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Hugard's Annual Of Magic 1937
Jean Hugard

Hugard's Annual Of Magic 1937

Max Holden (1937)
10

Genre

  • Conjuring

Subject

  • Magic tricks

Plot

Hugard, Jean: Hugard's Annual of Magic 1937
©1937 Max Holden
Hardcover, 142 pages

Comments: Illustrations by Nelson Hahne

Contents:

7 Foreword
8 Contents

11 Cigars and Cigarettes
11 Cigar Manipulation
14 Swallowing a Cigar and Reproduction from Vest
15 Pouring a Smoke
17 Just a Cigarette Paper
18 The Cigarette Paper Torn and Restored
20 A Cigarette Routine
20 - Cigarette From an Empty Paper
21 - Multiplication of Cigarettes
23 Max Holden's Routine With the Diestel Cigarette Dropper
24 Vanish of Cigarettes From a Glass
26 The Cigarette Rising From a Packet
27 Magnetized Cigarettes

29 Miscellaneous
29 The Bill In the Envelope (Bill O'Conner)
30 Ashes!
31 Ashes Second Method
31 Thimble and Trumpet
33 Impromptu Newspaper Tearing

37 Coins
37 The Flying Coins
40 Vanish of Coin From Trousers Fold (Jess Kelly and L.L. Ireland)

42 Cards
42 Do As I Do - You Can't
43 Magician Vs. Gambler
44 Touch (Paul Curry)
48 Touch (R.M. Jamison)
50 G.W. Hunter's Twelve Card Transposition (Max Holden)
52 The Knockk Out Card Trick (Sam Horowitz)
55 Leon Maguire's Card Force
57 Pack of Cards Changed to a Silk Foulard

60 Silks
60 Silks and Soup Plates
62 The Knot in the Silk (Rex Slocombe)
62 G.W. Hunter's Silk Routine (Max Holden)

65 Billiard Balls
65 Two Billiard Ball Moves (Jean Hugard)
66 Billiard Ball Change Over
67 The Limit Multiplying Billiard Balls
71 Passage of Four Balls From Hand to Hand
74 Production of Four Solid Billiard Balls Without Using a Shell
75 An Egg Production Climax

78 Some Useful Gimmicks
78 The Premier Silk Gimmick (Joseph Maynard)
79 A Card Holder
80 Billiard Ball Shell with Tongue
81 The Lozenge Vanish for a Billiard Ball
81 New Card Index
83 Torn and Restored Paper Strip Gimmick (Fred Rothenberg)

85 The Short and Simple Annals of the Poor - Impromptu Tricksters
85 Impromptu Linking Ring
86 A Cigarette Interlude
87 A Cigar Vanish
88 A Match Divination
89 The Knee Thread
91 Wand Through Hat
92 Somersaulting a Pack of Cards
93 A Rising Card
94 Egg Cups and Pellets
95 Knife and Egg Shell
96 A Surgical Operation
97 Concussion of the Brain
98 Shot in the Eye
99 Cutting the Thumb
100 The Hugard Method Floating Ball
107 Fire Eating
114 Hindu Fire Eating
115 The Whole Art of Smoke Pictures (Max Holden)
117 - An Original Double Picture Effect

121 Ropes, Fans and Silks
123 Cords, Fan and Silks Variation
126 XXth Century Spirit Séance
129 Production of Real Cannon-Balls and Metal Bar-Bell (Owen Clark)
131 Walking Through a String of Beads
134 Hugard's Bullet Catching - The Great Rifle Feat
142 Advertisements: Encyclopedia of Card Tricks, Other Publications

2nd of 2 copies

Personal

Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Location Magic Library (Home)
Quantity 0
Index 4699
Added Date Jul 01, 2017 03:06:49
Modified Date Apr 06, 2026 14:22:41

Value

Book Condition Very Fine

Notes

Jean Hugard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born Jean Hugard
4 December 1871
Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia
Died 14 August 1959 (aged 87)
Occupation Professional magician
Known for Card magic, sleight of hand
Jean Hugard (4 December 1871 – 14 August 1959) was an Australian professional magician and author, often co-writing with Frederick Braue. Among his better known works are the books The Royal Road to Card Magic, Encyclopedia of Card Tricks, and Expert Card Technique.

History
Hugard was born John Gerard Rodney Boyce in Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia, the third son of John Alexander Boyce and Anne Brown. Educated at Toowoomba Grammar School, later he joined the staff of the Queensland National bank. After a late start and from a completely non-theatrical background he rose to become one of the world's great stage magicians, often dubbed the Dean of Magicians, and the last of a trio (Robert-Houdin, Hoffman, Hugard) of famed authors on the art of legerdemain.

Over the course of his life, he performed as Oscar Kellmann, Chin Sun Loo, Ching Ling Foo, and Jean Hugarde. He was inspired in 1880 by seeing a Haselmayer show. He eventually began his professional career in 1896.[1]

In 1898, Gerard left the bank, and with several partners founded Burketown's Endeavour Meatworks (producing tinned beef) to solve the problem of getting Gulf Country cattle to market. The venture was a roaring success for several years, however drought, economic recession and some lack of expertise in the art of tinning ruined the meatworks venture, and Gerard returned to Toowoomba to a series of temporary jobs, including a stint as secretary of the Toowoomba General Hospital. In that capacity he organised entertainments to raise funds, including himself on the bill as an increasingly expert conjurer.[2]

He left his wife, Margaret Annie Griffiths, and at least two sons, Leslie and Colin, to move to the U.S. in 1916.[3] He worked in vaudeville from 1916 until 1918. One of his feature attractions then was "Birth of the Sea Nymph."

One of his full evening shows presented on tour in Australia and New Zealand was a silent Chinese act. He also was known for his bullet catch routine he called "The Great Rifle Feat". He was the first to present it with modern-day guns at the time.

He owned and performed in a magic theater in Luna Park (at Coney Island) from 1919–1929. He also appeared in a Broadway Show in 1928 at the Forrest Theater called "The Squealer."

When he retired from performing, he moved to Brooklyn to write and edit magic publications. He wrote more than 30 books on magic. Upon the death of John Northern Hilliard, who had written about 50 percent of his book Greater Magic, a lot of manuscript was left to be completed. Carl Waring Jones, who had contracted for its publication, hired Jean Hugard in 1938 to complete and enlarge the text to over 1,000 pages. The book went on to become a standard textbook of magic, which author Henry Hay called "one of the best and largest books ever written about magic."[citation needed]

He was editor of Hugard's Magic Monthly starting in 1943. He was also named the fourth ever Society of American Magicians, Dean of Magicians in 1951.[1] Near the end of his life, Hugard was blind, having lost the sight of both eyes following operations for the removal of cataracts. In spite of this handicap he continued to work in the magic field at his home in Brooklyn, NY.

He died in the United States in 1959 at the age of 87 and was known far and wide as The Great Hugard. The New York Herald Tribune published a double-column obituary with photograph – the sort of space usually reserved for statesman or movie stars.

Publications
Card Manipulations N° 1 & 2 (1933)
Card Manipulations N° 3 (1934)
Card Manipulations N° 4 (1935)
Mental Magic with Cards (1935)
Coin Magic (1935)
Card Manipulations N° 5 (1936)
Thimble Magic (1936)
Encyclopedia of Card Tricks (1937) (editor; with J. J. Crimmins)
Money Magic (1937)
Silken Sorcery (1937)
Close-up Magic (1938)
More Card Manipulations N° 1 (1938)
More Card Manipulations N° 2 (1939)
Modern Magic Manual (1939) (introduction by Julien Proskauer)
More Card Manipulations N° 3 (1940)
More Card Manipulations N° 4 (1941)
Sealed Mysteries of Pocket Magic (1943)
Expert Card Technique (1940) (with Frederick Braue)
The Stripper Deck - Miracle Methods No. 1 (1941) (with Frederick Braue)
Miracle Shuffles and Tricks - Miracle Methods No. 2 (1942) (with Frederick Braue)
Prepared Cards and Accessories - Miracle Methods No. 3 (1942) (with Frederick Braue)
Tricks and Sleights - Miracle Methods No. 4 (1943) (with Frederick Braue)
The Invisible Pass (1946) (with Frederick Braue)
Show Stoppers with Cards (1948) (with Frederick Braue)
Royal Road to Card Magic (1948) (with Frederick Braue)
Houdini's "Unmasking": Fact Vs. Fiction (1957)
Biographies

Alfredson, James (1997). Jean Hugard. David Meyer Magic Books. ISBN 0-916638-84-7. (1997) - Looks at the life and career of an accomplished magician who worked during the 1930s and 1940s, and his influence on the performance of magic during his day.
Awards and honors
Selected to the Society of American Magicians Hall of Fame.
Magic Circle's highest award, the Silver Wand
"Milbourne Christopher Award," a plaque that Walt Rollins gave each year in the memory of his son Chipper, to the magician who has done most in the advancement of "brotherly love."
International Brotherhood of Magicians Ring 136 (Brisbane, Australia) is named in his honor.
International Brotherhood of Magicians honorary life member
See also
List of magicians
References
"Card Trick Magicians - Jean Hugard".
"Jean Hugard – a name to conjure with". Toowoomba Chronicle. 26 November 1990.
Alfredson, James (1997). Jean Hugard. Glenwood, Illinois: David Meyer Magic Books. p. 18–19. ISBN 0-916638-84-7.
External links
See more about Jean Hugard at MagicPedia, the free online Magic encyclopedia.
Works by or about Jean Hugard at the Internet Archive
Jean Hugard Biography
What the hell was Hugard thinking?
Jean Hugard on the Pass
Hugard & Braue: Royal Road to Card Magic table of contents