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BarryFernelius Inner circle Still learning, even though I've made 2537 Posts |
Great article, Marty!
FWIW, the link to the Eugene Burger's article no longer works.
"To achieve great things, two things are needed: a plan and not quite enough time."
-Leonard Bernstein |
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martydoesmagic Inner circle Essex, UK 1665 Posts |
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Great article, Marty! Glad you liked it, Barry. I know you do this kind of stuff already, but I've found that this systematic approach to performance development avoids me getting distracted by the latest trick/book/whatever. The use of Kanban methodology (via Trello), in particular, keeps me focused and on track. Quote:
FWIW, the link to the Eugene Burger's article no longer works. Thanks for the heads-up, I've now fixed the link to Eugene Burger's article. Marty |
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Ado Inner circle New York City 1033 Posts |
It's a bit extreme, but I've been thinking about getting a mannequin or two. Then, if that's what you're in, you can build physical rapport in your rehearsal. Things don't have to be realistic; you can still put the deck on the table imagining it's in the mannequin's hands. But it can be great for working on rapport. Just look at how often people like Tamariz or daOrtiz touch their audience: it's part of their script (perhaps not done consciously anymore, but it's certainly part has been devised to make their magic great!)
P! |
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SvenSigma Regular user Germany 151 Posts |
Marty's article is great resource. What I also like is his suggestion to use Trello to organize it all and keep track of which effect/trick is at which stage (Example at: https://trello.com/b/bQLh3H4J/sprite-board ). I did something similar with another tool and will incorporate SPRITE into my practice/rehearsal organizaton.
It takes a baby in the belly six months to learn how to put the thumb in the mouth.
The rest of life is essentially the same problem. |
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ChrisPayne Loyal user UK 240 Posts |
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On Sep 22, 2016, Ado wrote: Bear in mind both are Spanish so have Mediterranean "non verbals" - as a Brit if I rehearsed touching people it would seem really creepy!☺ Thanks for resuscitating this thread, rehearsal remains a problem for me - I have just spent an enjoyable summer working on a thought of cards across - the mechanics and sleights I found utterly captivating - coming up with a presentation likewise creative - now I need to rehearse to subliminality, very difficult to get round to. The only way it works for me is to schedule an actual performance then I have no choice - a bit like having an exam looming. |
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SvenSigma Regular user Germany 151 Posts |
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On Sep 25, 2016, ChrisPayne wrote: That reminds me of that study about waiters that get higher tips when (appropriately) touching guests. There is a place and time for everything, but you can have too much. I think for scripting in magic touching can become creepy as well. In any culture. Making it part of standard routine might not be the best idea, because one probably would do it always, even if not appropriate.
It takes a baby in the belly six months to learn how to put the thumb in the mouth.
The rest of life is essentially the same problem. |
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