Help us get to over 8,756 articles in 2024.

If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com

Jess Kelley: Difference between revisions

From Magicpedia, the free online encyclopedia for magicians by magicians.
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 22: Line 22:
| misc                      =  
| misc                      =  
}}
}}
'''Jess Kelley''' (1882-1948), a clever Boston magician, once showed the [[Nate Leipzig]] several coin moves that Leipzig later used in his act.<ref>Linking Ring, Mar 1948, page 79</ref>
'''Jess Kelley''' (1882-1948), a clever Boston magician, once showed   [[Nate Leipzig]] several coin moves that Leipzig later used in his act.<ref>Linking Ring, Mar 1948, page 79</ref>
 


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Line 44: Line 43:
{{References}}
{{References}}
* The Sphinx, Vol. 47, No. 1, March 1948, Jess Kelley Dies, page 19
* The Sphinx, Vol. 47, No. 1, March 1948, Jess Kelley Dies, page 19
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kelley,Jess}}

Latest revision as of 12:04, 19 March 2020

Jess Kelley
BornJustin Aloysius Kelley
May 27, 1882
Somerville, Massachusetts
DiedJanuary 29, 1948 (age 65)
Cambridge City Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Jess Kelley (1882-1948), a clever Boston magician, once showed Nate Leipzig several coin moves that Leipzig later used in his act.[1]

Biography

In 1910-11 he assisted professional magician Bill Baker in a vaudeville act billed as "Bill Baker and Jess".[2]

A comical card manipulator, he also began doing a magical clown act throughout New England in the 1920s.[3]

By 1927 he was working clown comedy with Silent Mora.[4]

Max Holden writes in his "TROUPING AROUND IN MAGIC" column for The Sphinx (January, 1928) that Kelley was working at the Jordan Marsh store in Boston doing clown magic and was one of the most talked of entertainers in Boston.

In the October, 1928 issue of The Sphinx, U.F. Grant in the column "NEWS FROM PITTSFIELD, MASS." said that Kelley "should be known as the man of 500 tricks and 1,000 stories."

Honors

  • Most original effect at the Boston Society of Magicians "Originality Night" 1924[5]

Bibliography

References

  1. Linking Ring, Mar 1948, page 79
  2. Linking Ring, March 1943
  3. Billboard, JUNE 21, 1924
  4. Sphinx, July 1927
  5. Sphinx, March 1924
  • The Sphinx, Vol. 47, No. 1, March 1948, Jess Kelley Dies, page 19