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Difference between revisions of "Chop Cup"

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A [[gaff]]ed cup with a built-in magnet in the base (or bottom), allowing the retention of magnetic balls or other [[load]]s.  Used alone or as part of a [[cups and balls]] set.
 
A [[gaff]]ed cup with a built-in magnet in the base (or bottom), allowing the retention of magnetic balls or other [[load]]s.  Used alone or as part of a [[cups and balls]] set.
  
Devised by [[Al Wheatley]], a professional magician who performed under the name [[Chop Chop]]. His original Chop Cup was made out of a section of hollow bamboo.
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It was devised by [[Al Wheatley]], a professional magician who performed under the name [[Chop Chop]]. His original Chop Cup, created in the mid 1950's,  was made out of a section of hollow bamboo and marketed as "Chop Chop's One Cup & Ball Routine. By 1957, Wheatley's company, Excato Magic, was advertising a modified aluminum Chop Cup in magic magazines.
  
The Chop Cup became a popular magician's tool in part due to the celebrity of [[Don Alan]], who made it a staple of his act.
 
  
A fine introduction to the Chop Cup is available at [http://magicref.tripod.com/magref/artchop.htm Doug Atkinson's Magic Reference Pages]
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The Chop Cup became a popular magician's tool in part due to the celebrity of [[Don Alan]], who made it a staple of his act. Don Alan performed his Chop Cup routine on the "Ed Sullivan Show" in 1960. 
  
Here are a number of fine routines with such a cup from [[John Mendoza]], [[Dan Tong]], and [[James Swain]]. These are performances only. The DVD on which they appear (along with many other performances and full explanations) can be purchased from L&L Publishing at [http://www.llpub.com]
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Wheatley saw [[Larry Jennings]] perform his chop cup routine at The [[Magic Castle]] shortly after it opened in 1963. It was noted for its loading of a big ball and the use of a silk handkerchief and a shot glass.  He was so impressed that he asked Jennings to please not reveal his method or routine in print until after his death. Larry kept his promise, and did not publish his routine until a year after Wheatley's death. It was published in [[Genii]] Magazine, Volume 29, Number 7, in March of 1965. [[Don Alan]] used a  version of the Chop Cup on his national TV show and popularized it with magicians everywhere.
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The trick has spawned many variations, leading to elaborate routines developed by Larry Jennings, Ron Wilson, Earl Nelson, Alan Wakeling, [[John Mendoza]], [[Dan Tong]], and [[James Swain]]. The Nelson and Wakeling routines eventually appeared in The Chop Cup Book (1979). Ron Wilson's Uncanny Chop Cup saw print in "The Uncanny Scot" (1987).
  
 
{{#ev:youtube|UqiVeZPf3HM}}
 
{{#ev:youtube|UqiVeZPf3HM}}
  
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== References ==
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*[http://magicref.tripod.com/magref/artchop.htm Doug Atkinson's Magic Reference Pages]
 
[[Category:Close Up Magic]] [[Category:Prop]]
 
[[Category:Close Up Magic]] [[Category:Prop]]

Revision as of 11:46, 19 May 2008

A gaffed cup with a built-in magnet in the base (or bottom), allowing the retention of magnetic balls or other loads. Used alone or as part of a cups and balls set.

It was devised by Al Wheatley, a professional magician who performed under the name Chop Chop. His original Chop Cup, created in the mid 1950's, was made out of a section of hollow bamboo and marketed as "Chop Chop's One Cup & Ball Routine. By 1957, Wheatley's company, Excato Magic, was advertising a modified aluminum Chop Cup in magic magazines.


The Chop Cup became a popular magician's tool in part due to the celebrity of Don Alan, who made it a staple of his act. Don Alan performed his Chop Cup routine on the "Ed Sullivan Show" in 1960.

Wheatley saw Larry Jennings perform his chop cup routine at The Magic Castle shortly after it opened in 1963. It was noted for its loading of a big ball and the use of a silk handkerchief and a shot glass. He was so impressed that he asked Jennings to please not reveal his method or routine in print until after his death. Larry kept his promise, and did not publish his routine until a year after Wheatley's death. It was published in Genii Magazine, Volume 29, Number 7, in March of 1965. Don Alan used a version of the Chop Cup on his national TV show and popularized it with magicians everywhere.

The trick has spawned many variations, leading to elaborate routines developed by Larry Jennings, Ron Wilson, Earl Nelson, Alan Wakeling, John Mendoza, Dan Tong, and James Swain. The Nelson and Wakeling routines eventually appeared in The Chop Cup Book (1979). Ron Wilson's Uncanny Chop Cup saw print in "The Uncanny Scot" (1987).

References