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The Magic Messenger

The Magic Messenger is published monthly by the Ann Arbor Magic Club (AAMC). The AAMC the Hank Moorehouse Assembly 88 of the Society of American Magicians and Duke Stern Ring 210 of the International Brotherhood of Magicians.

The AAMC (est. 1971) is a Michigan Domestic Non-Profit whose focus is to advance the magical arts by making available equipment, education, mentors and opportunities for magical enthusiasts of all ages to expand their craft.

Ann Arbor Magic Club 
Board of Directors

  • President: Sean Howell
  • Vice-President: Wendy Stone
  • Treasurer: Rob Krozal
  • Secretary: Karl Rabe
  • Sgt at Arms: April Barrett

The Ann Arbor Magic Club meets the 2nd Wed of each month at 7p at the Plymouth Community Arts Council.

Plymouth Community Arts Council
โ€‹774 N. Sheldon Road at Junction Street
โ€‹Plymouth, MI 48170

Published by Karl Rabe using Generate Press Theme and Generate Blocks Plugin on WordPress.

ยฉCopyright 2026. All rights reserved, Ann Arbor Magic Club.


In This Issue

Website:
Email:
US Mail:

https://aamagic.org
annarbormagicclub@gmail.com
P.O. Box 532244 Livonia, MI. 48152

The President's Corner

Fellow Magicians, last monthโ€™s meeting was a fantastic showcase of talent as we held our annual close-up competitionโ€”and what a night it was! With a full slate of six performers, the room was packed with strong magic, bold presentations, and just enough mystery to keep even the saltiest old sea dogs guessing.

A hearty thank you to all who stepped up and shared their magic:

  • Eric Bedard
  • Ryan Hoffman
  • Chuck Kibrough
  • Ming Louie
  • Michael Thornton
  • Robert Langefeld

And a well-earned congratulations to our winner, Eric Bedard, whose performance rose above the rest and claimed the treasure. Nicely done!

Events like this are the lifeblood of the Ann Arbor Magic Club. Itโ€™s not just about fooling your fellow magicians (though thatโ€™s always a worthy quest), but about sharpening your craft, testing new material, and supporting your crew along the way. Whether you were performing or watching from the crowd, you helped make the evening a success.

Now thenโ€”set your sights on the horizon, because this month weโ€™ve got a real prize coming aboard.

Weโ€™re excited to welcome Nathan Kranzo, presenting his latest magic lecture. Nathan has spent over two decades performing and lecturing across the United States, Europe, and Asia, earning his reputation as a creative powerhouse and a practical thinker in the art of magic.

Heโ€™s the author of seven magic books and the creator of hundreds of original effects, with work published in MAGICGENIIMUMThe Linking RingPENUMBRA, and beyond. Heโ€™s also served as a columnist for MUM magazine.

Nathan has consulted for Penn and Teller, appeared on Wizard Wars and Houdini and Doyle, and was most recently featured on The Amazing Magicians, which held the #1 spot in China for ten straight weeks.

In shortโ€”this is no ordinary deckhand. This is a master of the craft, and a lecture you wonโ€™t want to miss.

So hoist the sails, gather your gear, and make your way to the next meeting. Opportunities like this are part of what makes our club such a treasure.

Until then, keep practicing, keep performing, and as alwaysโ€”

Keep the magic alive,
Sean โ€œCapโ€™n Seanโ€ Howell
President
Ann Arbor Magic Club

Ring Report

We had a great turnout for our annual Close-Up Competition. Six members performed at six different tables while spectators watched. After a 5 minute performance, the Captain Sean rang the bell and the performers rotated to the next table while the audience stayed put. In this way each audience member was able to see each performer's act.

Close-Up performers Chuck, Eric, Mike, Sean (Emcee), Robert, Ryan and Ming
  • Ryan Hoffman performed a card routine from Card College. Two cards selected from a shuffled deck were returned to the deck and completely mixed. Ryan was then able to find the selected cards.
  • Chuck Kibrough kicked off turning the back of a freely selected card green in the spectator's hands. The rest of the deck had red backs. Chuck finished by causing two quarters to appear, one at a time, under a glass sitting on top of a deck of cards in his hands.
  • Ming Louie performed a classic of magic Coins Through Table, taught to Ming by Slydini himself. Four silver dollars magically pass through the table one-by-one.
  • Eric Bedard - Started with a fantastic multi-phase card warp routine with a bill and a card that ended with a flash card restoration. Next was an ambitious card routine with an Omni Deck (Clear block of plastic) finale.
  • Mike Thornton kicked off with a multi-phase sponge bunny routine intermixed with lots of little bits-of-business including squeakers, fake viagra and other jokes and gags. Mike then closed a with an entertaining Chop Cup routine using a lemon and lime for the final loads.
  • Robert Langefeld, one of our newer members, kicked off with a three coin routine. The coins vanished from his hands one-by-one and then reappeared. For a finale, the last coin transformed into a packet of one dollar bills. After passing several out for examination, Robert changed the ones to twenties and then back again. And finally, using one of the bills, Robert seamlessly transitioned into a multi-phase bill penetration using a pencil.

After the performances were complete, members voted on their top three favorites. After all the ballots were counted, our president Sean Howell awarded the coveted Close-Up Trophy to Eric Bedard. Mike Thornton and Robert Langefeld were a close second and third respectively.

Congratulations to all our contestants. It was great to see some newer performers bravely get out there and show their stuff. That is what our club is all about!

Hocus Focus

We got some great pictures of our close up performers and audience members at our meeting.

Around the Town

Next Meeting

July Meeting

The Ann Arbor Magic Club meets the second Wednesday of each month. Anyone with an interest in magic is welcome to show up to a meeting and see what it is all about.
08 Jul
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Plymouth Community Arts Council
โ€‹774 N. Sheldon Road,Plymouth, MI 48170
  • AAMC
No event found!

Volunteer's Needed
No event found!

Other Events
June 2026

AAMC Magic Summer Camp

Magic Summer Camp is co-hosted by the Plymouth Community Arts Council (PCAC) and the Ann Arbor Magic Club. As a volunteer you will teach kids magic. The camp runs Monday through Friday from 9am to Noon. If you can not attend every day, that is OK. We need magicians, balloon twisters, and jugglers.
15 - 18 Jun
12:00 am - 12:00 am
Plymouth Community Arts Council
โ€‹774 N. Sheldon Road,Plymouth, MI 48170

Monthly Board MeetingRepeating Event

All members in good standing are welcome to join the AAMC Monthly Board Meetings which are generally held on the 3rd Wednesday of the Month from 10am to 11am via zoom.
17 Jun
10:00 am - 11:00 am
Zoom Meeting
July 2026

Ring 22 Monthly MeetingRepeating Event

Our friends at The Detroit Magic Club (Ring 22) generally meet the 3rd Tuesday of every month. Please check theirย Calendarย to confirm
21 Jul
7:15 pm - 9:30 pm
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
749 W. 14 Mile Rd., Clawson, MI 48017
August 2026

AAMC Picnic

NOTE THIS IS INFORMATION FROM 2025DETAILS OF 2026 PICNIC WILL BE UPDATED CLOSER TO THE EVENT The AAMC Picnic this year will be held at the Cap'n Sean Howell's Homestead "Kracken Acres" located in the next galaxy over at 5038 Hicks Rd, Albion MI 49224. As you are driving on the roads closer to our ... Read more
15 Aug
12:00 am - 12:00 am
Kracken Acres
5038 Hicks Rd, Albion MI 49224
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Ex Libris

Hello folks and welcome to the Ex Libris article for May 2026 (YIKES!) I hope everyone is doing well and enjoying the revival of life in the northern hemisphere!

This month I was feeling a tad nostalgic. When I was still performing magic full-time, one of my staples and my biggest upsell for my corporate clientele was doing private parlor shows for their employees, after hours, at the trade shows. It is one of my favorite performance formats because it allows for a wide variety of effects while keeping the groups a little more intimate.

Since our club also performs parlour shows for the public on occasion, it reminded me of a most wonderful book that was released back in 2020, Parlour Tricks by Rhys โ€œMorganโ€ Jones and Robert โ€œWestโ€ Tay (Morgan & West). It is a 356-page hardcover book and published by Vanishing, Inc. Magic. It is another luxurious book with a green leather cover, gilded titling and even comes with a handy sewn-in bookmark. 

In this tome you will find quite the variety of material, all of which, in this case, comes from the show the duet performs in the real world. The material within is not something you will learn and then go out and perform in a show, especially not by yourself, without some work in making it fit the style and personality of your own duet. If you plan to perform these effects on a solo level, be prepared to do some work. I say this not to scare you away from this book, but just as something to be aware of.

First off, their style is that of a Victorian-era vaudeville-esque setting, and the effects are written so that the characters play off each other. There is plenty of by-play, and the philosophies and theories that the authors share is quite profound, based on their solo work and their working together as a duet.

That all being said, everything in this book can absolutely be updated and changed to fit any modern style and situation. There is some work on a costume quick change, a wonderful use of an Impossible Bottle (unfamiliar with this one? Look up Harry Eng Impossible Bottles), one of the best Cards Across solutions I have ever used, and some very clever two-person code work. I really appreciate their approach to creating theatricality, writing the audience into the show and some of their other thoughts on developing an act for a modern show, and all of this can be applied to you, whether you are a solo act, a close-up performer, a parlour performer or even part of a duet.

Many of you will be familiar with our own wonderful duet from the AAMC, Bill and Karl Rabe and one of their signature pieces is the Multiplying Bottles, which gets the Morgan & West treatment in this book as an opener called The Restarting Bottle, and the way they perform it reminds me of the playful nature that the Rabe duo exudes in their interpretation.

In TOCA (Thought of Cards Across), you see ten black cards and ten red cards; one person merely thinks of a card, and it travels across to the other pile. In this case, it requires a gaffed set of cards (the official set made by Card Shark, and only $35.99/USD at the time of this writing) and it is super, super clean! There is a wonderful effect using a ribbon, a bag and a borrowed finger ring and a bunch of random rings with a startling finish. The 40 Digit Hyperbrain Act would especially be enjoyed by our mathematical magic wizard, Bob Goodwin.  There is even a very intriguing transposition between two people involving a waistcoat, a shoeโ€ฆand a carrot!

As a bonus, this book includes a link to a live performance of Morgan & West showcasing the material in the book. Including this was a great idea because of the nature of the act and the effects it contains. It gives you a chance to see the magic come alive off the page, to see their interpretation of it, and to also give you a chance to see how you would have to change it to suit your own needs. In my own head, I can see performers like duos of Karl & Bill, Don Oesterwind/Dan Jones and for all the wonderful work he does, even solo performers like Lincoln Stone taking the material in here to all new heights and styles.

That is all for this month, so please join me again in June as we get ready for summer and get ready for another study assignmentโ€ฆthe fun kind!

J.M.A.      

The Vanishing Archives

Some traditions in magic never truly vanishโ€”they just get better with age, like a well-worn deck that still forces the ace of spades every time. Back in 1995, the Ypsilanti crew showed how a close group of magicians can turn a simple backyard corn roast into something truly special. Why did the magician bring corn to the club picnic? Because he heard it was a-maize-ing for close-up work! Today, that same spirit lives on in our club, complete with endless card tricks and the occasional silk that refuses to stay vanished.

From M-U-M Assembly Report

We held our annual Corn Roast at the home of Harry and Mary Colestock. This has become a favorite event of our club. It is a chance for us to bring together our families for an afternoon of eating, magic, and fun. It is also a time to see old friends who have not been around for a while. The turnout was good and we could not ask for a more beautiful day. Everyone brought a dish to pass and the Colestocks provided the delicious sweet corn from their garden.

After stuffing ourselves on the large quantity of food, we began doing our favorite magic tricks. People broke into groups to exchange stories and catch up on whatโ€™s been happening. Randy Shaw demonstrated his skill with many different card tricks. Chris Moss demonstrated some of his new equipment, and many of the youngsters were trying their hand at juggling (outside, of course).

There were old friends we hadnโ€™t seen in a while and new faces (including many children and future magicians). We had scheduled a lecture, but it was canceled at the last minute because the lecturer could not make it. Of course, there was talk about the many club events coming up, such as the Flea Market, Faith In Action, and Michigan Magic Day 1996. All in all, it was a wonderful time.

And just like that, another slice of magic history refuses to stay vanished. The Ann Arbor gang showed us that a backyard corn roastโ€”complete with sweet corn, card tricks, and impromptu jugglingโ€”can still deliver the real goods. Itโ€™s the same spirit our Ann Arbor Magic Club tries to capture every summer with their own picnics: good food, great company, and just enough magic to keep the grown-ups smiling (since the kids rarely show up anyway). And hey, weโ€™re still running those flea markets and hosting Michigan Magic Day all these years laterโ€”proof that some traditions refuse to vanish, even if the scheduled lecturer occasionally does.

Funny Business