Month: August 2024

CHRIS CROSS: NOT PLAYING WITH A FULL DECK

☆☆☆

Sometimes performers come to the Fringe with their sharply honed, beautifully produced masterpiece show that fully encapsulates the extent of their creative abilities. Other times, they’re just here for the party and a laugh, and invite the occasional audience to join in. With his performance of Not Playing with a Full Deck, Chris Cross feels squarely in that second category. And for what it is, it’s a good performance. Cross is in his element onstage, with jokes and magic with a blend of varying quality that feels perfectly balanced by years of experience in keeping people entertained.

Flyers for the show warn that it’s “not for the easily offended”, which may sound worrying at first, but Cross’s bark proves worse than his bite. His crowd work may feel more like a comedian’s than a magician’s, but his prodding remains gentle enough for the audience to still like him. If he does make the occasional marginally offensive joke, it feels almost like a tick box exercise; like the weird uncle at Christmas dinner who sticks his finger in the pudding not because he wants to taste it but just because he likes the idea of fulfilling the archetype of the family’s weird uncle. Perhaps this is a sign that the audience of the reviewed show was indeed the “not easily offended” that the flyer requested.

Cross has demonstrably significant experience as a magician and in Not Playing with a Full Deck it definitely shows. Card trick fans may even just appreciate the fancy shuffles and card choreography that he employs during the requisite card trick sequence of the show. The card tricks themselves are a highlight as well. Every magician who has ever performed a card trick has, at some point, claimed that the trick they perform is the Best Card Trick Ever. Cross is no different, and he puts forward a strong contender for that title. At the reviewed show Cross performed several tricks with a card deck he borrowed from a member of the audience, which provided a lovely little moment of unplanned audience participation. Cross’s stunt work is equally perfectly performed, timed down to the second for maximum effect.

As evidenced by the highlight reel that Cross plays before the show, and indeed by the archives of this publication, Cross is a highly skilled magician perfectly capable of performing an excellent five star show. He may not have chosen that route this year, but his fun mess-around show is still well worth the ticket price and hour of the audience’s time. If at times it feels like he is conducting a group interview for post-performance drinking buddies, who can blame him? The world is burning and we could all use a laugh, a trick, and a drink.

More information on Not Playing With A Full Deck and its performance dates can be found here.

LEWIS FULLER: UNGENTLEMANLY CONDUCT

☆☆☆☆

There are many ways to surprise a magic fan at the Edinburgh Fringe, and in Ungentlemanly Conduct Lewis Fuller found a new one: the unexpected singalong. The show is a patchwork of live magic and stunts, largely pre-filmed storytelling, and, of course, not just one but several opportunities for the audience to join Fuller in singing popular songs. It’s not the show any member of the audience would expect, even after studying the flyer, but if they’re willing to go along for the crazy ride they’re in for a treat of an hour.

Ungentlemanly Conduct is categorized as a magic show, and in amongst the many other features Fuller does in fact perform several magic tricks and feats, themed to accompany the story that he tells himself and via video. A fun themed effect sees Fuller perform a classic card trick, using credit and debit cards rather than playing cards. The participant involved has no need to sign or otherwise mark their card to personalize it for this effect. Fuller’s flattering, energetic stage presence makes the participants feel comfortable on stage through effects that pose threat to their money and their bodies, a true testament to his personable nature as a performer.

The plot line that weaves the show together combines a fairly standard story of a young magician dreaming of performing at the Edinburgh Fringe with an altogether weirder tale, loosely inspired by a recent Netflix show but with plot elements and twists that make it a fun new experience. Fuller seamlessly weaves the pre-filmed segments of the show with his onstage storytelling, stunts, and tricks. Over the course of the show the plot lines come together to provide this framework for his effects.

No performance is flawless, and at the reviewed show Fuller had to deal with the biggest wild card in a magic show, the overenthusiastic audience member. Fuller successfully managed and contained his enthusiasm by involving him in an effect, giving him the portion of the spotlight that he clearly craved without allowing him to overtake Fuller’s own performance.

Ungentlemanly Conduct is about as far from a traditional magic show as is readily available, which makes it a welcome entry in the fringe magic lineup. The sheer variety of performance genres involved may make it a little more difficult for Fuller to acquire a target audience that will truly appreciate him, but for that audience he’ll be exactly what they didn’t realize they were searching for. 

More information about Ungentlemanly Conduct and its performances can be found here.

DIARY OF A MAGICIAN

☆☆☆☆

Diary of a Magician is marketed as a family friendly show, and for good reason. Even before the titular magician Mu-Syuan Chang steps onstage the show’s support staff are on hand to make family units feel welcome, ushering children to the front row and making space for parents to accompany those too young to sit alone. While missing even a second of this performance is not recommended, children who enter the show slightly late are still made to feel welcome, with staff adding chairs to the front row so quickly and unobtrusively that it’s almost as magical as the act onstage.

Chang is equally welcoming of his young fans, making a point to interact with them to their comfort levels and at one point making his way along the front row to ensure that each child gets a special magical experience. Shorter adults may also appreciate this approach, as it’s easier to see over children’s heads than those of their parents. Like the seating choice, Diary of a Magician itself is appealing to all age groups, with highly visual effects that capture and keep children’s attention as well as theatre and artistry that keeps everyone in the audience wanting more.

The magic is themed on classical poetry, and the lines appear as a pre-caption ahead of each section. Each dreamscape style diary entry is beautifully brought to life by Chang’s magic. Magic regulars may recognize the basic structure of the effects that Chang employs, but they are rarely seen performed with such specific artistic sensibilities that are more reminiscent of the movements of a dancer or acrobat. A particular early highlight is an especially beautiful scene involving a light and a wooden staff that Chang uses to bring a starscape into the room, earning gasps from the youngsters and applause from their adults.

Chang’s excellent staging and lighting choices deserve a mention as well. Simple props turn the stage in turn into such varied locales as the night sky, a train station, and a field of flowers. Chang’s metal hoops routine is an especially strong use of lighting, with the multicolored lights making the hoops look like they’re lighting up as well, enhancing the artistry of this scene.

Magic is known for its heavy use of audience participation, but aside from getting the front row involved briefly from their seats, Diary of a Magician does not use audience participants, with Chang alone in his dreamscapes creating the magic entirely in his own hands. The audience does not feel this as a loss—in fact may only realize that this was the case on reflection after the show—and indeed for some it may be a huge plus. Whether due to youth, shyness, or social anxiety, those who have been put off witnessing a live magic show because of a fear of needing to go onstage can safely enjoy the magic of Diary of a Magician.

With such broad appeal to all ages and all types of audience members, it’s no surprise that even on the sunny weekend day that Diary of a Magician was reviewed it filled out the theatre. After the show children could be heard begging their parents to let them take a picture with Chang on the way out, and was he obligingly just outside the door to fulfill requests. Chang’s physically inventive style of magic is a welcome addition to the Edinburgh Fringe scene.

SURREAL: THE MIND-READING SHOW FROM BERLIN!

☆☆☆☆

Stepping in to Surreal: The Mind-Reading Show from Berlin! feels like stepping back in time.  We visit the era of mentalism presented as the junction of the scientific and the spiritual, embodied in a mythical, magical woman. Psychic Vivian and her partner in performance Roman Maria von Thurau take turns playing the role of the mentalist and the assistant. Decorative and magical in turn, their mentalism demonstrations are equal parts impressive and beautiful.

An early sequence sets the scene for the style of the show. Vivian is blindfolded on stage while Roman requests that members of the audience hold out objects for her to describe without seeing. Vivian successfully describes a varied range of such random objects, interspersed with a variety of fun facts that are so perfectly timed and perfectly amusing that the audience almost doesn’t care if they are genuinely true.

Roman, the mathematician of the pair, follows up with a pi-based routine that blends classic calculator based mentalism with what he describes as a pandemic boredom-induced knowledge of the digits of pi. Few performers can make a recitation of a random selection of the digits of pi fun to watch, but Roman manages it, with a final revelation that the audience won’t see coming.

The third star of Surreal is the beautifully realized animations interspersed amongst the magic, which were hand drawn by Vivian in preparation. Vivian accompanies her artwork with autobiographical self-mythologizing stories from hers and Roman’s life. It’s impossible to choose which is the highlight of the show, the artwork or the magic, and the audience is lucky to be treated to both.

At the reviewed show, Surreal was briefly interrupted by several small technical issues. Such are often the pitfalls of a review relatively early in the run. Vivian and Roman dealt with these with steadfast professionalism—future audiences can be confident that they will witness a beautiful show regardless of any such issues. Their vintage throwback style suited it; after all technology is known to behave erratically in the presence of psychic powers such as Vivian’s. The magic goes much more smoothly than the technology.

With its central location, post-workday time slot, and of course beautifully performed mentalism, Surreal will undoubtedly prove to be a hit this Fringe. Vivian and Roman’s vintage presentation of mentalist classics sets them apart from the crowd of magicians at this year’s festival. If Vivian and Roman are not ageless immortals who entertained eighteenth century nobility with their timeless performance style, the lineage from historic performances to theirs is especially clear to see, and renews magic fans’ appreciation for the heritage of magic as an art form. Fans of mentalism in its contemporary iteration in particular will be delighted by this stylish throwback.

More information on Surreal and its’ performance dates can be found here.