Month: September 2023

SIEGFRIED AND JOY: LAS VEGAS IN EDINBURGH

☆☆☆☆

Siegfried and Joy make a strong impression from the moment they step out on their Las Vegas in Edinburgh stage. Wearing instantly iconic outfits of gold suits, silver shoes, and purple velvet shirts and accessorized with star-shaped sunglasses, they dance around their stage performing bits of classic magic. Luckily the outfits compliment the magic rather than overshadow it. Like their classic outfits jazzed up with more glitter than any other magic act this Fringe, they take classic magic and jazz it up, lending the tricks their sparkling personality and making for an incredibly fun show.

Siegfried and Joy are equally instantly noticeable for the great relationship they build with the audience. Siegfried greets every audience member with a high five as they enter the venue, sizing them up and welcoming them in straight from the outset. At the reviewed show they also dealt well with audience interruptions during their set. One man in their front row had to step out midway through, and while they playfully hassled him on his way out, they also welcomed him on his return. They also faced a brief heckling from an excited child in the front row, and responded to it by first making him laugh in the moment and, later on, giving him a co-starring role in their finale that he was enthusiastic to partake in. Toward the end of the show, they did come across as mildly bullying a woman who didn’t seem to want to come onstage, but when they did pull her up she appeared to be having fun with them. That moment aside, they were perfect models of how gracefully to deal with the vagaries of a live audience.

They performed some excellent magic as well. From the very start, when Siegfried licks his scissors before dramatically cutting Joy’s rope, they perform with their perfectly, hilariously ridiculous Vegas-inspired style. They’re really a three-person operation, and the occasional appearance of a young woman throughout the show is a genuinely funny and respectful take on the “female assistant” trope. A highlight is their bottles and glasses effect, which is well performed by all of them—although they may look to take more care when removing these props after this section, to avoid breaking the illusion. In a strong effect featuring just Siegfried, Joy, and an audience participant, they perform a card finding effect that many magic fans will have seen before, but with an added wetness element that only serves to make the final reveal more impressive. A lot of the stage time is taken up with magic themed humor, with tricks designed to flash, but when they get down to it they also have some genuinely fantastic reveals.

The real highlight of the show is the perfect intersection of stage chemistry and showmanship that is evident in every step that Siegfried and Joy take onstage. They spin each other regularly, often start a new trick by rubbing noses, and create an amazing, excited atmosphere over the course of the hour.

MAGICAL BONES: SOULFUL MAGIC VOLUME II

☆☆☆☆

Ever a popular one, Magical Bones’s shortened run for his new Fringe show has resulted in reliably busy showtimes. Soulful Magic Volume II may feel less polished than his previous year’s show, but it has all the trademark tricks (magic and otherwise) that make Bones worth a watch.

 A key feature that sets Bones apart is his breakdance background, and his dance skills rival even his impressive magic skills. In addition, showmanship doesn’t get much better than Bones moonwalking his way through a card selection, breakdancing to warm up for a Rubik’s cube solve, and doing a backflip to find a chosen card.

Bones also tends to use his Fringe shows to shed light on Black history. This year he highlights Ellen Armstrong, the first female black magician to tour her own show in the United States. He performs a themed effect to make Armstrong memorable in the minds of his audience. While the Fringe magic scene is still largely white it’s slowly but surely diversifying, no doubt at least in part to the success of Bones himself, who has always allowed his heritage to enrich his performances.

Soulful Magic II drew a large audience, and Bones gets a large number of them involved in the magic. An early mind reading card effect gets a whopping nine audience members involved, from the comfort of their seats. The audience establish their willingness to lie for him from this starting point, but he doesn’t let them get away with it—they don’t have to pretend to be impressed when he gets going. In the performance reviewed, the most trusting participant joins Bones for his dangerous bag trick, but while she proves willing to put herself in danger for him ultimately no audience members are harmed in this show.

An eternal highlight of Bones’s performances is a card finding effect performed to a bespoke hip hop soundtrack. No other magician imbues a standard deck with so much character and even cheekiness. Even if somehow nothing else about his performance appeals, he’s worth seeing for this effect alone.

With a very limited run by Fringe standards, Soulful Magic Volume II is well worth a ticket. It’s the less formal Bones, making friends with the audience, hanging out before his big UK tour, and showing off some of the cool things he can do.

ARRON JONES: ROCKSTAR MAGIC

☆☆☆☆

For Arron Jones’s second Fringe, he continues his trend of performing magic shows that no one would think to ask for in his new show Rockstar Magic. Here Jones, true to title, performs magic like a rockstar. There’s lots of music, plenty of card tricks, and even more hip thrusts than anticipated. Jones is the magician to go to when you think you’ve seen it all.

The show is perfectly themed in rockstar style magic. If there are digressions, they’re well reasoned enough to feel like they fit in, and engaging enough that no one in the audience is thinking too hard about it. Jones chats to his roadie Al throughout the performance, a helpful presence who assists with props and audience management, and generally adds a pleasant extra presence to the show.

The magic is well themed and all goes to plan. A highlight that the participants all seem to especially get into is an instructional section on how to smuggle drugs through an airport. While no concrete lessons are learned, probably for the best in case there are any airport staff in the audience, Jones displays his mind reading skills to perfection. Jones ends the show as both a rockstar and a magician, with an incredible keytar performance and a final reveal to send the audience on their way.

With such a specific theme, Jones draws an enthusiastic audience who instantly engage with his character. While his trainee drug smugglers were particularly keen, everyone brought onstage at the reviewed show seemed delighted to be in closer proximity to Jones, and played along with all the tasks and activities he assigned them. Jones reacted perfectly to interruptions as well, claiming responsibility for breaking a stray glass with his mind without skipping a beat.

Jones may be developing his trend of performing magic shows that no one would think to ask for, but by the end of one of his shows the audience will be convinced that it’s exactly what they always wanted. He’s fully committed to the bit every step of the way with this high energy performance. Those feeling that late afternoon slump will leave Rockstar Magic feeling energetic enough to take on the world.  Ladies, gentlemen, and everyone in between, bring your spare underpants to toss on the stage.  Just try not to faint when he walks through the audience.

DIMIS MICHAELIDES: IT’S MAGIC, BUT IS IT ART?

☆☆☆

One of the joys of the Fringe is getting to peek inside the cool buildings that dot Edinburgh’s landscape. It’s Magic, but is it Art? is in one such building, in what feels like a small, old church hall with a lovely arched ceiling framing the stage. As performed by magician Dimis Michaelides, the name is not 100% representative of the content of the show. While there is some conclusion drawn about the nature of magic, the majority of the stage time is devoted to illustrating art through magic—ostensibly to draw the parallel, but in practice it feels more like a magical art history lecture. This isn’t a bad thing, it’s a different kind of lens through which to view magic, and it does ultimately succeed in its aim.

It’s Magic takes the audience through the history of art, painting by painting, illuminating each piece through magic. The tricks themselves aren’t anything that magic fans won’t have seen before, but the way each trick is presented is well themed. Some tricks are easy to connect to their respective painting, like the opening effect featuring the classic cups and balls alongside the painting The Conjurer by Hieronymus Bosch, which features this exact trick. Michaelides creates a lovely connection between past and present audiences—when it comes to being tricked by magicians maybe society hasn’t changed that much. Other connections are more tenuous, but also perhaps more fun. A card finding trick is set up using a Freida Kahlo-esque dream story, which may be a bit of a stretch but is sold by Michaelides’s commitment to the bit.

Michaelides draws his thesis from scholarship about the visual arts, that modern art is typified by its requirement for interpretation by the viewer. For magic to be art it must therefore require the same level of interpretation, by provoking the viewer to think beyond how the trick was achieved. Michaelides actually does not illustrate this with a magic trick but rather with a magic adjacent stunt-like sequence featuring eggs carefully balanced on playing cards. The delicate nature of the stunt, and the props used, are symbolic of the delicacy of the UN commitments to improving the world, a topical theme touching on climate change and general global wellbeing.

It’s always fun to see magicians differentiate their shows with their other interests. Michaelides does this here both through his knowledge of art and in highlighting art from his native Cyprus. It feels like the kind of show that couldn’t have been performed by anyone other than him.

Is it just magic or is it art? The show itself is certainly art, even if the magic performed often feels more illustrative of the art than elevated to art on its own merit. It’s certainly worth a watch, it educates as it entertains and feels like an hour well spent. Fringe-goers often hear about that illusive phenomenon of the “hidden gem” show, and here in a little theatre watching a lovely little magical art show, the audience may very well congratulate themselves for having found one.