| http://www.britannica.com/bcom/magazine/article/0,5744,238345,00.html
By
David Handelman
May 19, 1997
The Wizard of
Grunge
Street Magician David
Blaine has Enchanted Big Stars; Now He's Conjured up a Prime-Time
Special
Blaine should know. In
the past few years he has sprung his deadpan, charismatic
sleight-of-hand in hip hangouts on both coasts, impressing some of the
biggest names in show business--including Jack Nicholson, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, David Geffen, Mike Tyson and Madonna. Robert De Niro and
Leonardo DiCaprio have befriended him. At a party after the Grammys this
year, Blaine sidled up to hot young singer Fiona Apple; today they are a
couple. "David's magic reduces you to being three years old,"
says Apple, "that complete wonderment with the world."
But Blaine's best
magic trick may be his own career. By updating corny card and coin
feints and levitation stunts with post-grunge chic, he has leapfrogged
from hustling sharpie to the star of his own sweeps-month network
special, David Blaine: Street Magic (ABC, May 19, 8 p.m. E.T.).
"It's a roll of the dice," admits ABC Entertainment president
Jamie Tarses. "But David is very contemporary, of his generation,
hip, cool. We think he can pull in the young, urban audience."
On the program, with
DiCaprio as host, Blaine traipses across the country, performing his
repertoire for a broad sampling of America's melting pot: old Chinese
men in San Francisco; gangbangers in Compton, Calif.; Valley Girls, Wall
Streeters, the Dallas Cowboys. "The secret, hidden message,"
he says, "is that all people are the same."
Most professional
magicians scoff at Blaine's dime-store bag of tricks: making a chosen
card rise out of a deck or reappear after being torn to pieces. But in
magic, style is everything, and Blaine's intense, streetwise persona is
nothing like your typical gabby Vegas showman in a cape. His deceptively
low-key, ultracool manner leaves spectators more amazed than if he'd
razzle-dazzled.
Where did he come
from? Blaine likes to cultivate an air of mystery. In his short life, he
has gone by several last names, including his grandmother's and his
stepfather's, both of which he declines to disclose. Blaine (it's
actually his middle name) was born in Brooklyn and started doing magic
at age 4 when his mother Patrice White got him his first effect: a
device that allowed a pencil to pass through a card without leaving a
hole in it. He says he loved magic early on because "it made people
smile. I've always had an ability to communicate with people, and magic
was just a device that enhanced that." Blaine studied acting at New
York City's Neighborhood Playhouse but started doing magic for rich
people's private parties, earning, he says, as much as $300 an hour.
Through a friend's roommate, he met the man who would become his ICM
agent, Jon Podell (who also represents Michael Bolton and the Allman
Brothers). When Podell doubted that Blaine's "close-up" magic
would work on TV, Blaine hired his own video crew and shot a 10-minute
demo to convince him.
But Blaine intends the
ABC special to signal the close of his card-trick phase. "It's fun,
but I'm starting to get depleted," he says. He has been consulting
with more seasoned magicians to bolster his repertoire ("We discuss
ways to make things possible," he says) and has begun putting
together his theatrical debut, an ambitious show he plans to perform for
the first time in a meat locker in Manhattan's meat-packing district.
"It's going to be simple and street," he promises. "It
will have a story, not just a bunch of assembled tricks."
Despite Blaine's
immersion in the worlds of celebrity and illusion, he says his idol
remains his mother, who died of cancer in 1994. "She raised me with
the attitude you can do anything you want," says Blaine. "She
told me, 'There's no logic--just follow your heart.'" Time will
tell if that heart is an ace.
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