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To propose a new feature article for the main page, '''make a suggestion''' on the [[MagicPedia_talk:Today%27s_featured_article|discussion page]].
Previous featured articles are located in [[:Category:Featured Article]]


Proposed candidates are listed in [[:Category:Featured Article Candidate]]
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[[Magic of Japan]] video compliations by Charles Hsu
{{Youtube Thumb|tks9xf13Pqs}}
Clicking on the above link will bring you to a compilation video containing effects from Japanese magicians, as performed by five different performers:
*'''Name of Effect/Creator/Performer/where published'''
#Metamorph-Rose/Kazuyuki Hase/Steven Wu /New Magic of Japan by Kaufman
#Human Cannonball/Tomohiro Maeda/Evan Shuster / Genii Magazine Volume 83 Number 5 (May 15, 2000)
#Band On The Run/Hiroyuki Sakai/Aloysius Adrian /Trap Door Magazine by Steve Beam
#Gemini Card System/Tomoyuki Shimomura/Charles Hsu
#Coin Box Routine/Shigeo Futagawa/Shaun Robison
[[Magic of Japan|Click for more...]]


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[[File: RichardPotter.png|right|thumb|200px|[[ Richard Potter]]]]
 
'''Richard Potter''' (b.1783-d.1835) is credited as the first successful stage magician born in the United States and as the first black magician.
 
== Biography ==
Reportedly, Potter was the son of an English baronet, Charles Henry Frankland, and an African American woman (some say "slave"). Frankland, however, died years before Potter was born.  Church records from Hopkinton, MA, list his father as George Simpson.  His mother's name was Dinah, who was a slave on the Frankland estate.  Potter went to England around 1798.  There is no record of his actual education.  He returned to the United States around 1801, probably with [[John Rannie]], a professional magician whom he started out working for as an assistant in 1802.
 
One of the earliest records of Potter advertising a show was in Boston, November 2nd, 1811 at the Columbian Museum.  He advertised his show as, "An Evening's Brush to Sweep Away Care, or a Medley to Please."
 
[[Richard Potter|Read more about Richard Potter…]]

Latest revision as of 17:27, 1 November 2024

Previous featured articles are located in Category:Featured Article

Proposed candidates are listed in Category:Featured Article Candidate


Richard Potter (b.1783-d.1835) is credited as the first successful stage magician born in the United States and as the first black magician.

Biography

Reportedly, Potter was the son of an English baronet, Charles Henry Frankland, and an African American woman (some say "slave"). Frankland, however, died years before Potter was born. Church records from Hopkinton, MA, list his father as George Simpson. His mother's name was Dinah, who was a slave on the Frankland estate. Potter went to England around 1798. There is no record of his actual education. He returned to the United States around 1801, probably with John Rannie, a professional magician whom he started out working for as an assistant in 1802.

One of the earliest records of Potter advertising a show was in Boston, November 2nd, 1811 at the Columbian Museum. He advertised his show as, "An Evening's Brush to Sweep Away Care, or a Medley to Please."

Read more about Richard Potter…