JUSTIN WILLMAN: ONE FOR THE AGES

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How much magic makes a magic show… a magic show? What percentage of focus on sleight of hand, trickery, or carefully designed deceit is enough to say, ‘this is a Magic Show’? At this publication, we will review even the tiniest amount, eager to engage with every performance that even touches the world of magic. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t a topic worth pondering. Justin Willman is, undeniably, a magician. In his show One For the Ages, you will find all the comfortable classics you yearn for – cards to pick from, a thing turned into another thing, a word plucked from the very recesses of your mind. If you’re looking for originality in your magic, this is not the place. But the focus of One For The Ages seems a bit different. It seems magic tricks may be the skeleton, but humanity the filling.

Willman radiates openness (ironic for a magician) and down-to-earthness. His banter with the audience is eagerly received because for a lack of a better word, it is simply so normal. Willman is a working magician with a Netflix show and multiple appearances on daytime televison. Show attendees can be sure that every word he says and every breath he takes have been rehearsed down to the second. But he still manages to make it not feel that way. He makes every joke feel organic, and weaves his storytelling so languorously that you legitimately forget to expect the magic trick that comes at the end of it.

If this is an impressive skill to witness, it is not his only one. Willman’s sleight of hand is cleanly done and his show designed with enough variety to stay interesting, while still focusing around a few central moments that set a good pace for the night. Even more impressive is his – skill? luck? with audience participants. Perhaps Milwaukee is just a city teeming with character, and Willman had a 100% chance of getting a star as he brought multiple people on the stage to take part on long effects. But experience does not back that up, and more likely the culprit is just his practiced hand at setting participants up to succeed. The two main participants at the show reviewed were darn near show stealers in their own right, particularly a young lady who may have skewed a little too close to curiously skeptical for Willman’s taste in the end.

While the show was certainly designed to be completely family friendly and was clearly mostly intended for the under 18 set, it still full of tongue in check risque jokes to keep the elders entertained. Willman also wisely includes nods to Milwaukee’s favourite magic son (he was here for a few years in his young adulthood! That’s close enough!), Harry Houdini. And ranging from extensive audience interaction, literally running around the venue, and just exuberant clownishness, Willman’s show really does encompass enough to keep anyone entertained.

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