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Eddie Abbott: Difference between revisions
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Eddie Abbott was born in Millville, NJ, in 1882, the son of Harmon J. Abbott and Mary Brannon Abbot. His father taught him magic, and young Eddie toured the USA and Canada from the age of six. He appeared in major vaudeville halls, including Tony Pastor's in New York and Keith's Bijou in Philadelphia. He was billed as "The Wonder of the Nineteenth Century" and "The Only Boy Magician." According to [[H. J. Burlingame|Hardin J. Burlingame]] "He well deserves the warm words of praise the press has bestowed on him. He treads the stage like a veteran, and performs remarkable tricks in magic with the greatest ease and with the most captivating ''sangfroid''".<ref>Burlingame, Hardin J. [[Leaves from Conjurers' Scrap Books]]. Donohue, Henneberry & Co., 1891, pages 35-36</ref> | Eddie Abbott was born in Millville, NJ, in 1882, the son of Harmon J. Abbott and Mary Brannon Abbot. His father taught him magic, and young Eddie toured the USA and Canada from the age of six. He appeared in major vaudeville halls, including Tony Pastor's in New York and Keith's Bijou in Philadelphia. He was billed as "The Wonder of the Nineteenth Century" and "The Only Boy Magician." According to [[H. J. Burlingame|Hardin J. Burlingame]] "He well deserves the warm words of praise the press has bestowed on him. He treads the stage like a veteran, and performs remarkable tricks in magic with the greatest ease and with the most captivating ''sangfroid''".<ref>Burlingame, Hardin J. [[Leaves from Conjurers' Scrap Books]]. Donohue, Henneberry & Co., 1891, pages 35-36</ref> | ||
As an adult he left show business and earned his living as an electrician. | |||
Revision as of 12:00, 9 October 2020
Eddie Abbott | |
Born | Edward Brannon Abbott August 2 1882 New Jersey |
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Died | November 23 1932 (age 50) |
Resting place | Atlantic City Cemetery |
Nationality | American |
Eddie Abbott, (1882-1932) "The Boy Wonder Magician," headlined in vaudeville from age six.
Biography
Eddie Abbott was born in Millville, NJ, in 1882, the son of Harmon J. Abbott and Mary Brannon Abbot. His father taught him magic, and young Eddie toured the USA and Canada from the age of six. He appeared in major vaudeville halls, including Tony Pastor's in New York and Keith's Bijou in Philadelphia. He was billed as "The Wonder of the Nineteenth Century" and "The Only Boy Magician." According to Hardin J. Burlingame "He well deserves the warm words of praise the press has bestowed on him. He treads the stage like a veteran, and performs remarkable tricks in magic with the greatest ease and with the most captivating sangfroid".[1]
As an adult he left show business and earned his living as an electrician.
References
- ↑ Burlingame, Hardin J. Leaves from Conjurers' Scrap Books. Donohue, Henneberry & Co., 1891, pages 35-36
- Find A Grave, Edward Brannon Abbott https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/69871544/edward-brannon-abbott
- Propelled Pasteboards, Friday, June 2nd, 2019 https://web.archive.org/web/20201009155336/https://throwingcards.blogspot.com/2019/06/master-eddie-abbott-wonder-of.html