sam lutpon

HOW TO BE DUMPED: A SORT OF MAGIC SHOW

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How to be Dumped is subtitled, “a sort of magic show”, which is an accurate description. The multitalented Sam Lupton has written this part magic, part storytelling, and part musical theatre collage of performance art as a sort of active therapy to help himself get over his recent difficult breakup. It sounds like it will be a mess, but much like Lupton‘s self described mental state, that’s only how it starts, by the end of the show the disparate elements are revealed to be the necessary pieces to tell the whole of the story.

The biggest surprise to someone who just glanced at the poster before seeing this show is probably the musical aspect. Lupton walks the audience through the stages of a breakup, and each stage comes with an original musical number, which Lupton performs using his voice and a piano. The songs are a lot of fun, and weave the thread of the story that Lupton illustrates through magic.

The magical effects are performed well, with mis-sleights few and far between. An early moment that sets the tone is when Lupton uses magic to set up two members of the audience on a mock date. In true magician fashion, he reveals that he predicted from the start that the two participants chosen would be perfect for each other, only to play on that expectation of magical omnipresence to highlight the flaws and frustrations of online dating. It’s an interesting and thoughtful use of the tropes of magic that illustrate how Lupton approaches the tricks used in the show; it’s very much story-forward, and the way Lupton uses tricks highlights the storyline more than the magic itself.

That being said, there are some great reveals.  Lupton has audience members write down a regret before the show and then throw them in a garbage bin onstage, a fitting symbolic act.  He does rummage through the bin to find some regrets and successfully read them from people’s minds, politely respecting those that request they not be revealed to the audience, but concluding that the bin really was the best place for the secrets. 

Magicians have to lie in their shows, otherwise the audience couldn’t experience them as magical, but the heart of How to be Dumped feels like it’s come from somewhere honest. If it’s not quite a magic show, it feels like the performing artist’s version of kintsugi, repairing a shattered object with gold to make it whole. It’s an exceptionally creative sort-of magic show, and the patchwork of artistic talents fits that theme of reconstruction. No one could leave the show not wanting to see more from Lupton, although for the sake of his mental health hopefully on a different theme.

SEANCE LIVE

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The newest entry in the time-honoured tradition of magicians debunking the methods of false spiritualists is Séance Live by Sam Lupton. In this interactive show, Lupton showcases staples of mediumship, but all with the caveat of his own disbelief and in the stated interest of encouraging skepticism among attendees.

Lupton is a charming and compelling performer, and it would be easy to believe that had he chosen to peruse mediumship as a career, he would have no shortage of devotees. He divides his show into two parts, one composed primarily of hot and cold reading audience members, and one more focused on spirit phenomena like slate writing and pendulum dowsing.

Lupton is conscientious enough to assure participants, in the first half of the show, that he has had no legitimate contact with loved ones on the ’other side’. In some ways, his ethical standards here are to his detriment. Professional fake mediums are often extremely creative and invasive in their zeal to uncover personal information on audience members that they can use for their readings. Likely due to the absence of this, Lupton’s ‘hits’ of information on audience members are sporadic and somewhat underwhelming. He does use the excuse of this being an educational experience, but that falls a bit flat considering what he is theoretically trying to achieve. If it is shocking perceptiveness that causes people to fall victim to fake mediums, a show debunking it should be able to reach equal levels of this otherworldly-but-not-really skill.

As mentioned, stage magicians criticizing the methodology of fake spiritualists is no new practice. It has gone on essentially as long as the two groups have coexisted. However, one thing magicians typically do not mention is that this debunking was done not just out of a sense of justice for the general public or a fight in the battle to be the most honest liar. It was also because magicians and mediums often do use the same tricks, and through this, mediums posed a risk to magicians’ control over their secrets.

This begets the unfortunately innate weakness in Lupton’s show – as a working magician, there is only so far he can lead the viewer without giving away useful skills he and other magicians use in their careers. He wholeheartedly states his own disbelief in the supernatural, and indeed presents this entire show in the theme of disproving the beliefs of others. However, many phenomena within the show are left underexplained or unexplained for the purposes of dramatic appeal.

Séance Live is a fun and intriguing way of engaging in the concept and methodology of fake mediumship. While it may not change your belief one way or another, it is a worthwhile experience and a great way to learn more about the history of spiritualism.