Notes
Eric C. Lewis
(Northampton, England: 23rd November 1908 - 6th June 1993)
Inspired at age 11 seeing a busker. Semi-pro to pro magician. Aka "Yung Lu" 1936-39. Operated Magikraft Studios, a small workshop in Northampton making small apparatus 1946-52 when switched to mechanical display work. Aka "The Great Zonzo" 1952-60. Moved to California in 1968. With Jim Simon of Worth Magic Novelty Company in Sun Valley 1968-70; in own workshop 1970-72, as builder for Hollywood Magic, Albo, and Mark Wilson; worked on Robert Albo's apparatus collection in Oakland 1972-73; again with Simon 1973-75; with John Gaughan and Associates in Los Angeles 1975-81 when retired from active public performing. Thence busy as consultant, lecturer, researcher, and writer. SAM Hall of Fame. Father of Martin Lewis.
AMA Best Stage Magician 1970 (shared) and 1975. 1974 AMA Literary Fellowship. 1985 AMA Masters Fellowship. 1985 SAM Hall of Fame. 1989 H. Adrian Smith Literary Award (shared with Peter Warlock).
Invented Fantastic Frame (1940), co-invented (with Cyro) Lighted Bulbs from Mouth (1941), and the Twister illusion (1978). Prolific author (21 books), including Well I Never! (1931), Magical Mentality (1934), Magic As We Do It (1935, 28pp, with Dan Bellman), The Magic of 1936 (1936, with Dan Bellman), The Magic of 1937 (1937, 73pp), Magic for Moderns (1937, 39pp), Studies in Mystery (1941, 35pp), More Studies in Mystery (1941, 41pp), Modus Operandi (1943, 67+142pp), Magic to Entertain (1946, 72pp), Open Sesame (1947, 154pp, with Wilfred Tyler; repr 1968), Opus Thirteen (1951, 110pp; repr 1969), The Oriental Magic of the Bambergs, Vol.1 (1973, 228pp, with Albo and Bamberg), Martin's Miracles (1985), and P.T. Selbit (1989, with Peter Warlock). Edited (with Tony Branson) Personality Patter 1943-46 (30 issues) and The Masque as house organ 1947-48 (2 issues).
Memoir is Fifty Years of Magic (3 vols: 1980, 1981, 1983, 213+254+237pp), informally known from their subtitles as "The Miracles Trilogy". Illustrator of his own books as well as those by others. Wrote over 200 articles for various magazines including Abra, Genii, and Linking Ring.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Eric C. Lewis
Jump to navigationJump to search
Eric C. Lewis
Eric and Martin Lewis
Born Eric Charles Lewis
November 23, 1908
Northampton near London, England
Died June 06, 1993 (age 84)
Orange
Categories Books by Eric C. Lewis
Eric C. Lewis (b.1908-d.1993) was a British-born illusion builder who emigrated to the United States.[1]
Contents
1 Biography
2 Awards
3 Books
4 References
Biography
His best known creation is the Diminishing Silk Production. He founded the MagiCraft Magic Manufacturing Co. He also worked with illusion builder John Gaughan before his retirement.
He authored over 20 books.
His son Martin Lewis carries on the magic tradition.
Awards
The Academy of Magical Arts voted him Stage Magician of the Year twice, honored him with a Literary Fellowship and in 1985 awarded him the Masters Fellowship.
Books
Well I Never! (1931)
Magical Mentality (1935)
Magic As We Do It (1935) (with Dan Bellman)
The Magic of 1936 (1936)
The Magic of 1937 (1937)
Magic for Moderns (1937)
Studies in Mystery (1941)
More Studies in Mystery (1941)
Further Studies in Mystery (1944)
Modus Operandi (1944)
Magic To Entertain (1947)
Open Sesame (1947) (with Wilfred Tyler)
Opus Thirteen (1951)
Eric Lewis’ Rope Routine (The Triple Cut Rope Routine) (1969)
A Choice of Miracles (1980)
A Continuation of Miracles (1981)
The Crowning Miracles (1983)
Martin's Miracles (1985)
The Berg Book (1983) (with David Avadon)
P.T. Selbit: Magical Innovator (1989) (with Peter Warlock)
The Genius of Robert Harbin (1997) (with Mike Caveney)
References
↑ Genii 1975 June (cover with son Martin Lewis)
Genii 1969 October (cover)
The Linking Ring, Vol. 61, No. 12, December 1981, Memoirs Of A Magician's Ghost, by John Booth, CHAPTER 164 – Meet Freddy The Bear's Boss, page 53
The Linking Ring, Vol. 73, No. 8, August 1993, Broken Wand, ERIC C. LEWIS, November 23, 1908 – June 6, 1993, page 107
The Linking Ring, Vol. 74, No. 9, September 1994, Memoirs of a Magician's Ghost, by John Booth, CHAPTER 285 – Tarbell's Death, Dr. Gloye's Reminiscences and Eric Lewis' Legacy, page 70
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert Harbin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born
Ned Williams
14 February 1909
Balfour, South Africa
Died
12 January 1978 (aged 68)
Westminster, London, England
Robert Harbin (born Ned Williams 14 February 1909 Balfour, South Africa - 12 January 1978 Westminster, London, England [1]) was a British magician and writer. He is noted as the inventor of a number of classic illusions, including the Zig Zag Girl. He also became an authority on origami.
Contents
1 Career
2 Bibliography 2.1 On origami
2.2 On magic
2.3 Other subjects
3 References
4 Further reading
5 External links
Career
The young Ned Williams first got interested in magic after an unknown ex-serviceman appeared at his school with a magic show later described as "rather poor".[2] Williams came to London at the age of 20 and began by working in the magic department of Gamages toy shop.[3] He began performing in music halls under the title "Ned Williams, the Boy Magician from South Africa".[2] By 1932 he was appearing in the Maskelyne's Mysteries magic show in various London theatres.[4] He was the first British illusionist to move from stage performing to television, appearing in the BBC TV show Variety in 1937[5] and in his own show which began in 1940. He developed a number of new tricks, including the Neon Light and the now ubiquitous Zig Zag Girl. His lesser known inventions include the Aztec Lady, The Blades of Opah, and Aunt Matilda's Wardrobe.
Much of his inventive genius was put into written form and he is known as one of the most prodigious authors on the subject of magical effects. However, although Harbin was brilliantly creative in the field of magic he was not a particularly good writer and his friend and associate Eric C Lewis has stated that many of Harbin's titles were ghost written for him.[2]
In about 1952 Harbin appeared in a minor part as a magician in the film The Limping Man, produced by Cy Endfield. In 1953, Harbin and a friend of Endfield, Gershon Legman (1917–1999), discovered a common interest in the Japanese art of paper-folding. Harbin wrote many books on the subject, beginning with Paper Magic (illustrated by the young art student, the Australian Rolf Harris who in the middle of the project, caught the origami idea and contributed several intricate models himself) in 1965, and was the first President of the British Origami Society. He was the first Westerner to use the word origami for this art-form. He also presented a series of origami programmes for ITV in its "Look-In" magazines for children in the 1970s.
His grave is at Golders Green Crematorium in London.
Bibliography
Titles by Robert Harbin
On origami
Paper Magic: The art of paper folding, Oldbourne, 1956, ISBN B0000CJG8R
Paper Folding Fun, Oldbourne, 1960, ISBN B0000CKUYQ
Secrets of Origami, old and new: The Japanese art of paper-folding, Oldbourne, 1963, ISBN B0000CM4YW
Teach Yourself Origami, Hodder, 1968, ISBN 0-340-05972-9
Origami 1: The Art of Paper-Folding, Coronet, 1969, ISBN 0-340-10902-5
More Origami, The art of paper-folding no.2, Hodder, 1971, ISBN 0-340-15384-9
Origami 2: The Art of Paper-Folding, Coronet, 1971, ISBN 0-340-15384-9
Origami 3: The Art of Paper-Folding, Coronet Books/Hodder, 1972, ISBN 0-340-16655-X
Secrets of Origami, Octopus, 1972, ISBN 0-7064-0005-4*Origami: Art of Paper Folding (Teach Yourself), Hodder, 1973, ISBN 0-340-16646-0
Origami Step by Step, Hamlyn, 1974, ISBN 0-600-38109-9
Have Fun with Origami, ITV, 1975, ISBN 0-900727-26-8
Origami: Art of Paper Folding (Illustrated Teach Yourself), Picture Knight, 1975, ISBN 0-340-19381-6
Origami A/H, Hodder Arnold, 1976, ISBN 0-340-27950-8
Origami 4, Robert Harbin, 1977, ISBN 0-340-21822-3
Have Fun with Origami, Severn Ho., 1977, ISBN 0-7278-0225-9
Origami: Art of Paper Folding (Coronet Books), Hodder Headline Australia, 1977, ISBN 0-340-21822-3
New Adventures in Origami, 1982, Harper & Row, ISBN 0-06-463555-4
On magic
Something New in Magic, Davenport, 1929
Psychic Vision, Davenport, 1930
Six Card Creations, Davenport, 1930
Demon Magic, Davenport, 1938
How to Be a Wizard, Oldbourne, 1957, ISBN B0000CJUT3
How to Be a Conjuror, Sphere, 1968, ISBN 0-7221-4322-2
Magic of Robert Harbin, C.W. Mole and Sons, 1970 - This was published with a run of only 500 copies, after which Harbin had the plates destroyed.
Magic (Illustrated Teach yourself), Treasure, 1983, ISBN 0-907812-39-2
Magic (Illustrated Teach Yourself), Knight, 1976, ISBN 0-340-20502-4
The Harbin Book, M. Breese, 1983, ISBN 0-947533-00-1
Harbincadabra, brainwaves and brainstorms of Robert Harbin [i.e. N. Williams]: From the pages of Abracadabra, 1947-1965, R. Harbin
Other subjects
Waddington's Family Card Games, Elm Tree, 1972, ISBN 0-241-02111-1
Waddington's Family Card Games, Pan, 1974, ISBN 0-330-23892-2
Party Lines, Oldbourne, 1963, ISBN B0000CLQIH
Instant Memory: The Way to Success, Corgi, 1968, ISBN 0-552-06091-7
References
1. GRO Register of Deaths: MAR 1978 15 2717 WESTMINSTER, Robert Harbin, DoB = 14 Feb 1909
2. a b c Smith, Eric C. "Introduction to Genius of Robert Harbin quoted at The Magic Depot". Aaron Smith. Retrieved 2007-06-14.
3. The Times, "Obituaries", 13 Jan 1978, p.16, col.F
4. The Times, "Varieties, &c.", 9 Mar 1932, p.10, col. E
5. The Times, "Broadcasting", 9 Feb 1937, p.9, col. A
Further reading
Eric C. Lewis, The genius of Robert Harbin: A personal biography, Mike Caveney's Magic Words (1997), ISBN 0-915-18130-8