Help us get to over 8,755 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

Jack Gwynne: Difference between revisions

From Magicpedia, the free online encyclopedia for magicians by magicians.
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 93: Line 93:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Gwynne,Jack}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gwynne,Jack}}
[[Category:Featured Article Candidate]]

Revision as of 09:13, 1 November 2014

Jack Gwynne

Cover of Genii (1941)
BornJoseph McCloud Gwynne
April 12, 1895
Braddock,Pennsylvania
DiedDecember 7, 1969 (age 74)
Oak Lawn, Illinois
Resting placeLakeside Cemetery, Colon, Michigan

Jack Gwynne (April 12, 1895 - December 7, 1969) performed in vaudeville and nightclubs throughout the United States, often billing himself as "Gwynne the Magician, the Aristocrat of Deception"

Jack Gwynne and his royal family of magic.

He was also a creator of original magic effects.

Early life

Born Joseph McCloud Gwynne in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Gwynne was inspired to become a magician after seeing a performance by Harry Kellar and Howard Thurston in 1908. With little money to procure magic props from professional outlets, Gwynne began designing and building his own tricks and illusions.

He married Anne Apel (1896-1979) in 1915 and had two children; Margaret (Peggy) Gwynne (1916-1973) and Virden “Buddy” Gwynne (1917-1978).

During the 1910s and early 1920s, Gwynne was employed by the Edgar Thompson Steel Mill (Carnegie Steel) in Pittsburgh during the day and performed and built magic at night. In 1925, after seeing a performance by Gwynne at Kaufman’s Department Store in Pittsburgh, legendary magician Harry Houdini hired Jack to build several props for the Houdini show. These included an original “Disappearing Chicken” trick that was featured by Houdini until his death in October, 1926. Gwynne also built props for the Howard Thurston show and other contemporary performers. Later creations included the "Flip Over Dove Vanish" box and "Flying Carpet" levitation effect.

Vaudeville

Following an appearance (arranged by his friend, Jean Foley) at the 1927 International Brotherhood of Magicians convention in Kenton, Ohio, Gwynne took his act to New York in attempt to find work in vaudeville. After a show for booking agents at the Franklin Theater, Gwynne was offered a contract with RKO (Radio-Keith-Orpheum), the largest chain of vaudeville theaters in the U.S., for 50 weeks, beginning in September, 1927. From that point, Gwynne’s career took off with performances from coast to coast for the next eight years. In New York he was featured at the Palace Theater (considered the top vaudeville theater in the nation), along with The Roxy, Loew’s State, and Radio City Music Hall. Gwynne’s act was known for its speed, precision timing and baffling, original magic. Trademark routines included the appearance of a tall stack of seven glass goldfish bowls (filled with water and live goldfish), the Disappearing Chicken and his original Temple of Benares (sword box) illusion. Utilizing his wife, son, daughter and nephew, Roger Apel, in the act, the Gwynnes became known as “The Royal Family of Magic.”

Floor Shows

As American vaudeville declined in the mid-1930s, Gwynne adapted his stage act to perform in the then-new venue of floor shows. Floorshows were small entertainment revues, featuring several live acts, that performed on the dance floors of night clubs and hotels during the flourishing post-Prohibition, big band era. Gwynne was the first illusionist to adapt to this new medium. It was unusual because many thought that magicians needed a stage and curtains to hide the workings of their tricks. Gwynne could perform his act with the audience entirely surrounding him, which heightened the mystery. As he had in vaudeville, Gwynne became one of the most popular performers in nightclubs during their heyday before World War II. Motion Pictures

While performing in nightclubs in California in 1940, Gwynne and his family settled in Hollywood. Gwynne was cast in several motion pictures by Universal Studios, including, Dark Streets of Cairo (1940); Bagdad Daddy (Knight In A Harem) (1941); Model Wife (1941); Three Hits and a Miss (1941); and Hello, Sucker (1941). A friend of director and magician, Orson Welles, Gwynne is also credited with a brief appearance (as the “man on the roof”) in Welles’ epic, Citizen Kane (RKO, 1941). In several of his film appearances, Gwynne performed some of his original magic routines.

USO

With America’s entry into World War II, Gwynne joined the United Service Organization (USO). In 1943, as part of USO unit #289, Gwynne made a tour of stateside army bases and hospitals, entertaining the troops. In 1944, Jack and Anne Gwynne embarked on a year-long tour for the USO, through remote parts of North Africa, Italy, Iran, India, Burma and China, presenting hundreds of shows for soldiers on the front lines of combat. Upon their return to the United States in July 1945, the Gwynnes had logged some 30,000 miles of travel for the USO. Their son, Buddy was a decorated glider pilot during the war in Europe and also performed a private magic show for U.S. Army General, Mark Wayne Clark and his staff. Postwar Years and Television

Following the war, the Gwynne family settled in the Chicago suburb of Oak Lawn, Illinois. With the help of his son, Buddy and son-in–law, Frank Cole II (also a magician), Gwynne built a large magic show that toured theaters and civic auditoriums throughout the United States from 1946 to 1960.

As television burst upon the scene, Gwynne was the first illusionist to be featured in a series, with 28 appearances (between 1952-1955) on the ABC network show, Super Circus. Gwynne was also featured in print and broadcast advertising for Zenith television.

Final Years

Gwynne continued to find work with his magic during an era when many other magicians were struggling to make ends meet. In the early 1960s he was featured in several Shrine Circus productions around the United States. Making his entrance atop an elephant, he performed his magic in the center ring, surrounded by the audience. He appeared in the inspirational film, Parable that was featured at the Protestant Pavilion at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. That same year, Gwynne headlined the annual production of “It’s Magic” at the Wilshire Ebell Theater in Los Angeles.

By the late 1960s, Gwynne had been performing for over 50 years. Realizing there was a new generation who had not been exposed to live entertainment, he developed an educational magic program that was featured in Chicago schools. Death

Jack Gwynne died of a heart attack at age 74 on Sunday, December 7, 1969 at his home in Oak Lawn, Illinois. The previous Friday he had performed four magic shows at Chicago area schools. His wife, Anne, survived him by 10 years, making annual appearances at the Abbott’s Magic Get-Together in Colon, Michigan, where she presented the “Jack Gwynne Excellence In Magic Award” each year to the outstanding magician at the gathering. The award is still presented by surviving members of the Gwynne family.

Contributions

  • Temple of An-Gee (also known as Temple of Benares)
  • Flip-Over Dove Vanish Box
  • Gwynne Rabbit Vanish Box
  • Atomic Dove Vanish (for Owen Magic)
  • Flying Carpet (for U.F. Grant)
  • 6 Foot Guillotine (for U.F. Grant)
  • "Spee-Dee" Rabbit Production (see: Tarbell Course in Magic, Volume 3)

Books

Jack Gwynne:The Man, His Mind and His Royal Family of Magic by David Charvet (1986)

References

Wikipedia-logo.png This page incorporated content from Jack Gwynne,

a page hosted on Wikipedia. Please consult the history of the original page to see a list of its authors. Therefor, this article is also available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

  • Who's Who in Magic, Sphinx, August, 1932
  • Cover Genii 1941 February
  • Cover Genii 1950 October
  • M-U-M, Vol. 43, No. 5, October 1953, Jack Gwynne, magician-of-the-month, by Leslie P. Guest, page 187
  • Cover Genii 1962 February
  • The Linking Ring, Vol. 46, No. 3, March 1966, The Royal Family of Magic, by Frances Marshall, page 23
  • Cover Genii 1968 April
  • Chicago Sun-Times, Dec 10, 1969
  • Goodliffe's Abracadabra, Vol. 49, No. 1252, January 1970, The Last of the Great Showmen, by Frances Marshall, page 49
  • The Linking Ring, Vol. 50, No. 1, January 1970, Broken Wands, Jack M. Gwynne, page 97
  • The New Tops, Vol. 10, No. 2, February 1970, The Last of the Great Showmen, by Frances Marshall, page 20, An Appreciative Salute to a Departed Friend, by Clarke C. Crandall, page 38
  • The New Tops, Vol. 19, No. 10, October 1979, Final Curtain, Anne Gwynne, page 21
  • The Linking Ring, Vol. 81, No. 5, May 2001, Pictures from the Past, page 44, Answers to Pictures from the Past, The Jack Gwynne family…, page 128
  • The Linking Ring, Vol. 90, No. 2, February 2010, Recollections of Jack Gwynne, by Don Wilberg, pages 58-64
  • Bio-bibliographisches Lexikon der Zauberkünstler Edition Volker Huber, April 2002, Gwynne, Joseph McCloud “Jack” USA Zauberkünstler (*12.04.1895 Braddock, Pennsylvania; †07.12.1969), pages 141
  • Internet Movie Database - "Jack Gwynne."