Help us get to over 8,749 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 "Max Holden"
(New page: Max Holden (August 20, 1884 - July 3, 1949) was born William Holden Maxwell in Boston. He spent much of his time as a boy traveling between New England and Scotland, accompanying his ...) |
m |
||
(18 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | + | '''Max Holden''' (August 20, 1884 - July 3, 1949) was born William Holden Maxwell in Glasgow, Scotland (although some references claim Boston). He spent much of his time as a boy traveling between New England and Scotland, accompanying his parents on junkets. He began as assistant to [[David Devant]] in 1901. | |
+ | {{Infobox person | ||
+ | | image = | ||
+ | | image_size = | ||
+ | | alt = | ||
+ | | caption = | ||
+ | | birth_name = William Holden Maxwell | ||
+ | | birth_day = August 20, | ||
+ | | birth_year = 1884 | ||
+ | | birth_place = Glasgow, Scotland | ||
+ | | death_day = July 03, | ||
+ | | death_year = 1949 | ||
+ | | death_place = | ||
+ | | resting_place = | ||
+ | | resting_place_coordinates = | ||
+ | | nationality = | ||
+ | | known_for = | ||
+ | | notable works = | ||
+ | | flourished = | ||
+ | | awards = | ||
+ | | box_width = | ||
+ | | misc = | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | He enjoyed success in England before coming back to the United States to work in [[Vaudeville]]. He worked with wife as the team "Holden & Graham". His major act was a colored-light [[Shadowgraphy]]<ref>THE ART OF SHADOWGRAPH on [http://www.quick-change-artistry.com/shadowgraphy.html Quick Change Artistry]</ref> | ||
− | He | + | He also worked with Vivian Le Clair around 1910 in Massachusetts (their photo can be seen in the [[Conjuring Arts]]' exhibit "The Many Faces of Magic"<ref>http://conjuringarts.org/exhibitions/the-many-faces-of-magic/holden-and-le-clair/</ref> |
− | + | In 1914 Mr. Holden invented and patented a colored smoke picture trick called shadowgraphs, with which he toured Europe, Africa, Australia, the Par East and | |
+ | the United States as a headliner. | ||
− | He wrote a column which ran for several years in the [[Sphinx]] titled "Trouping Around In Magic". | + | Holden spent his later life as a magic dealer, opening [[Max Holden Magic Shop]] in New York city (with branches in Boston and Philadelphia). He opened his first store in 1929 with support from [[Lewis Davenport]]. |
+ | |||
+ | He was a member of the London Inner Magic Circle, the [[Society of American Magicians]], the [[International Brotherhood of Magicians]] and the [[Magician's Guild ]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Holden wrote a column which ran for several years in the [[Sphinx]] titled "Trouping Around In Magic". | ||
+ | |||
+ | Holden created the very popular [[Cross Cut Force]]. He also secretly helped Camel cigarettes with their series of magazine ads that explained magic tricks in 1933 under the tag line "It's Fun to Be Fooled, but It's More Fun to Know". It caused quite a scandal in the magic community, but no one found out Holden's involvement until after his death.<ref>[[Knack Magic Tricks]] by Richard Kaufman, page 29</ref><ref>Cover [[Genii 1948 December]]</ref><ref> | ||
+ | Obituary [[Bat]] No. 68, August 1949, page 529</ref><ref>Obituary [[Genii 1949 August]]</ref> | ||
== Books == | == Books == | ||
− | *Programmes of Famous Magicians | + | *[[Programmes of Famous Magicians]] (1937) |
− | *Manual of Juggling | + | *[[Manual of Juggling]] (1947) |
+ | |||
+ | == References == | ||
+ | <references /> | ||
+ | |||
− | [[Category:Biographies | + | {{Wikipedia|Max_Holden_(magic)}} |
+ | [[Category:Biographies]] | ||
+ | {{DEFAULTSORT:Holden}} |
Revision as of 11:56, 22 July 2012
Max Holden (August 20, 1884 - July 3, 1949) was born William Holden Maxwell in Glasgow, Scotland (although some references claim Boston). He spent much of his time as a boy traveling between New England and Scotland, accompanying his parents on junkets. He began as assistant to David Devant in 1901.
Max Holden | |
Born | William Holden Maxwell August 20, 1884 Glasgow, Scotland |
---|---|
Died | July 03, 1949 (age 64) |
Categories | Books by Max Holden |
He enjoyed success in England before coming back to the United States to work in Vaudeville. He worked with wife as the team "Holden & Graham". His major act was a colored-light Shadowgraphy[1]
He also worked with Vivian Le Clair around 1910 in Massachusetts (their photo can be seen in the Conjuring Arts' exhibit "The Many Faces of Magic"[2]
In 1914 Mr. Holden invented and patented a colored smoke picture trick called shadowgraphs, with which he toured Europe, Africa, Australia, the Par East and the United States as a headliner.
Holden spent his later life as a magic dealer, opening Max Holden Magic Shop in New York city (with branches in Boston and Philadelphia). He opened his first store in 1929 with support from Lewis Davenport.
He was a member of the London Inner Magic Circle, the Society of American Magicians, the International Brotherhood of Magicians and the Magician's Guild .
Holden wrote a column which ran for several years in the Sphinx titled "Trouping Around In Magic".
Holden created the very popular Cross Cut Force. He also secretly helped Camel cigarettes with their series of magazine ads that explained magic tricks in 1933 under the tag line "It's Fun to Be Fooled, but It's More Fun to Know". It caused quite a scandal in the magic community, but no one found out Holden's involvement until after his death.[3][4][5][6]
Books
- Programmes of Famous Magicians (1937)
- Manual of Juggling (1947)
References
- ↑ THE ART OF SHADOWGRAPH on Quick Change Artistry
- ↑ http://conjuringarts.org/exhibitions/the-many-faces-of-magic/holden-and-le-clair/
- ↑ Knack Magic Tricks by Richard Kaufman, page 29
- ↑ Cover Genii 1948 December
- ↑ Obituary Bat No. 68, August 1949, page 529
- ↑ Obituary Genii 1949 August
This page incorporated content from Max_Holden_(magic),
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 |