celebrity guest Archives - Chamber Magic Steve Cohen’s Chamber Magic® At The Magnificent; Lotte New York Palace hotel Mon, 30 Sep 2019 13:58:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 Barack And Michelle in my showroom at the Waldorf Astoria https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/obama-waldorf/ Sat, 21 Sep 2019 13:51:30 +0000 http://blog.chambermagic.com/?p=4480 I've always dreamed of performing magic for the President of the United States, in the White House.

While that dream has yet to come true, I was giddy to find that President Obama came to the private suite where I perform Chamber Magic during his visit to NYC.

The picture above is from the official White House website and the caption reads:

Sept. 21, 2011 "The First Lady reacts to something the President whispered to her at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in between events related to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City." (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Here is a photo of me standing in exactly the same spot, [...]

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I’ve always dreamed of performing magic in the White House.

While that dream has yet to come true (and I’m willing to wait), I was giddy to find this photo capturing Barack and Michelle Obama in the same private suite where I used to perform Chamber Magic!

The photo above is from the official White House website (now archived) and the caption read:

Sept. 21, 2011 “The First Lady reacts to something the President whispered to her at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in between events related to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City.”  — Official White House Photo by Pete Souza

Here is a photo I took in exactly the same spot, in the same room, one week later. Notice the chairs all set up for my show in the living room:

The Obamas’ whispering photo reminded me of a picture I took with Warren Buffett after a private show in Omaha, Nebraska. I’ll never reveal the secret he shared…!

 

My performance suite at the Waldorf Astoria New York was room 35H, in the Waldorf Towers, down the hall from the Presidential Suite. On October 4, 1965, Pope Paul VI met President Lyndon Johnson in that same room. Also pictured is First Lady, Lady Bird Johnson.

Pope Paul was visiting New York to address the United Nations. It marked the first visit of the head of the Roman Catholic Church to the United States.

Here are some performance photos of me in that same room, suite 35H. Notice the same fireplace, and the same oil painting on the rear wall.

The Waldorf Astoria New York is closed but these wonderful memories remain. I was inspired to post this — albeit years later — since it corresponds with the current United Nations General Assembly being held in midtown Manhattan. When I came across the Obama photos, it reminded me of that formative stage in my life.

Looking back on my old showroom at the Waldorf, it seems so intimate and dainty. At that time, I never could have imagined that Chamber Magic would graduate to its grand showroom at the Lotte New York Palace (see below). I love my new venue even more, and am thrilled at the solid partnership with The Palace. We will be releasing 2020 tickets soon, in anticipation of the 20th Anniversary show. I look forward to meeting you at The Palace sometime in the near future!

 

 

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Peter Sagal – “Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me” Visits Chamber Magic® https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/peter-sagal/ Thu, 01 Dec 2016 15:46:27 +0000 http://chambermagic.com/?p=6552 As you may know, I stay at the Waldorf Astoria from Thursday through Sunday every week. After my shows are over, I take off my tuxedo, put on my pajamas, and go to sleep. One of the benefits of performing in a hotel suite is that there is an adjoining bedroom! Aside from Mac King, I […]

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As you may know, I stay at the Waldorf Astoria from Thursday through Sunday every week. After my shows are over, I take off my tuxedo, put on my pajamas, and go to sleep. One of the benefits of performing in a hotel suite is that there is an adjoining bedroom! Aside from Mac King, I may have the best gig in magic (though my commute is shorter!).

One of my weekend rituals is to listen to the Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me podcast from NPR. Peter Sagal is the genial host, and his voice has an all-access pass to my ears every Sunday morning. I follow Peter on Twitter, and like millions of his fans, feel like I “know” him through his clever barbs and on-air quips. Last week, however, I actually did get to “know” Peter when he visited Chamber Magic® to celebrate his parents’ birthdays. He is a tremendous guy.

After the show we talked for about 20 minutes, and snapped the photo above. A couple of days later, Peter sent the following endorsement:

 

“What Steve Cohen does is flatly impossible. Cannot be happening, and probably didn’t, really. I just hallucinated being in a hotel suite filled with well-dressed people, watching chamber-scale miracles. Seriously: not only could he not really have done any of that, but people don’t dress up anymore. Don’t believe me? Well, go — and don’t believe him yourself.”Peter Sagal

 

We are now members of a mutual fan club. His show on NPR is always razor-sharp and often leaves me grinning so much my face hurts. (Especially when Paula Poundstone is on.) It would be a great honor to be asked to appear on the “Not My Job” segment — one can only dream?!

wwdtm_logo_clr_stacked_highres

 

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2015 Year in Review https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/2015-year-in-review/ Thu, 07 Jan 2016 02:20:35 +0000 http://www.chambermagic.com/?p=6223 As we look forward to the promise of a new year, it's easy to forget the special moments and accomplishments of the previous twelve months. Allow me to wax nostalgic with a rundown of my 2015 highlights!

232 Chamber Magic performances at the Waldorf Astoria New York

14,000 visitors to Chamber Magic

15 national and international performances

Thank you, everyone, for your ongoing support of my show. I look forward to sharing more magic with you in 2016.

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As we look forward to the promise of a new year, it’s easy to forget the special moments and accomplishments of the previous twelve months. Allow me to wax nostalgic with a rundown of my 2015 highlights!

  • 232 Chamber Magic® performances at the Waldorf Astoria New York
  • 14,000 visitors to Chamber Magic®
  • 15 national and international performances

Magazine Feature #1

I was interviewed in the ultra high-end Manhattan Magazine, Jan/Feb 2015 issue. Ethan Hawke appears on the cover. Manhattan Magazine

 

Chan Canasta Art Exhibition

I launched a one-day art exhibition as a tribute to Chan Canasta, an admired magician who left show business to follow his passion as a painter.

Canasta died in 1999, and I recently became friends with his widow Renata. We worked together to locate nearly 40 of Chan Canasta’s paintings, and I displayed them in my suite at the Waldorf Astoria. Approximately 150 people attended, and the event was a fantastic success. Throughout the afternoon I performed some of Chan’s card magic, and also screened television footage of Chan so visitors could see him “at work.”

Canasta panorama

 

NBC Television Spotlight

Chamber Magic® was featured on NBC television, New York Live. Watch the full video here.

NBC screenshot

 

 

TENYO-ISM book has arrived!

I’ve translated all of Tenyo’s instructions from Japanese to English since 1997. It is an honor to be included in the new Tenyo-ism book by Richard Kaufman, with my own page.

This book set is unbelievable. A massive, heavy, and ultimately invaluable piece of magic history. I assisted in translating many pages from Japanese to English. If you have even the littlest interest in Tenyo magic, this is an incredible investment that will delight you for years!

Tenyoism page

 

Magazine Feature #2

A “local boy made good” article in Westchester Magazine.

Screen Shot 2016-01-06 at 4.44.58 PM

 

Award of Excellence from Linking Ring magazine

I published an article titled “The Eleven Commandments of Parlor Magic” and was delighted to receive an award from the International Brotherhood of Magicians for this piece.

2015-11-25 14.31.54-1

 

Visited Houdini’s gravesite

A friend from Japan visited New York so I took him to many Houdini-related spots, including Houdini’s home on West 113th Street, and Houdini’s gravesite in Queens.

2015-10-14 11.42.29

 

#10 top show in NYC on TripAdvisor

When I started Chamber Magic® in New York 16 years ago, my goal was to help raise public respect toward magic as a performing art. I wanted people to consider going to a magic show instead of the opera, or the ballet. It is highly gratifying to see that my vision has been recognized by so many others.

According to TripAdvisor.com, the top 10 Theater & Concerts in NYC are:

1.Lion King

2. Jersey Boys

3. Wicked

4. Beautiful – The Carole King Musical

5. The Phantom of the Opera

6.Kinky Boots

7. Radio City Music Hall

8.The Metropolitan Opera

9. Les Miserables

10. Steve Cohen’s Chamber Magic®

 

Screen Shot 2016-01-06 at 6.44.06 PM

 

Japanese book reprinted

My book “Win The Crowd” was reprinted in Japanese with a new cover. My friends at Tenyo told me that my books are stacked on the main shelf (the best position) in bookstores across Japan.

Japanese cover

 

“Priceless” MasterCard review

Chamber Magic® “Priceless” review by MasterCard website: “Your mind will be blown, no matter how skeptical you are.”

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Premiere League Soccer meets Magic

We had a family dinner in NYC with Christian Fuchs, a pro soccer player on the English Premiere League team Leicester City. He is a fun, dynamic, and talented guy who has helped my son grow as an athlete. Christian is the captain of the Austrian National Soccer Team.

Of course I showed everyone some magic and Christian reciprocated with some awesome soccer ball juggling.

Fuchs Cohen

 

Tony Award Winner

Broadway and Younger star Sutton Foster sat in the front row at Chamber Magic®. A true delight to meet her, and we enjoyed a chat afterwards. Months later she told the Huffington Post that Chamber Magic® is her favorite date night in New York City.

2015-02-27 20.31.08-2

 

Magic Mentor Monday Series

I researched and published a series of well-received articles on my blog, centering around my magical mentors. Each Monday for two months, I released a new long-form article that covered the teachings of beloved magicians from yesteryear: Max Malini, Johann Hofzinser, Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin, Charles Bertram, Think-A-Drink Hoffman, Albert Goshman, and Harry Lorayne. I will continue this series in 2016 with future articles about Mark Sicher, Danny Kaye, Sammy Davis Jr, Willy Wonka, and more.

steve-cohen-m5

 

Black TYCOON Cards released

TYCOONS, my custom playing cards co-created with Theory 11, received such accolades from discerning card players and magicians that we decided to release a new edition in black. I use all three editions in my show: red, blue, and black.

2015-08-31 10.04.15

 

My Newest Secret Project Started…

And finally… I’ve begun work on my latest project, a graphic novel titled The Millionaires’ Magician, which will be released in 2016. Together with a team of incredible artists and writers who work for Marvel and DC, I have created an origin story for my performing character, presented in a 100 page graphic novel in full color. You are not going to believe how gorgeous this book will be! Much more to come in the coming year.

Thank you, everyone, for your ongoing support of my show. I look forward to sharing more magic with you in 2016.

MillionairesMagician(rd14)

 

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Broadway Star Sutton Foster’s Favorite Date in NYC https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/broadway-star-sutton-foster/ Tue, 04 Aug 2015 20:47:01 +0000 http://www.chambermagic.com/?p=6030 Broadway star Sutton Foster (two-time Tony Award winner) sat in the front row at Chamber Magic earlier this year. We had a great chat afterwards - her pal and Younger co-star Hilary Duff recommended me as a "must-see."

In a recent Huffington Post interview, Sutton was asked to name her favorite date night idea in New York City...

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Broadway star Sutton Foster (two-time Tony Award winner) sat in the front row at Chamber Magic® earlier this year. We had a great chat afterwards – her pal and Younger co-star Hilary Duff recommended me as a “must-see.”

In a recent Huffington Post interview, Sutton was asked to name her favorite date night idea in New York City. Of the thousands of things she could’ve picked, she said, “Steve Cohen’s Chamber Magic!”

Sutton Foster came with her husband, screenwriter Ted Griffin. Says she, “This was a really cool date, in one of the private rooms at the Waldorf Astoria. Steve Cohen does sleight-of-hand magic right in front of you — it’s really interactive with the guests and it is awesome! Such a great New York thing to do that not a lot of people know about.”

To wrap up the date, Sutton recommends Market Table, a farm-to-table restaurant on Carmine and Bedford. “The menu’s always changing and it’s awesome.”

For completeness’ sake, here’s a picture with Hilary Duff, when she came to Chamber Magic® recently. They talked about me on the set of the popular TV series, Younger.

Hilary Duff Cohen

Since I don’t have, and never have had, a massive advertising budget, my show has survived for 15 years entirely through word-of-mouth. It’s gratifying to know that it’s working!

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Magic in Moscow https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/magic-in-moscow/ Fri, 15 Mar 2013 03:25:52 +0000 http://www.chambermagic.com/?p=5211 Yes, that's me standing in the Red Square in Moscow. And yes, Saint Basil's Cathedral looks like a giant Carvel ice cream cake. It was certainly cold enough to stay frozen (see below)! My trip to Moscow was a great adventure, and I'd like to share some of the highlights with you.

The purpose of my trip was a private performance, held in a bona-fide palace owned by the Russian Foreign Ministry. I was invited to perform at the 60th birthday of Yuri Bashmet - one of the world's finest viola players. Also present were my dear friend Anne-Sophie Mutter, and renowned conductor Valery Gergiev (of the London Symphony Orchestra). The audience was mostly Russians and Germans, but this was an extremely cultured crowd, and [...]

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Yes, that’s me standing in the Red Square in Moscow. And yes, Saint Basil’s Cathedral looks like a giant Carvel ice cream cake. It was certainly cold enough to stay frozen (see below)! My trip to Moscow was a great adventure, and I’d like to share some of the highlights with you.

Yes, this temperature is in ºF !

The purpose of my trip was a private performance, held in a bona-fide palace owned by the Russian Foreign Ministry. I was invited to perform at the 60th birthday of Yuri Bashmet – one of the world’s finest viola players. Also present were my dear friend Anne-Sophie Mutter, and renowned conductor Valery Gergiev (of the London Symphony Orchestra). The audience was mostly Russians and Germans, but this was an extremely cultured crowd, and I was able to perform in English with no interpreter.

Steve Cohen, Valery Gergiev (standing), with Yuri Bashmet and Anne-Sophie Mutter seated in front row

 

Here is the gorgeous room that I performed in. It was straight out of a fairy tale, or a lavish room in Versailles:

 

Several more views of my performance room:

 

 

 

Here is a nice photo after the show of me with Anne-Sophie and Yuri.

And a candid shot of us, cracking up at Yuri’s joke.

Yuri is a very big name in the classical music world, and since classical music has such widespread appeal in Russia, he is somewhat of a rock star. Just… not with rock music. In celebration of his 60th birthday, he was featured in a series of high profile concerts, including this one which was broadly promoted throughout Moscow:

I was told that President Vladimir Putin was invited to this concert, and also to my show, but he did not attend. There were some other very wealthy Russians there, with lots of bling.

After the concert, Yuri and his guests were brought to the Official Party House of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a palace built in 1893. The palace combines both Gothicism and Neo-Gothicism, and exemplifies what later became Russian Art Nouveau. The first owner of the house was millionaire and patron of the arts Savva Morozov.

 

An imposing iron gate barricaded the driveway from the street, and each guest needed to gain clearance with an official guard. I was asked for my passport to gain admittance.

Here’s the entrance hall:

And this has got to be the most luxurious greenroom I’ve ever been offered. It was paneled with mahogany. What a great place to relax before the show!

After the show I was invited to a huge dinner that started at 12 midnight! It went until 4am, but I left much earlier because of my flight schedule the next morning. Musicians know how to party! There was lots, and I mean LOTS of vodka consumed (it’s Russia, remember?), and everyone was tipsy, if not flat-out drunk before long.

I sat next to Anne-Sophie and Yuri, at the head of the table. Here’s a view of the massive spread.

Note that everyone had their own personal serving of Russian caviar, served in a carved wooden bear carafe:

Throughout the dinner, various members gave speeches praising Yuri and his accomplishments as a musician and humanitarian. I was honored, then, when Yuri stood up and gave a speech about me! He thanked me for flying from New York to Moscow for his birthday, and opined that my Chamber Magic show is “composed like a symphony.” Then he said a bunch of things in Russian that I didn’t understand. I was told later by a translator that he found inspiration in my work, and wished to share the emotions he felt that night with his own audiences.

Here’s the hotel I stayed at, the Ritz Carlton Moscow.

There was a Bentley parked out front, as the house car.

Fortunately I was within walking distance of the Kremlin, and my hosts had arranged a private tour.

Kremlin tour tickets

My guide, named Svetlana, took me to the Armory Chamber (my favorite spot on the tour, but also the one spot where they prohibit photography!) and many other churches and official buildings.

Although I couldn’t take photos in the Armory Chamber, here is a nice video that shows the types of artifacts on display, including lavishly ornate horse-drawn carriages, thrones, sceptres, Czar’s crowns, costumes, weapons, and more.

Here are a few photos I took during my Kremlin tour:

Later in the day, I took a stroll uptown to a famous supermarket that is a historic landmark. The interior of the supermarket is like a grand mansion.

 

 

Before long, I was back on a plane to New York City. Lufthansa Business Class – Moscow -> Frankfurt -> JFK

This made for good reading material on the plane – a new book of card tricks by Darwin Ortiz.

Oh, one more thing. Here’s my favorite souvenir from Russia. A fur and leather hat that is so warm, it’s like having a furnace parked on top of your head.

 

 

 

 

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David Copperfield calls Chamber Magic® “A masterful performance” https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/david-copperfield/ Mon, 28 May 2012 15:49:33 +0000 http://blog.chambermagic.com/?p=4759 As a boy growing up in the 1980s, I eagerly anticipated each year's David Copperfield special on television. I even convinced my parents to take me to his live theater show as a graduation gift. Copperfield has been an icon in the magic world for as long as I can remember, and I've watched every one of his television shows multiple times.

What an honor, then, to have David Copperfield visit my show at the Waldorf-Astoria this past weekend. It was thrilling to see him in the audience - this time watching me!

I was elated.

After the show, we went downstairs to the Bull & Bear restaurant and spent an hour talking about [...]

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As a boy growing up in the 1980s, I eagerly anticipated each year’s David Copperfield special on television. I even convinced my parents to take me to his live theater show as a graduation gift. Copperfield has been an icon in the magic world for as long as I can remember, and I’ve watched every one of his television shows multiple times.

What an honor, then, to have David Copperfield visit my show at the Waldorf-Astoria this past weekend. It was thrilling to see him in the audience – this time watching me!

I was elated.

After the show, we went downstairs to the Bull & Bear restaurant and spent an hour talking about magic over drinks. Copperfield was gracious, charming and funny. He was very complimentary about the show, which meant the world to me. Later, he tweeted about the show on his Twitter page:

The photo he linked to is a picture we took together in 1983. I was 12 years old, he was 27. The photo was taken at a Tannen’s Jubilee magic convention at the old Brown’s Hotel in the Catskill Mountains. I’ve had this picture in my scrapbook for 29 years, and took it out to show him after the show. Copperfield laughed and commented on his shiny Member’s Only jacket: “I think I was the last member.”

We tried to recreate the same pose when we took our picture again on Friday night.

Steve Cohen and David Copperfield in 1983

We both had a good laugh over our clothes and facial expressions. The thin neckties are clearly a sign of the times.

Back to our talk. Copperfield told me that he was impressed by how I create texture in my Waldorf-Astoria show, without the use of music, lights or theatrical devices. He said that I’ve figured out a way to build drama and texture into my performance using nothing but showmanship. And he emphasized that such showmanship only comes from giving thousands of performances. “You can’t write a show like this,” he said. “It can only come from performing night after night, listening to the audience, and eliminating superfluous words and actions. You’ve honed the show down to its essential components. I loved it. It’s really tight.”

Coming from David Copperfield, a magician I’ve looked up to my entire life, I take this as the highest praise.

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How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Here’s how. https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/carnegie-hall-performance/ Thu, 19 Jan 2012 11:35:51 +0000 http://blog.chambermagic.com/?p=4502 For over one hundred twenty years, Carnegie Hall has been a world-famous venue for music, but not magic. It was an honor, then -- a once-in-a-lifetime achievement -- to be able to perform my full evening magic show there on January 12, 2012. The show ran two hours, and received a standing ovation from the sold-out auditorium.

I'd like to thank all of you who came to the show. I'll always remember the electric anticipation you projected as I walked on-stage. Looking out at you, I felt anticipation too -- like we were creating a historic moment together.

Throughout my career I've always believed that magic has the potential to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with other performing arts, such as ballet, opera and orchestral music. Magic can be more, much more, than a simple diversion. The artistry required to construct and stage a theatrical magic show is on par with the training, thought and creativity required to present other traditional art forms.

My personal goal in staging a magic show at Carnegie Hall was to prove that the art of magic is capable of accepting its due respect, if only we give it the chance. It was immensely satisfying to see that the public supported this belief; the entire theater was sold-out months in advance.

Because I am used to performing for small audiences of 50 people at the Waldorf-Astoria, the nearly 300-seat Weill Recital Hall presented some challenges. I did my best to cross the footlights and reach out to the entire audience, even up to the balcony.

In this blog, I've composed a full report of the evening, from my perspective as performer and producer [...]

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For over one hundred twenty years, Carnegie Hall has been a world-famous venue for music, but not magic. It was an honor, then — a once-in-a-lifetime achievement — to be able to perform my full evening magic show there on January 12, 2012. The show ran two hours, and received a standing ovation from the sold-out auditorium.

I’d like to thank all of you who came to the show. I’ll always remember the electric anticipation you projected as I walked on stage. Looking out at you, I felt anticipation too — like we were creating a historic moment together.

Walking out from the stage door

 

_DSC2436

Making my entrance onto the stage at Carnegie Hall

Throughout my career I’ve always believed that magic has the potential to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with other performing arts, such as ballet, opera and orchestral music. Magic can be more, much more, than a simple diversion. The artistry required to construct and stage a theatrical magic show is on par with the training, thought and creativity required to present other traditional art forms.

My personal goal in staging a magic show at Carnegie Hall was to prove that the art of magic is capable of accepting its due respect, if only we give it the chance. It was immensely satisfying to see that the public supported this belief; the entire theater was sold-out months in advance.

Because I am used to performing for small audiences of 50 people at the Waldorf-Astoria, the nearly 300-seat Weill Recital Hall presented some challenges. I did my best to cross the footlights and reach out to the entire audience, even up to the balcony.

In this blog, I’ve composed a full report of the evening, from my perspective as performer and producer, along with photos taken by David Linsell. (Click any photo to view larger)

Carnegie Poster

Theater of Wonder poster, designed by Darren D’Agostino

HOW THE SHOW WAS CONCEIVED

In November 2010 my dear friend, violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter was visiting New York from Munich. She was in town to perform a series of music concerts at Carnegie Hall. On her off-night, we met up for a drink in the Bull & Bear (at the Waldorf-Astoria) and she asked me, “What’s next? You’ve been performing here for small audiences for many years, and you can keep doing this as long as you wish. But what is next?”

Anne-Sophie told me that a world-class act deserves a world-class stage, and that I should attempt a larger show that could be seen by more people. “After all,” she said, “look at me. I’m performing in Carnegie Hall tomorrow night.”

That comment inspired me to take action, and I immediately contacted my collaborator Mark Levy. I asked him, “Are you in?” He replied, “Without a doubt.”

Fortunately the executives at Carnegie Hall had heard of my Waldorf-Astoria shows, and they were willing to take a meeting with me regarding a potential date. At first they declined my request, insisting that magic shows are not the type of performance that they typically present. My manager Holly Peppe and I had to explain that this was not a Las Vegas style show with animals and explosions, but more of a spoken word performance.

After a great deal of negotiation over the following three months, we decided on a date in the Weill Recital Hall – January 12, 2012.

I had ten months to prepare.

Fast forward to the day of the event…

ARRIVING AT CARNEGIE HALL

A production van picked me up at 3:00pm at my Upper West Side apartment. My father and brother helped load the van with my show equipment, and we arrived at the stage door of Carnegie Hall fifteen minutes later.

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Entering through the stage door on W 56th St.

The stagehands assigned to my show put me at ease right away, and loaded my equipment into a large rolling basket. We entered the service elevator and got off on the third floor.

IMG_0995

Here are some photos from the outside of the hall, taken the day before:

Show poster displayed outside Weill Recital Hall

Show poster displayed outside Weill Recital Hall

Listed on street-level poster

Listed on street-level poster for the month of January 2012

In order to perfect my Carnegie Hall material, I had been rotating the newer routines into my Chamber Magic® shows at the Waldorf for several weeks. Fortunately this gave me a lot of time to practice the newer acts “under fire,” and feel how they fit together as a whole. One week prior to Carnegie, I gave one complete run-through of “Theater of Wonder” at the Friars Club, where I am a member. Nearly two hundred members showed up for that performance, and I had a chance to refine the blocking for the stage show.

Since I am used to working in a smaller setting at the Waldorf week after week, standing on stage at Carnegie Hall was a bit awkward at first. The two hour rehearsal time (from 4 to 6pm) gave me a chance to tread the boards and internalize the space. Performing on a new stage is like trying to cook in somebody else’s kitchen. You reach for a spatula, and it’s not where you expect it to be.

Mark Levy was in the balcony during the rehearsal, shouting out comments as I moved about the stage. By the time the rehearsal was over, the show was blocked and I had a good feeling.

Mark Levy watching my 2 hour rehearsal

Mark Levy watching my 2 hour rehearsal

The stage furniture was all provided by Carnegie Hall, since they have a rigid policy regarding what is and is not allowed on stage. I would have much preferred to use elegant antique wooden tables, but was limited to using institutional tables draped in plain tablecloths. No additional set furniture was permitted. According to the hall contract, all of my props had to be hand-held size, and must start on the tables provided or in my pockets. These are all new rules for me, so we had to accommodate these design parameters during the planning stage.

My four assistants arrived at 6:00pm, so I broke from the rehearsal to meet with them and go over their cues. It was a welcome distraction to meet and joke with them – it took my mind off the performance for a bit. These four young ladies (Bianca Bryan, Jame Rose, Patricia Santomasso, Mary Orzano) have worked with me for years at the Waldorf, so they know my show cold. Speaking to them was like writing in shorthand – they instantly knew what was needed of them, even though the venue was different.

My musical trio also arrived at 6pm. Their names are Lev Ljova Zhurbin (viola), Monica Davis (violin) and Amali Premawardhana (cello). I invited them to play classical music both before and after my performance, as a nod towards the hall’s traditional use, and to acknowledge its original name: Carnegie Chamber Music Hall. Having live music on stage was an important detail; no recording can imitate the impact of hearing talented artists play in person.

WAITING BACKSTAGE

By this point, my mind was hyper-alert, my body surging with positive energy. I became keenly aware of small details: a fleck of dust on my lapel, the shuffling of people’s feet down the hall. The entire show ran through my head — like a fast-forwarded movie  — and as it neared the end I came to the calm conclusion: “I can do this.” I’d trained my entire life for this moment. Planning was no longer necessary. There was nothing else I could do now except go out and perform.

SHOW PHOTOS

Meanwhile back in the lobby, guests were instructed to write the names of their favorite drinks on white index cards and drop their requests into a basket. This activity “tipped off” the fact that I would be performing Think-a-Drink during the show. On their way into the theater, guests received a red envelope and a show program.

Here is the front and back of the program:

Carnegie program front

Carnegie program back

My assistant Bianca Bryan walked on stage from the wings and set my magic teapot onto the rear table. She then stepped forward and announced: “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Theater of Wonder. In the lobby you received a red envelope. Please do not open the envelope until later in the show. We will tell you when to do so. Also, please take this time to silence your cell phone. If it rings during the show, Steve will have to make it disappear! And now it gives me great pleasure to introduce to you… the incredible Steve Cohen.”

Dennis the stage manager opened the door and I made my entrance.

I performed:

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Think-a-Drink

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Think-a-Drink

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Egg in Lemon (same as my Letterman appearance)

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Walnut in Egg (same as my Letterman appearance) – a borrowed ring was inside the walnut

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The Rising Cards

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Lip Reading – a new routine based on a David Berglas idea

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Telepathy Act – reading the minds of audience members throughout the entire theater

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Right before the show finalé

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Thanking the audience before the finalé

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An interactive card trick that everyone could do with me, using cards from the red envelope. The magic happened in their own hands.

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A final bow

The standing ovation from a sold-out audience at Carnegie Hall was a dream come true:

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Here is another view from the rear:

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ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER IN THE AUDIENCE

It was extremely meaningful that Anne-Sophie Mutter flew from Germany to NYC for just one night, before flying back to Europe the next morning. If it weren’t for her inspiration, I would never have even considered this performance in the first place.

Here is a photo of the two of us, with André Previn, and composer Sebastian Currier.

Sir André Previn, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Sebastian Currier, and me

André Previn, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Sebastian Currier, and me

Anne-Sophie told me that she’s performed in Carnegie Hall dozens of times, but she’s never actually walked in through the front door! We both had a laugh at that.

THE AFTERMATH

After greeting the audience, and signing autographs, I took a few photos onstage with my family:

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And with Holly Peppe and Mark Levy:

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I can honestly say that Holly was the driving force behind this evening’s success. There were hundreds of details that required our ongoing attention over the ten-month process leading up to the show; she took them all in stride. No one could have asked for a better, or more patient business partner.

Mark Levy has been my closest friend and adviser over the past twelve years. Everything I do and say on stage has Mark’s brilliant handiwork all over it. Together we make a great team, starting with Chamber Magic®, then Miracles at Midnight, and now Theater of Wonder. He makes me laugh like no one else, and his magic and storytelling skills are my secret weapon.

Before long we were alone among the sea of empty seats and the color, light, music and warmth of the applause were just a memory. My bags packed and loaded, we loaded up the van and I headed uptown.

I slept like a baby that night. A year’s worth of tension and stress melted away and my muscles unwound as if I had spent a week in Hawaii. Decompression at last, but not for long: I had five sold-out Chamber Magic® shows at the Waldorf-Astoria that weekend, starting the very next day!

PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS

Overall, the show was a success, both artistically and financially. I am honored to be among the few magicians in history who have ever appeared in Carnegie Hall. According to my research, other performers of note include: Cardini, Richard Himber, Al Delage, and Kreskin.

I took some risks that didn’t play out as well as I had liked. But I learned from studying the career of the great Chan Canasta that the reward is much greater when you challenge yourself to take risks. At a one-night only event, you can’t repeat any moments – they present themselves, and then slip away. As I perform Theater of Wonder more often, I look forward to playing with these moments and molding them to build even stronger presentations.

The ultimate compliment of the evening was that Clive Gillinson, executive and artistic director of Carnegie Hall, attended the show and loved it. I received an email from his staff the next day saying, “What a resounding success in Weill Recital Hall last night! I hope a return is in order SOON!”

I can foresee another performance at Carnegie Hall in the future. It would be wonderful to start an annual tradition. Time to start working on it!

Weill-RH

The post How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Here’s how. appeared first on Chamber Magic.

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Society of American Magicians’ magazine cover story, November 2011 https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/sam-article/ Tue, 15 Nov 2011 05:35:20 +0000 http://blog.chambermagic.com/?p=4382 How Steve Cohen Got To Carnegie Hall

by Antonio M. Cabral

M-U-M magazine, November 2011

Magicians and secrets have a funny relationship. The normal people who comprise our audiences watch us perform miracles and cannot begin to imagine how a person might learn the requisite techniques and other arcane knowledge to accomplish the impossible. Magicians on the other hand know all about the vast oceans of literature (in print and on film) obsessively detailing and documenting the history and lineage of all these bizarre, clever and wonderful ideas. They know you can walk into a magic shop and buy whatever you like without having to fight a dragon or some other kind of mystic wizard’s trial. They worry that their audiences will run home after watching a performance and look for the explanations on YouTube. The “secrets” are out there, if you care enough and know where to look. And yet, magicians and laymen can look at the same “miracle” and both be mystified—if for different reasons.

For example, many close-up magicians know the story of Max Malini's famous production of a brick or a block of ice from under a hat as recounted by Dai Vernon in Stars of Magic. Vernon was tasked with watching Malini over the course of an evening's dinner performance to try to pin down the little man's sleight-of-hand secrets—in particular the the block-of-ice-under-the-hat trick. Throughout the full evening's meal, Malini never left the table. Malini then proceeded to perform the trick and “…when Malini lifted the hat, a block of ice the size of four fists lay in the center of the table […] Vernon swears to this day that 'The little bugger had no time to load up.'” While the regular audience members wondered how the ice got under the hat, Vernon was dumbfounded as to how the ice got to the table at all. A bribe to the waiter proved unsuccessful, and they never found out from where Malini had procured the ice.

On the other hand, whenever Steve Cohen performs the trick as the opener of his exclusive Miracles At Midnight show, the source of the block of ice is somewhat less of a mystery. The show is his second as part of his residence at the über-opulent Waldorf-Astoria in Manhattan. The kitchen at the Waldorf-Astoria is located on the second floor and takes up the area of a full city block. “They have a huge walk-in freezer, and they've let me have a whole shelf in there just for blocks of ice for this trick. I used to go down myself to fetch the ice, but it gets so cold in that freezer that our arrangement now is that I simply ring down to the kitchen and they run one upstairs for me at the beginning of each show.” Of course. Everything's easy once you know the secret.

But while Steve’s audiences—like Malini’s—are astounded at the appearance of the ice under the hat, magicians marvel at something else. They don’t marvel at how the ice appeared under the hat or how the ice got to the table, but at how Steve Cohen himself has managed to “magically appear” in residence at the Waldorf-Astoria with not one, but two elegant, high-end magic shows—one of which costs $250 per person. For close-up magic! And coming this January, Steve will be premiering a stage show at a local Manhattan venue named Carnegie Hall. Compared to those “miracles”, blocks of ice and bricks under hats might as well be the old stretching thumb trick your uncle does [...]

The post Society of American Magicians’ magazine cover story, November 2011 appeared first on Chamber Magic.

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How Steve Cohen Got To Carnegie Hall

by Antonio M. Cabral

M-U-M magazine, November 2011

What is a true secret? Something that is there for everybody to see—and one recognizes it, the other doesn’t.

—Lao-tse

Magicians and secrets have a funny relationship. The normal people who comprise our audiences watch us perform miracles and cannot begin to imagine how a person might learn the requisite techniques and other arcane knowledge to accomplish the impossible. Magicians on the other hand know all about the vast oceans of literature (in print and on film) obsessively detailing and documenting the history and lineage of all these bizarre, clever and wonderful ideas. They know you can walk into a magic shop and buy whatever you like without having to fight a dragon or some other kind of mystic wizard’s trial. They worry that their audiences will run home after watching a performance and look for the explanations on YouTube. The “secrets” are out there, if you care enough and know where to look. And yet, magicians and laymen can look at the same “miracle” and both be mystified—if for different reasons.

For example, many close-up magicians know the story of Max Malini’s famous production of a brick or a block of ice from under a hat as recounted by Dai Vernon in Stars of Magic. Vernon was tasked with watching Malini over the course of an evening’s dinner performance to try to pin down the little man’s sleight-of-hand secrets—in particular the the block-of-ice-under-the-hat trick. Throughout the full evening’s meal, Malini never left the table. Malini then proceeded to perform the trick and “…when Malini lifted the hat, a block of ice the size of four fists lay in the center of the table […] Vernon swears to this day that ‘The little bugger had no time to load up.’” While the regular audience members wondered how the ice got under the hat, Vernon was dumbfounded as to how the ice got to the table at all. A bribe to the waiter proved unsuccessful, and they never found out from where Malini had procured the ice.

On the other hand, whenever Steve Cohen performs the trick as the opener of his exclusive Miracles At Midnight show, the source of the block of ice is somewhat less of a mystery. The show is his second as part of his residence at the über-opulent Waldorf-Astoria in Manhattan. The kitchen at the Waldorf-Astoria is located on the second floor and takes up the area of a full city block. “They have a huge walk-in freezer, and they’ve let me have a whole shelf in there just for blocks of ice for this trick. I used to go down myself to fetch the ice, but it gets so cold in that freezer that our arrangement now is that I simply ring down to the kitchen and they run one upstairs for me at the beginning of each show.” Of course. Everything’s easy once you know the secret.

But while Steve’s audiences—like Malini’s—are astounded at the appearance of the ice under the hat, magicians marvel at something else. They don’t marvel at how the ice appeared under the hat or how the ice got to the table, but at how Steve Cohen himself has managed to “magically appear” in residence at the Waldorf-Astoria with not one, but two elegant, high-end magic shows—one of which costs $250 per person. For close-up magic! And coming this January, Steve will be premiering a stage show at a local Manhattan venue named Carnegie Hall. Compared to those “miracles”, blocks of ice and bricks under hats might as well be the old stretching thumb trick your uncle does…

Steve Cohen card shower

“I remember once hearing one of my younger brothers telling his girlfriend my story […]—I was born, I was talented, I got into piano, I had this neat place and I worked with Miles Davis. He left out this GIANT part which was the STRUGGLE!”—Keith Jarrett

Steve Cohen’s success is unparalleled. His client list reads like a listing from Forbes—in large part, because it IS. Then there’s his residence at the Waldorf-Astoria, where he performs two elegant and exquisite evening shows of classical parlor conjuring. Chamber Magic is his now well-known, eleven-year-running weekend parlor show, and since 2010 he’s added Miracles At Midnight, a $250-a-head evening of close-up performed only once a month and billed as “The World’s Most Exclusive Magic Show”. And like many of magic’s great secrets, the secret to Steve’s success is hidden in print. He’s detailed much of the story of his journey from young birthday party magician to The Millionaire’s Magician in his 2008 Genii Magazine cover feature, his interviews with The Magic Newswire website, and his own book for the lay public, Win The Crowd. And Steve still receives enough emails from eager magicians wanting to set up residence performing at swanky hotels (because “it worked for THAT guy!”) that last year he put a very frank post up on his Chamber Magic Blog addressing these emails in general. It’s titled, “How NOT to start your own one-man show” . And in it, he explains some of the secrets to his success.

Put in magician’s terms, Steve’s success at the Waldorf-Astoria boils down to a lot of “pre-show work”. While his identity as The Millionaire’s Magician is a relatively recent creation, he got his very first experience performing for the “upper crust” at age 17, performing for the Rockefeller family on their estate. During his four years living in Japan, his connections made from attending Cornell led to him performing weekly at the 5-star Park Hyatt Tokyo. He was already an experienced and successful performer when he decided, with the help of his creative partner Mark Levy, to reinvent himself and his repertoire as “The Millionaire’s Magician”. He’d already had an act when he decided to put together his first Chamber Magic shows. He’d already been performing his Chamber Magic show every week for many months in other venues before approaching the Waldorf-Astoria. Also, by his own admission, it took two years of self-support and losing money on the show, and three or four before he’d proven the show successful enough to the hotel that they began to help promote him. So, in the same way a mentalist can point to any random audience member and appear to instantly pluck their secrets from their mind, Steve Cohen is an “overnight sensation”. Easy, when you know the secret. No one can simply waltz into the Waldorf-Astoria and put on a magic show, anymore than one can really pluck thoughts from people’s brains

And Steve’s not the only one tipping his mitt on the Internet. Marketing guru Seth Godin, on his own blog, put together a succinct-yet-insightful five-point list of how Steve has achieved the success he has (“Giving away a magician’s secrets”). Points One, Two, and Four are savvy marketing skills. Number Five on that list is “He’s very good at his craft. Don’t overlook this point.” And while Chamber Magic and Steve’s existence as “The Millionaire’s Magician” are very much the result of intelligent and  focused marketing efforts, when all is said and done sustaining that image involves being a consummate performer. When you watch Steve perform, it’s impossible to overlook the fact that he’s very good at his craft. He ought to be by this point; he’s been performing magic professionally since the age of 10, is a veteran of Tannen’s Magic Camp, and has performed his Chamber Magic show alone by his own estimation over three thousand times. If you watch closely, you can see all of that experience manifest in his three shows: Chamber Magic, Miracles at Midnight, and the brand-new, upcoming Theater of Wonder.

Chamber Magic

When Steve set about creating Chamber Magic, he’d already had to reinvent his repertoire to fit his image as The Millionaire’s Magician. Tricks he’d been performing successfully for years got retired as Steve now focused on tricks that spoke to wealth and affluence—tricks with real diamonds, $100 bills, gold…your standard everyday household items. When the time came to create Chamber Magic, he knew he wanted to create an evening of elegant, refined magic that harkened back to the Viennese salons—a stylistic choice that was a good fit in the venues he aspired to and spoke as much to the “lifestyles of the rich and famous” as any choice of props. More importantly, thought, Steve knew what kind of show he didn’t want to do.

Around the time Steve was conceiving Chamber Magic, his friends were telling him about the great success Ricky Jay was having with his evening show, Ricky Jay and His 52 Assistants, an evening of nothing but card tricks. Without even seeing the show, Steve immediately knew that trying to launch a similar evening of only card tricks would invite inevitable comparisons—“apples to apples”—and Steve wanted to offer something exclusive and unique. While Chamber Magic does open with a selection of flourishy sleight-of-hand with cards, once he’s established his skill Steve deliberately moves away from sleight-of-hand. While 52 Assistants wears its sleight-of-hand on its sleeve, Steve wanted a show of close-up and parlor magic seemingly devoid of any sleight-of-hand whatsoever.

On the other side of that coin, while Chamber Magic features some very powerful mental magic, Steve didn’t want a full evening of mentalism, either. He’s not a mentalist; he’s a magician who can read minds. So the show would ultimately be a fine-tuned mix of prestidigitation (like the opening card tricks and the Malini Ice Under The Hat) and more inexplicable mysteries (linking wedding bands, an astounding presentation of the Rising Cards, and the aforementioned feats of mind reading). The program states that the show begins with “Precision technique which has no equal” and ends with “An enigma of the highest order”. A well-crafted crescendo of effect to be sure—but it doesn’t stop there.

Rising cards final2

Point Number Three on Seth Godin’s list is “He intentionally creates an experience that is remarkable and likely to spread.” Thanks to Steve’s decades of experience as a performer, Chamber Magic was designed with that idea firmly in mind. Steve recalls a conversation with Jeff McBride about what an audience wants to take away from a performance of magic. “His answer was they want to be able to say ‘It happened to ME!’” In Chamber Magic, Steve manages to squeeze every drop of audience involvement out of his act—not just participation, but involvement. Take for example one of the opening effects, a bit of mind-reading with cards. Steve has someone from the audience remove a handful of cards from a shuffled deck and proceeds to divine each and every card one-at-a-time as the audience concentrates on them. Where most performers would perform this with a single person while the rest of the audience looks on, Steve has the first person focus on a card, divines it, then has that person pass the cards to another member of the audience. This continues until all the cards have been divined. While the normal audience marvels at how he could possibly know what card they’re each thinking of, the real trick is getting each audience member to think, “I could be next!” Even the initial shuffling is done not by one, but by several members of the audience. Magicians like to refer to their audience members as “spectators”. Steve recognizes the importance of not allowing his audiences to simply “spectate”.

This thinking permeates the entire evening’s performance. For his signature performance of Think-A-Drink, each and every member of the audience writes down their favorite drink. Even though only five or six drinks are eventually poured, the entire audience of fifty or more people feels like their drink of choice could have been next. In a recent performance on tour at the Beverly Wilshire hotel in 2010, Jason Segel (of How I Met Your Mother, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and The Muppets) assisted Steve with Think-A-Drink. He was offered any choice of drink, with every opportunity to change his mind, and when Steve began pouring the chosen drinks, the 6’ 4” comedian’s reactions were as loud and boisterous as any he’s delivered on TV or in film—and genuine. And that’s the whole idea: to make the audience feel like they could’ve dictated the outcome—”that they could’ve affected the show.”

Jason Segel small

Another key factor to the way audiences experience Chamber Magic is laughter. Steve’s rule of thumb is that every couple of minutes (if not once-a-minute) there needs to be a laugh of some kind. Not knock-down, fall-over-yourself comedy—because that’s not Steve. But Steve finds that some kind of laugh or joke along the way helps everyone to relax and enjoy the experience with each other. By the time he gets to the end of a performance and is into the finale—his version of Juan Tamariz’s Total Coincidence—he asks the audience, ‘Should I STOP, or CONTINUE?’. In the performance I attended, everyone was laughing and shouting together ‘CONTINUE!’ “It really brings the whole audience together.”

Even the strict dress code is in place to enhance the experience. “When people have to get dressed up for an evening out, it makes them feel like they’re experiencing something special. Even the trip through the Waldorf-Astoria to the suite where I perform gives the feeling of something unique. Everyone feels like they’re sharing something important.”

It’s this kind of thinking that’s allowed Chamber Magic to enjoy a very successful eleven-year run, one Steve plans to extend to twenty, and then retire the show. He’s only mentioned that part in a few places, but from the beginning that’s been Steve’s plan for the show—a forward piece of thinking that will no doubt leave a few folks disappointed in nine years.

Miracles At Midnight

What more could any magician ask for beyond a show as distinctive and successful as Chamber Magic? Where does one go beyond the penthouse? Enter Miracles At Midnight. In 2009, David Kaye (aka Silly Billy) went to see Steve’s Chamber Magic show. After viewing Steve’s performance, David’s business sense for all things magic kicked in, and he made the suggestion that Steve ought to have “a luxury show” to offer his clients. After the high-end experience of Chamber Magic, what could possibly count as a “luxury show”? “This was in the middle of a recession!” But Steve liked the idea, and the result was Miracles At Midnight.

Miracles at Midnight logo

Performed only once a month in the Waldorf Towers, Miracles At Midnight is an exclusive, expensive, and late evening of intimate miracles. Where Chamber Magic is a parlor-style performance for a typical audience of 40–50 people, Miracles At Midnight allows Steve to indulge in his love for close-up magic for an audience of no more than twenty. “Because of the high price [$250 a ticket], the size of the audience is smaller than Chamber Magic, so I get to do the kind of close-up tricks I love but that don’t quite fit into Chamber Magic.” This includes items familiar to most magicians like Coins Across, and the Newspaper Tear. Speaking about the Newspaper Tear, Steve was initially reluctant to include the routine because of its popularity with other performers (again, avoiding the “apples to apples” comparisons), “…but the reactions it gets are too strong! It’s such a powerful trick.” Steve combines these more intimate tricks with some favorites from Chamber Magic. And like Chamber Magic, the key to justifying the $250 per ticket for Miracles At Midnight is creating a unique experience for all involved. To that end, another feature of this show not found in Chamber Magic is a segment where the audience is invited to bring up their own belongings and personal items, whereupon Steve performs miracles with those very items. Of course, to really “improvise” would risk doing something less-than-spectacular, and Steve will not let that happen. “It has the feeling of improvisation, like I’m making up the tricks on the spot. Of course, certain objects trigger certain tricks for me, like a jazz musician follows the chords and has certain ‘licks’ and can always come back to the form of the song. But for the audience it’s like I’m creating something for the first time, right in front of their eyes.” Steve also notes that most audiences tend to offer up the same objects (keys, jewlery, etc.), so he never has to worry about being confronted with anything particularly bizarre or unusual.

Which is not to say spontaneity doesn’t rear its head on occasion. On one such occasion, one of Steve’s guests was Dr. Ruth Westheimer. For the “improvisational” part of the show she offered a tube of lipstick. Steve proceeded with a trick similar to the Ashes On The Palm that he does whenever someone offers lipstick. With a twinkle in his eye, Steve asked the noted sex therapist, “Dr. Ruth, I’d like to perform something called a ‘penetration effect’. Would you like to see that?” Which of course delighted both Dr. Ruth and the rest of the audience no end.

Dr Ruth and Steve Cohen

Far from being prohibitive, the price tag and exclusive nature of Miracles At Midnight have attracted an equally high-end audience. Noted conductor and pianist André Previn celebrated his 80th birthday in attendance at Miracles At Midnight. Whenever people bring up the late start time of the show, Steve tells them that an eighty-year-old man came and stayed awake through the whole night—and enjoyed himself.

Theater of Wonder

Where does one go beyond the penthouse? In January 2012, Steve will debut Theater of Wonder at Carnegie Hall. The story behind the inception of this new show is in many ways a textbook example of the world Steve has created for himself, although again, as a “secret” there’s not much to it.

Carnegie Poster

One of Steve’s clients, patrons, and good friends is renown classical violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter. The September 2008 Genii Magazine cover feature on Steve recounts how, at a private performance in Switzerland, Steve followed his staple performance of the Himber Linking Finger Rings by linking a violin bow onto the strings of a violin and presenting the object to Ms. Mutter as a souvenir. This is how fast friendships are made. In 2010, the two were having lunch and Ms. Mutter stated that she firmly believed that, as someone she considers a “world-class artist”, Steve should have a much wider audience. She pointed out to him that while he could certainly stick to his 20-year plan and continue to enjoy success, it wouldn’t allow him to grow as an artist. Her advice? “Think BIG!” And by way of example, she pointed out “Look at me: I’m playing Carnegie Hall tomorrow night.” Rather than wonder what he could accomplish that as big as playing Carnegie Hall, Steve took her literally. “I called my creative partner Mark Levy and said, ‘I want to play Carnegie Hall. Are you in?’ He said, ‘Absolutely.’”

(Steve is actually no stranger to Carnegie Hall. He’s performed there several times before—backstage. Whenever Anne-Sophie Mutter has played there, she’s invited Steve to perform for her guests after the concert upstairs in the Maestro’s Suite.)

Mutter Cohen Waldorf

Of course, no one simply walks into Carnegie Hall and starts performing magic—any more than they can simply walk into the Waldorf=Astoria and put on a magic show. Luckily, through his performances Steve had a contact at Carnegie Hall who arranged for them to tour the facility to get a feel for the venue. First step was to head to the main stage—the Perelman Stage in the Stern Auditorium. This is the stage people picture when they picture Carnegie Hall, open since 1891 and seating 2,804 people. Mark walked out into the center of the house and Steve walked to center stage. Once in place, Steve held up a playing card. “It looked like a postage stamp.” It became readily apparent that the sheer size of the hall would present significant problems for a performer used to working in more intimate venues. “2,800 is all right, but those last four are on their own!” Moreover, Carnegie Hall won’t allow any performer to hang projection monitors to aid visibility, killing the possibilities for any kind of close-up material.

Carnegie Hall also has strict regulations governing what performers are allowed to do on stage. Nothing can be done with fire, nothing with livestock—which would kill 90% of most large Vegas-style illusion shows. Most restrictive for Steve: nothing with liquid. That means while Steve could have a bottle of water with him onstage, his signature performance of Think-A-Drink gets left behind in the suite at the Waldorf. If all this sounds like an opportunity to dust off the Zig-Zag and the Substitution Trunk and hire some of the Rockettes to get sawn in half, consider that any and all onstage assistants would need to be provided by the union, which would drive the cost of the show up nearly $400,000. That’s a vastly expensive difference for a man who’s made his world-class reputation as a one-man show.

It would be tempting for any performer to reconsider, give up and try to find another venue more accommodating to the magician’s repertoire. However, any other venue isn’t Carnegie Hall. In truth, Steve did reconsider and find another venue, and that venue was…Carnegie Hall. Carnegie Hall features three stages: the aforementioned Perelman Stage, the more recently-built Zankel Hall and the Weill Recital Hall. The Zankel Hall was constructed in 2003 and seats 600—a more manageable size, but built in a more modern, austere “shoebox” style. It’s a beautiful hall for a modern jazz performance, but it doesn’t say “Chamber Magic”. The Weill Recital Hall, on the other hand, seats 300 while looking like a miniature version of the Stern Auditorium. With gilt-accented columns, ornate drapery, and crystal wall sconces, not only is it exactly the sort of backdrop Steve is accustomed to, at 300 seats it’s also an audience size he’s performed for many times before. Suddenly, the daunting expanse of Carnegie Hall becomes an almost bespoke fit for Steve’s brand of Victorian-flavored, classical conjuring. (Note: if you’re interested in “touring” the various spaces for yourself, carnegiehall.org offers virtual 360º panoramic views of each of the three different spaces that allow you to scroll around if you were standing right in the middle of the halls themselves.)

Now that he was comfortable in the space, what would Steve put into this new show? Steve is understandably reticent about the contents of the new show, but one thing it definitely will be is entirely new. He’s still contractually subject to the same performance restrictions, so Think-A-Drink is still out. There will be some mind reading (a strong way to play to a large audience), but again Steve does not want to mount a full-evening’s performance of mentalism. So for the first time in a number of years he gets to create a wholly new show. With 11 years of performing Chamber Magic, though, Steve feels he has a terrific advantage in envisioning the shape, rhythm, and flow of a succesful show. In fact, he’s managed to devise a unique framework for Theater of Wonder, running from the beginning moments of the show, providing a connecting thread for all the effects and culminating in a truly grand finale. On top of which, it draws from all aspect’s of Steve’s experience, resulting in a very personal presentation. Steve told me that when the idea came to him and he fleshed it out, he was so excited by it that he actually jumped up and down. For now, though, until Theater of Wonder debuts in January, the details remain…a secret. But not for long after, as with a 300-seat capacity and a 30,000-person mailing list, Steve fully expects the show to be sold out by the time this article sees publication. But the plan afterward, if the show proves successful, is for Steve to tour with the show, cross-promoting the stage show with performances of Chamber Magic in suitable venues in different cities.

The secrets of Steve Cohen’s success aren’t all that secret. Then again, they’re not all that easy. Like the most difficult sleight-of-hand, the “answer” may be simple, but only after years of  experience, dedication, and attention to detail. There’s a  joke that’s likely been in the mind of every reader since they started reading this article. It’s a joke about Carnegie Hall that scientists have proven to be older than the hall itself:

A man gets into a cab in New York City and asks the driver, “How do I get to Carnegie Hall?”

The cab driver replies, “Practice!”

It shouldn’t surprise anyone that after years of success, Steve will find himself onstage at Carnegie Hall. And he should do well. After all, he’s had plenty of practice.

The post Society of American Magicians’ magazine cover story, November 2011 appeared first on Chamber Magic.

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Performing for astronaut Buzz Aldrin, my childhood hero https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/buzz-aldrin/ Mon, 17 Oct 2011 05:31:45 +0000 http://blog.chambermagic.com/?p=4138 Buzz Aldrin after my performance in New York: "I used to think Saturn V was a miracle. But your show - this was a real miracle."

I performed magic last week for NASA astronaut Buzz Aldrin and a fascinating group of space tourism supporters.

Buzz let me use his ring for one of my tricks - the ring HE WORE ON THE MOON!

Without a doubt, that experience trumps all the other notable rings I've borrowed in the past, including a Super Bowl ring, and Ellen Barkin's wedding ring.

I still can't get over it. I held the ring Buzz Aldrin wore while walking on the moon. And he let me use it in my show. What an honor.

After the show he also allowed me [...]

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Buzz Aldrin after my performance in New York: “I used to think Saturn V was a miracle. But your show – this was a real miracle.”

I performed magic last week for NASA astronaut Buzz Aldrin and a fascinating group of space tourism supporters.

Buzz let me use his ring for one of my tricks – the ring HE WORE ON THE MOON!

Without a doubt, that experience trumps all the other notable rings I’ve borrowed in the past, including a Super Bowl ring, and Ellen Barkin’s wedding ring.

I still can’t get over it. I held the ring Buzz Aldrin wore while walking on the moon. And he let me use it in my show. What an honor.

Here’s a photo of Buzz’s ring magically linked together with two other guests’ rings. (It’s the large signet ring at the bottom)

Buzz Aldrin ring chain

And here’s a photo right at the moment one of the rings is unlinking:

Buzz open mouth

After the show he also allowed me a look at his watch – a beautiful Omega Deville Chronoscope. He wore a different model Omega watch on the moon, but he said that, frankly, knowing the time in Houston while standing on the surface of the moon was somewhat pointless!

Here’s a snapshot I took of Buzz Aldrin’s watch. Now I want one too…

Buzz Watch

The event was held in the Charles Bank gallery, and the waitstaff were dressed in spacesuits, serving food and cocktails. I thought the costumes were a great touch.

photo[4]

The gallery show presented artwork that was exhibited in space (in the International Space Station), inspired by space, or even created in space (by videogame designer and space tourist Richard Garriott).

Here’s a photo of Richard Garriott when he came to visit me at the Waldorf about two years ago.

Richard Garriott

 

These are patches he gave me from his trip to the International Space Station. They are identical to the patches that he wore on his spacesuit. Note the Russian writing, since he was in the station with Russian cosmonauts.

Garriott patches

Last year Richard invited me to Brittania Manor, his unbelievable house in Austin, Texas which is a labyrinth full of curious artifacts. It even has secret rooms and hidden passageways as shown in this 10-minute video.

 

I had a blast touring Richard’s house, and looking through his extensive magic and automata collections.

Finally, here is the classic Buzz Aldrin photo from July 1969 that is indelibly printed in my mind – the Apollo 11 moonwalk. This image inspired me as a child, and now that I’ve met the man inside the spacesuit, it leaves me even more awestruck.

 

Aldrin_Apollo_11_original

 

 

 

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Derren Brown’s lovely comments https://dev.chambermagic.com/blog/derren-brown-comments/ Fri, 27 May 2011 03:17:36 +0000 http://blog.chambermagic.com/?p=3554 "Aside from his success, it is Steve Cohen's charm and elegance which separate him from all but a tiny elite of world-class magicians. However, Steve is the only magician from that elite and highly-select group to take his show to an elite and highly-select audience. It is a true one-off: an intimate caprice of parlour diversion by an enthralling and consummate master."

-Derren Brown

I also dug out an old photo of Derren with my wife and children [...]

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“Aside from his success, it is Steve Cohen’s charm and elegance which separate him from all but a tiny elite of world-class magicians. However, Steve is the only magician from that elite and highly-select group to take his show to an elite and highly-select audience. It is a true one-off: an intimate caprice of parlour diversion by an enthralling and consummate master.”

-Derren Brown

I also dug out an old photo of Derren with my wife and children, when we visited London in 2005 for the Magic Circle Centenary celebration. This photo was taken at a Chinese restaurant. Even back then, Derren was getting approached at our table by fans seeking his autograph or a photo. He was/is so gracious with his fans.

Chinese Restaurant

I’m looking forward to catching up with my dear friend Derren again during my next trip to London – hopefully this fall, for a series of performances at a high-end hotel in London.

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