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[[File: JohnnyAcePalmer.png|right|thumb|200px|[[ Johnny Ace Palmer]]]]
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[[File: Oudini1.png|right|thumb|200px|[[ Oudini]]]]
'''Johnny Ace Palmer''' (b. 1960) is an award-winning American close-up magician.  
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'''Oudini''' (1885-?) was the stage name of Francis "Frank" Joseph Rowan, an escape artist and obvious [[Houdini]] imitator based on the name, during the early 1900s in the Boston area.  
  
== Biography ==
 
  
Palmer was born in Warren, Ohio, in the early 1960s and attended Kent State University in Ohio in the late 1970s and early '80s. He came to magic early in life, and as a teenager, performed a stage act with his sister. In college, he majored in both theater arts and psychology.
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== Biography ==
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Oudini wrote a book called The Great Mysteries in 1909 in which he exposed his escapes and included many photos and press clippings of his performances. On the reverse side of the title page with the copyright date are the names "by Frank J. Rowan and E. T. Stewart".  
  
Throughout the 1980s, Palmer entered and competed in a large number of American magic competitions, culminating in his first-place wins at the annual convention of the [[International Brotherhood of Magicians]] and the annual convention of the [[Society of American Magicians]].
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Some thought that [[Robert Doidge]] might have been "Oudini" because he had at one time so many copies available to sell.
  
Then he set his sights on international goals, entering [[FISM]], in 1988. He presented a 10-minute act that was one of the first competition acts to utilize stage techniques in a closeup setting. One routine for which he became known was a version of the [[Cups & Balls]] in which the final load is three live baby chicks.
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John Henry Grossman wrote in his MUM "Ask the Doctor" column that [[Walter B. Gibson]] informed him that Doidge told him that it was Frank J. Rowan, who lived near Haverhill, Massachusetts (where many of the press clippings from the book came from).  
  
[[Johnny Ace Palmer|Read more about Johnny Ace Palmer…]]
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[[Oudini |Read more about Oudini …]]

Latest revision as of 17:15, 19 May 2024

Previous featured articles are located in Category:Featured Article

Proposed candidates are listed in Category:Featured Article Candidate

Oudini (1885-?) was the stage name of Francis "Frank" Joseph Rowan, an escape artist and obvious Houdini imitator based on the name, during the early 1900s in the Boston area.


Biography

Oudini wrote a book called The Great Mysteries in 1909 in which he exposed his escapes and included many photos and press clippings of his performances. On the reverse side of the title page with the copyright date are the names "by Frank J. Rowan and E. T. Stewart".

Some thought that Robert Doidge might have been "Oudini" because he had at one time so many copies available to sell.

John Henry Grossman wrote in his MUM "Ask the Doctor" column that Walter B. Gibson informed him that Doidge told him that it was Frank J. Rowan, who lived near Haverhill, Massachusetts (where many of the press clippings from the book came from).

Read more about Oudini …