone!

I’ll keep you in touch with developements if you are interested.

And, if you are wondering, of course I didn’t win.

 

You catch watch the performance mentioned above here

Message From The Opus Mobile Office…

It is late in the evening here in the Opus Mobile Office… it has been a very successful day for me, JJ, as I am pretty certain I have found a PDF editor that will do what we need to do to bring bits of the past back to life.

You will see in the Shop section that I have posted a sample article from Volume 2… one from the “Tales from The Wagon” series for you people to read. It is about one of the key moments of my magic life and I was able (somewhat embarrassingly) to include a video of the television show (New Faces of 88) referred to in the article… technology hey?

Then just now I picked a up a post in the Opus forum from our video guru Bob Hamilton who has discovered some long lost videos from the conventions Opus ran on the Isle of Man in the early 1990′s. This might lead to the publishing of some rare magical moments from those days.

I am excited!

 

After the excitement and passion that was EMC2011 came the effort to get this new Opus website up and running. This latter event took place as I was also touring Portugal in my motorhome having a bit of a holiday.

Chris (Art Department) had hurt his leg and on returning to the UK after the conference had to cancel a trip to the States as the hospital told him he couldn’t travel with it in the state it was.

He is using the time to tidy up the pdfs of the back issues of Opus… Vol 1 and 2 are available from our shop and the rest should follow soon.

EMC2011 was a superb event to be part of.

The venture is a very exciting and modern one. An international Magic Conference/Convention broadcast LIVE over the internet. The speakers covered many different aspects of our art. There were tricks, techniques, performances, history, theory, ideas on promotion and self improvement etc etc.

After each session, a play back  went up online so if you had missed it or wanted to watch it again you could. Indeed, you still can.

If you didn’t join for the live conference you can still sign up and see all the events, get all the special offers and receive a set of edited dvds when ready just as the others members will.

There were quite a few magicians from the UK and as well as being magicians some look as though they would do well as bailiffs, security men or close quarter protection experts… (see photo)

Here They Are…

Click here for the Opus Advert

 

 

Thanks to EMC2011 together with the input and resources of Bill Kalush and the Ask Alexander team, we can now offer you the opportunity of  buying the back issues of Opus Magazine in PDF form.

Click a few buttons and you will have Opus Magazine (often referred to as the cult magic publication of the late 80′s and 90′s) on your computer to enjoy.

Volume 1, edited by Ian Keable, contains news, views, reviews and routines by people such as The Great Soprendo (Geoffrey Durham), David Williamson, Wayne Dobson, David Britland and so on…

Cost of each Volume is £14.99

Volume 1

 

Volume 2, now edited by JJ builds on the success of the first volume and has high quality contributions from stars of magic from all around the world.

Enjoy the enigmatic illustrations and lay outs of star close-upper and artist Chris Power and giggle at some of the gossip of the era.

Each volume has 12 issues and costs £14.99

 

Volume 2 

 

Volume 3.  Here is the third in the collection…

I was told to write some copy to encourage you to buy it… what can I say?

The 12 issues are packed with news (of the day) reviews of conventions, including Magic Hands in Germany, Ron McMillan’s International Covention in London,  Tony Andruzzi’s Invocational (1989)  and the History Conference.

Tricks and moves by magicians like Aldo Columbini, Antony McDaniels, Vanni Bossi. Articles and comments by magic thinkers like Max Maven, Richard Kaufman and David Britland plus of course book reviews, gossip and the odd bit of scandal.

In short… it is packed with stuff for the enthusiastic magician who is serious about the art… all for £14.99

Volume 3 

 

 

Volume Four… here for your enjoyment…

In short… it is packed with MORE stuff for the enthusiastic magician who loves the art… £14.99

 Volume 4 

 

 

Volume Five… as above (more details when I get some more reading done… there is so much in these issues!) The same price… £14.99

Volume 5 

 

 

Check the main site for the Opus Story if you want more information.

The Time Gets Closer and Closer…

The Sun Rises on the Opus Publishing Empire as it falls on Mr Murdoch’s…

 

It is very near the time when we will be offering back volumes of Opus magazine for sale on this site.

After offering complete volumes (and if there is any interest of course) there are plans a foot to offer other stuff too…

If anyone out there has (printable) suggestions of content we would delighted if you were to post it on the Opus Forum.

The members of EMC2011 will soon have their free version of Volume 1 and maybe will start visiting the Opus site too…

Any of the above reading this now are very welcome…

Shop Being Refitted…

Opus will have a shop very soon where you can BUY stuff…

Please watch this space…

 

Soon I will Have To Wean Myself Off This Blog…

I will have to move into our website proper soon… But we will keep this “blog” active too until all the content has been transferred…

Last night’s EMC2011 Opus talk went ok, the trouble is when some jokes went down better than expected we wandered “off piste” a bit and it got a bit messy… even after Chris and I had spent more time rehearsing this talk than anything we had before…
As it was last year the conference is superb on many different levels… so many interesting people with a real passion for magic… it is excellent…