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'''Frank Everhart Sr.''' (1921 - 2004) was a magic bartender that believed in making people smile<ref>Reflections on Frank Everhard by Max Howard, Magic, September 2001 </ref>.  
'''Frank Everhart Sr.''' (b.1921-d.2004) was a magic bartender that believed in making people smile<ref>Reflections on Frank Everhard by Max Howard, Magic, September 2001 </ref>.  


== Biography ==
== Biography ==

Latest revision as of 04:03, 10 September 2024

Frank Everhart, Sr.
BornSeptember 10, 1921
Alverton, Pennsylvania
DiedJuly 31, 2004 (age 82)
Alton, Illinois

Frank Everhart Sr. (b.1921-d.2004) was a magic bartender that believed in making people smile[1].

Biography

Learning to tend bar in San Diego, California at the El Cortez Hotel, he later moved to Chicago by 1949, working the Gay 90's Room of the Hotel LaSalle where Johnny Platt was the house magician. Frank's interest in magic began when he saw the great tips Platt was making compared to his from working behind the bar.

Platt taught magic and in 1953 Everhart went to work at the Ivanhoe (still in Chicago) where he stayed for 21 years.

Everhart also appeared on the Bozo Show in the 1950’s

In 1977, he moved to Memphis, Tennessee to become "Vice President of Fun" for his longtime corporate client Richards Manufacturing.

Everhart retired in 1986 and later moved to Illinois, near St. Louis and wrote a column called "Frankly Speaking" for John Fabjance's Legerdemain Magazine.

Everhart popularized "Chicago Opener" and the story-telling card trick "Sam the Bellhop".

His son, Frank Everhart, Jr., carried on the tradition of magic at the Schooner Wharf in Key West.[2]

References

  1. Reflections on Frank Everhard by Max Howard, Magic, September 2001
  2. http://www.frankeverhart.com/?page_id=20
  • Genii, Vol. 67, No. 9, September 2004, Genii Speaks, Obituary page 13
  • The Linking Ring, Vol. 84, No. 10, October 2004, Remembering Frank Everhart by Max Howard, page 59, Obituary FRANK A. EVERHART, page 140