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Wild Card: Difference between revisions

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* Duvivier’s ''Printing''. In french L'''Imprimerie'', described in 1977 in Cartomagie 2006, then marketed.
* Duvivier’s ''Printing''. In french L'''Imprimerie'', described in 1977 in Cartomagie 2006, then marketed.
* [[Larry West]]'s ''Wild Wild West''. (Shows up in Linking Ring articles by 1977).
* [[Larry West]]'s ''Wild Wild West''. (Shows up in Linking Ring articles by 1977).
* Impromptu Wild Card by Jonathan Townsend,in Apocalypse, Vol. 5, no. 2, Feb. 1982, page 595.
* Impromptu Wild Card by [[Jonathan Townsend]],in Apocalypse, Vol. 5, no. 2, Feb. 1982, page 595.
* "Wild Jokers" by [[Dan Fleshman]] in [[The Excellence of Dan Fleshman]] by [[John Mendoza]] (1983).
* "Wild Jokers" by [[Dan Fleschman]] in [[The Excellence of Dan Fleschman]] by [[John Mendoza]] (1983).
* Really Wild Jokers by Peter Marshall in Apocalypse, Vol. 6, no. 8, August 1983, page 805.
* Really Wild Jokers by Peter Marshall in Apocalypse, Vol. 6, no. 8, August 1983, page 805.
* Two Bit Wild Card  by [[Daryl Martinez]] in Richard's Almanac, No. 19, March 1984.  
* Two Bit Wild Card  by [[Daryl Martinez]] in Richard's Almanac, No. 19, March 1984.  

Revision as of 03:27, 17 May 2011

Wild Card is a packet trick card routine. Eight cards of the same value are placed on the table, some face up and some face down. The magician then introduces the "wild card", which is different than the other eight. As the magician flips each card with the wild card, they change to the same value as the wild card.

History

The Wild Card concept began with Hofzinser's Everywhere and Nowhere ca.1857 in which he transforms a row of cards into duplicates of the chosen card using double-ended and duplicate cards.

The next step took place when Brother John Hamman published Mystic Nine in The Card Magic of Bro. John Hamman S.M. (1958) written by Paul LePaul. It used ten ungaffed cards.

Peter Kane published a new version which uses double-faced cards as Watch The Ace in Hugard's Magic Monthly (April 1962).

Bill Simon read the Kane effect and showed it to Lou Tannen one day at Tannen's Magic Shop shortly after it appeared. Lou asked Frank Garcia to work out a handling of the effect so Tannen could place it on the market--and this is how "Wild Card" was born. The Garcia handling is very different from Peter Kane's. Had Lou Tannen put "Based on Peter Kane's 'Watch the Ace'" on the instruction sheet, Garcia would have received the credit he deserved for his superior variation. Instead, the Garcia marketed handling carried no credit and Garcia was accused of stealing Peter Kane's trick. In fact, Garcia used only Kane's idea of doing the routine with double-faced cards.

Variations and publications

References