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Difference between revisions of "Ron Bauer"
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*Special Edition ''Basic Cups & Balls Technique'' (2004) | *Special Edition ''Basic Cups & Balls Technique'' (2004) | ||
*Special Edition ''The Complete Don Alan’s [[Chop Cup]]'' (2005) | *Special Edition ''The Complete Don Alan’s [[Chop Cup]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''The Ron Bauer 2008 Lecture: Notes from "THE Underground Legend'' (2008, revised edition 2009) | ||
== Published Tricks In == | == Published Tricks In == |
Revision as of 17:12, 27 December 2014
Ron Bauer | |
Born | Ronald Raymond Bauer 1938 Portland, Oregon |
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Categories | Books by Ron Bauer |
Ron Bauer (b. 1938) is a professional writer in the computer and video industries, and a semi-professional magician. He's the author of a series of 24 "annotated performance scripts" for magicians, called the Ron Bauer Private Studies Series.
Biography
In the fifties, Bauer was the first magician to appear on the first two television stations in Memphis, Tennessee. He also became the first full-time professional close-up magician in the Detroit area upon his arrival there in 1959. In 1968, he founded Mr. Trix Enterprises, a highly successful children's entertainment company based in the prestigious Detroit suburb of Birmingham, Michigan.
After almost a decade running Mr. Trix, Bauer turned his attention back to the video industry, and wrote, produced, and marketed the first training course in non-broadcast video production in the late seventies.
Bauer's work in the video industry landed him a deal with Sony in the early eights, and he headed to California. In 1983, he managed to persuade his friend Ed Marlo to venture out of Chicago and attend the Pacific Coast Association of Magicians' 51st annual magic convention in Santa Barbara, California, much to the delight of West Coast magicians, many of whom had never had a chance to see Marlo. The convention was a huge hit, with Marlo, Dai Vernon, Charlie Miller, and Jack McMillen all in attendance. A photograph of Vernon, Miller, Bauer, and Marlo posing on a sunny Santa Barbara beach appears in The Vernon Chronicles, Volume 2: More Lost Inner Secrets by Stephen Minch.
Several years later, Bauer wrote the first book for the public on Microsoft DOS, called Easy DOS It! (1986), which went on to become one of the best-selling computer books of the 1980s (It's also how Alex Elmsley learned DOS!).
In 1994, Bill Kalush held a private convention in New York City, inviting less than fifty of the top "workers" in the world. Although Bauer was invited, he was unable to attend, but sent a trick to be published in a book of material from the convention. When the book was published in 1997, the author Lance Pierce introduced the trick with this:
Ron Bauer is the underground legend. A strong creator of routines and effects, he is rarely seen by the cogniscenti and even lesser known among the majority of the fraternity. For those who know, though, Ron represents the type of artist many of us would aspire to be.[1]
He maintained longtime friendships with Milt Kort, Jack McMillen, Don Alan, Ed Marlo, Dai Vernon, Charlie Miller, "Senator" Clarke Crandall, Bruce Cervon, and many others.
The Ron Bauer Private Studies Series
This is a series of 24 annotated performance scripts written by Ron Bauer and illustrated by Sandra Kort. Originally published by John Luka Enterprises. Since late 1999, published by Sandra Kort at E-GADS (Electronic Graphic Art Design Studio).
- No. 1 Gadabout Coins Revisited (1998, revised edition 2000)
- No. 2 Sudden Death Gypsy Curse (1998, revised edition 2000)
- No. 3 Tony Chaudhuri's Feminine Side (1998, revised edition 2000) (Out of This World)
- No. 4 Butch, Ringo, and the Sheep (1998, revised edition 2002) (Thieves and Sheep)
- No. 5 Hornswoggled Again! (1998, revised edition 2001) (Bamboozle)
- No. 6 Owed to Poker Dan (1998, revised edition 2001)
- No. 7 Dixie! (1998, revised edition 2002) (Cups and Balls)
- No. 8 The Cursed Ring (1998, revised edition 2000) (Ring off Wand)
- No. 9 Fair and Sloppy (1998, revised edition 2002) (Slop Shuffle)
- No. 10 Charlie Miller's Left-Handed Hank (1999, revised edition 2001)
- No. 11 The Mechanical Deck (1999, revised edition 2001) (The Pack That Cuts Itself)
- No. 12 Paul Chosse's Bar Bill Stunt (1999, revised edition 2001) (Bill Switch)
- No. 13 Senator Crandall's Cut-Up Card Trick (2003)
- No. 14 Four Squares and a Knot (2003) (Sympathetic Silks)
- No. 15 The Siamese Goose Egg Bag (2003)
- No. 16 Ed Marlo's Time Machine (2004)
- No. 17 Second Finger Top Deal (2004)
- No. 18 Xerox Money (2000) (Himber Wallet)
- No. 19 Milt Kort's All-Outs Think-of-a-Card (2005)
- No. 20 Brother Hamman's Final(ly) Aces (2006) (Ace Assembly)
- No. 21 That's the Spirit! (not yet released)
- No. 22 Jim Bergstrom's Hat Trick (2007)
- No. 23 Bob Longe's Worn Out Deck (not yet released)
- No. 24 Don Alan's Sneaky Nudist Rides Again (not yet released)
- Special Edition Don Alan's Devano Card Rise (1999)
- Special Edition The Chick Trick (2002)
- Special Edition Basic Cups & Balls Technique (2004)
- Special Edition The Complete Don Alan’s Chop Cup (2005)
- The Ron Bauer 2008 Lecture: Notes from "THE Underground Legend (2008, revised edition 2009)
Published Tricks In
- Genii
- The New Tops
- M-U-M
- The New Modern Coin Magic by J.B. Bobo (1966)
- Daryl's Ambitious Card Omnibus by Stephen Minch (1987)
- Cardfixes by Jon Racherbaumer (1990)
- Card Finesse II by Jon Racherbaumer (1992)
- L.I.N.T.: Luka in New Tops by John Luka (1997)
- KORT: The Magic of Milton Kort by Stephen Minch (1999)
- Clever Close-up Magic by Bob Longe (2003)
- Mystifying Card Tricks by Bob Longe (2005)
- Switch: Unfolding the $100 Bill Change by John Lovick (2006)
- Uncovered: Secrets for the Serious Magician by John Luka (2006)
- Mind-Blowing Magic Tricks by Bob Longe (2007)
References
- ↑ Bill Kalush's New York City Conference 1994 by Lance Pierce, 1997, p. 103