Dan Bastianelli

DAN BASTIANELLI: IDENTITY

☆☆☆☆

Talented Fringe regular Dan Bastianelli returns this year with a show called Identity, in which he explores just that. With an interesting premise and great variety of magic, Identity makes for a fun hour of magic.

With flyer art featuring Bastianelli playing with his cards, it should come to no surprise to Identity audiences that playing cards feature heavily. Bastianelli is a skilled card magician, even impressing with his cardistry moves before he gets in to the magic. The card magic is a highlight, with magical classics performed with his distinct flair. Bastianelli varies the type of magic he performs with playing cards, to get a great deal of use out of this one type of magic. There is other magic too that uses a greater variety of props—audiences won’t be bored in Bastianelli’s audience.

The identity theme weaves in and out of the show, at times taking center stage, while at other times feeling more tangentially related to the effect being performed. A particularly strong moment of thematic magic is the restoration effect. The themes of being confident enough to be individual, and “destroying” the past self to become truer to one’s own nature, fit perfectly with the effect that Bastianelli performs. On the other hand, some of the routines seem to be explained to be related to identity simply because they are magic and being a magician is a part of Bastianelli’s identity. On the one hand, this feels like an appropriately cheeky use of theme for a magician, but after seeing Bastianelli advertise such an interesting theme it would have been nice to see it explored more deeply.

In an appropriately intimate venue for a show that involves so much close-up magic, and with Bastianelli’s friendly stage presence, the frequent participation in the show is not a concern for the audience. Audience members do all the usual tasks: picking cards, checking props, and letting Bastianelli read their minds. When Bastianelli distributes gifts to select participants, these are thoughtfully constructed pieces of magic, giving them impossible items to remember him by.

Identity is a lovely showcase of Bastianelli’s incredible range of magical talent. The reviewed show was unsurprisingly busy. Fans of close up in particular will appreciate Bastianelli’s latest.

DAN BASTIANELLI: DECEPTION

☆☆☆☆

Dan Bastianelli is a popular guy. At the reviewed evening of Deception his partner and a crowd of his friends attended to support him. They were the most useful type of hecklers. In the opening moments of the show they helped Bastianelli warm up the audience with their exaggerated reactions, and then all quieted down once he got in to the main body of the performance. They deserve more stars than a review site can give them for their exemplary show of support. However, it’s clear that Bastianelli doesn’t need them there every evening, as his perfectly performed magic and nicely structured show speak for themselves.

With an intentionally intimate venue, Bastianelli’s focus is on close up magic. The audience is indeed very close, leaving no room for error. Luckily Bastianelli is a very skilled performer and doesn’t make any errors, or at least none that are visible from about four feet away. Bastianelli performs a variety of magic but the card tricks in particular are all highlights. For fans of card magic, the physical element of the shuffles and findings can be very beautiful, and Bastianelli adds additional elements of physical beauty with card folding and a secret surprise at the very end of the show that is very pretty and very difficult to describe without spoiling it entirely, but it worth looking forward to.

At a close up magic show with an audience that is small by necessity, the audience must go in assuming that the majority of them will end up participating in one form or another. In Deception most of the participation is fairly laid back and achieved from the participants’ seats. Bastianelli comes across as friendly, perhaps an impression augmented at the reviewed show by the presence of several of his friends, and even for the few who stand in the stage area it feels like a relaxed kind of show.

Deception is framed by its butterfly theme, as hinted by the posters. Bastianelli uses this effectively to aid in the description of card tricks and in very pretty non-magic effects performed solely for the audience to enjoy his beautiful props. Other minor motifs run through the show as well, giving Bastianelli extra scaffolding for his effects and narrative. The structure is as admirably precise as the magic, allowing the separate effects to flow together in a way that feels natural.

Bastianelli makes it clear in his advertising that Deception is a close up magic show, and hopefully his audiences are self selecting for those who enjoy these kinds of physically smaller effects. For fans of close up magic this will be the perfect Fringe show to see.

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