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Meir Yedid is a magician and author. He won the [[Society of American Magicians]] 1981 Close-Up Magic Championship with his famous finger routine.  
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| birth_year                = 1960
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| birth_place              = Tel Aviv, Israel
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'''Meir Yedid''' (b. 1960) is a magician and author. He won the [[Society of American Magicians]] 1981 Close-Up Magic Championship with his now-famous (then ground-breaking) finger routine in which he apparently made his fingers vanish one by one. The methods behind these vanishes were subsequently revealed in the book [[Meir Yedid's Finger Fantasies]], written by [[Harry Lorayne]].
  
In 1986, a car accident severed a third of his right hand, the hand used for the routine. After nine micro-surgeries and a year and a half of extensive therapy, Meir was able to continues to amaze audiences. He again claimed the S.A.M. Close-Up Magic Championship, in 1988, although this time performing his trademark finger routine with his left hand. This made Meir the first person to win the award more than once. He also received a special originality medal for his creative contributions to the art of magic.
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== Biography ==
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In 1986, a car accident severed a third of his right hand, the hand used for that routine. After nine micro-surgeries and a year-and-a-half of extensive therapy, Meir was able to continue amazing audiences. He again claimed the S.A.M. Close-Up Magic Championship in 1988, this time performing his trademark finger routine with his left hand. This made Meir the first person to win the award more than once. He also received a special originality medal for his creative contributions to the art of magic.{{Youtube Thumb|q-USR2IJ_7U}}
  
Currently Meir resides in Fair Lawn, N.J., and operates [[Meir Yedid Magic]]. He consults with toy manufacturers, performs for corporate clients in a private setting or in trade show venues and devises original magic.
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Currently Meir resides in Fair Lawn, N.J., and operates [[Meir Yedid Magic]]. He consults with toy manufacturers, performs for corporate clients in private settings or in trade show venues, and devises original magic. To date, seven books of his original magic have been published, the last (or latest) in 1994 - [[Magical Wishes]]. In the early 1980s, he also wrote a column called '''New Wave Thaumatology''' for [[The Magic Manuscript]], and used the same name for a series of marketed effects.
  
In 1997 Meir was voted as The Magician of the Year by the Society of American Magicians in New York City and in 2003 he was the Guest Of Honor at the prestigious [[Fechter's Finger Flicking Frolic]] Convention
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In 1997 Meir was voted Magician of the Year by the [[Society of American Magicians]] in New York City, and in 2003 he was the Guest Of Honor at the prestigious [[Fechter's Finger Flicking Frolic]] Convention.<ref>http://www.meiryedid.com/</ref>
  
 
== Television appearances ==
 
== Television appearances ==
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* Mind Over Matter (ACTV, U.S.A.)
 
* Mind Over Matter (ACTV, U.S.A.)
  
== External Links ==
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== Books on Meir Yedid's Magic==
* http://www.meiryedid.com/
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{{Youtube Thumb|O0DR4H_3gvg}}{{Youtube Thumb|EiwHaHEcxhU}}
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* 1981 [[Meir Yedid's Finger Fantasies]] (written by [[Harry Lorayne]])
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* 1982 [[Incredible Close-Up Magic]] (written by [[Gary Ouellet]])
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* 1982 [[Close-Up Hallucinations]] (written by [[George Schindler]])
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* 1983 [[Off the Wall]] (lectures notes)
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* 1986 [[Stage Stuff]] (written by [[Steven Schneiderman]])
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* 1987 [[Card Animations]] (written by [[Harry Lorayne]])
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* 1993 [[Memorable Magic]] (lecture notes)
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* 1994 [[Magical Wishes]] (written by [[Stephen Hobbs]])
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== Marketed Tricks ==
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*1981: Mirror Miracle
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*1981: Twist and Shout
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*198?: Hot Doggie
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*1983: Sunny Side Up
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*1983: Card Marx (with [[Steve Schneiderman]])
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*1993: Cardinal Cards
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*2003: Fadeout
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== Meir Yedid on DVD ==
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*1989 [[Live From London]]
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*1997 [[Finger Fantasies]]
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*2003 [[Published & Unpublished]]
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== Meir Yedid in [[Genii]] ==
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* [[Genii 2008 January]] • Radical Hold'em
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{{References}}
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[[Category:Biographies]]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Yedid,Meir}}

Revision as of 17:40, 10 February 2014

Meir Yedid
Born1960
Tel Aviv, Israel

Meir Yedid (b. 1960) is a magician and author. He won the Society of American Magicians 1981 Close-Up Magic Championship with his now-famous (then ground-breaking) finger routine in which he apparently made his fingers vanish one by one. The methods behind these vanishes were subsequently revealed in the book Meir Yedid's Finger Fantasies, written by Harry Lorayne.

Biography

In 1986, a car accident severed a third of his right hand, the hand used for that routine. After nine micro-surgeries and a year-and-a-half of extensive therapy, Meir was able to continue amazing audiences. He again claimed the S.A.M. Close-Up Magic Championship in 1988, this time performing his trademark finger routine with his left hand. This made Meir the first person to win the award more than once. He also received a special originality medal for his creative contributions to the art of magic.

Currently Meir resides in Fair Lawn, N.J., and operates Meir Yedid Magic. He consults with toy manufacturers, performs for corporate clients in private settings or in trade show venues, and devises original magic. To date, seven books of his original magic have been published, the last (or latest) in 1994 - Magical Wishes. In the early 1980s, he also wrote a column called New Wave Thaumatology for The Magic Manuscript, and used the same name for a series of marketed effects.

In 1997 Meir was voted Magician of the Year by the Society of American Magicians in New York City, and in 2003 he was the Guest Of Honor at the prestigious Fechter's Finger Flicking Frolic Convention.[1]

Television appearances

  • Comedy Tonight (FOX-TV, U.S.A.)
  • Paul Daniels Show (BBC-TV, Great Britain)
  • Naruhodo the World (FUJI-TV, Japan)
  • Luna de Verano (CSTV, Spain)
  • Knoff Hoff Show (ZDFTV, Germany)
  • Mind Over Matter (ACTV, U.S.A.)

Books on Meir Yedid's Magic

Marketed Tricks

  • 1981: Mirror Miracle
  • 1981: Twist and Shout
  • 198?: Hot Doggie
  • 1983: Sunny Side Up
  • 1983: Card Marx (with Steve Schneiderman)
  • 1993: Cardinal Cards
  • 2003: Fadeout

Meir Yedid on DVD

Meir Yedid in Genii

References

  1. http://www.meiryedid.com/