Help us get to over 8,750 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
Difference between revisions of "Artist's Dream"
(Created page with "'''Artist's Dream''' is a stage illusion in which a woman steps out of a picture that was painted by the magician. It was created by David Devant, based on his first stag...") |
m |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
After Devant's death, the illusion was purchased and revived in a modified form by [[Cecil Lyle]].<ref>Encylopedic Dictionary of Magic by Bart Whaley </ref> | After Devant's death, the illusion was purchased and revived in a modified form by [[Cecil Lyle]].<ref>Encylopedic Dictionary of Magic by Bart Whaley </ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The [[Thayer Magic Company]] produced a version in the 1940s. | ||
== References == | == References == |
Latest revision as of 16:22, 21 April 2012
Artist's Dream is a stage illusion in which a woman steps out of a picture that was painted by the magician.
It was created by David Devant, based on his first stage illusion called "Vice Versa" in which a man is magically turned into a woman. J.N. Maskelyne asked Devant to work out an illusion for a production at the Egyptian Hall and he came up with the Artist's Dream.[1] Maskelyne chose to present it as a dramatic sketch and it was scripted by Mel. B. Spurr. It premiered on September 4, 1893 with Devant as the artist and his wife, Miss Marion Melville, as the dream-picture.
Alexander Herrmann would develop his own version and performed it in 1895 in the United States.
After Devant's death, the illusion was purchased and revived in a modified form by Cecil Lyle.[2]
The Thayer Magic Company produced a version in the 1940s.