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How a French watchmaker became the father of modern stage magic

France is seen as the birthplace of conjuring thanks to a 19th century watchmaker from Blois

Frenchman Jean-Eugène Robert-Houdin (1805-1871) paved the way for modern illusionists like Zatanna Pic: Alamy-The Print Collector-Heritage Images / Zatanna

Frenchman Jean-Eugène Robert-Houdin is seen by many as the father of modern stage magic.

“Everybody talks about him, from the US to Japan,” the Cannes-based magician Zatanna told us. 

Read more: Franco-Australian former water ski star nominated for top magic prize

“Even if the first magic trick we know of is a cups-and-ball trick on the wall of a 4,000-year-old Egyptian pyramid, and other magic comes from China and Greece, which were more evolved than us at the time, modern magic came from France with Robert-Houdin, and Austria with Hofzinser in the same period.”

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An accidental magician

Robert-Houdin (1805-1871), from Blois, Centre-Val-de-Loire, was a watchmaker and illusionist, and is seen as having made conjuring a fashionable entertainment, as opposed to a fairground sideshow or, before that, something feared in the days of witch hunts. 

He is said to have got into magic by accident after ordering books on clockmaking and receiving a set of magic books by error instead.

Harry Houdini took stage name from Frenchman

Among his most famous tricks was the Orange Tree, where he would make a ring disappear and then he would demonstrate an automaton of a tree, which appeared to blossom and fruit on the stage. 

“The fruit would open and butterflies would come out, carrying a handkerchief, and the ring was inside,” Zatanna said.

Later, the famous American-Hungarian magician and escapologist Harry Houdini took his stage name from Robert-Houdin.

Read more: French artist transforms Eiffel Tower with optical illusion

Global federation in France includes UK’s Magic Circle

France is also home to the Fédération internationale des sociétés magiques, whose members include the UK’s Magic Circle, the FFAP and Cercle Français de l’Illusion, and the Society of American Magicians in the US. 

Founded in the 1930s, it runs a three-yearly World Championship of Magic, which will next be held in Italy in 2025. 

Zatanna said: “It was the first international body for magicians, based in France, with French as an official language, even if everyone tends to perform in English in international competitions now.”

Meanwhile, France’s national body FFAP (Fédération Française des Artistes Presti­digitateurs) has been going since 1903, representing the interests of professional magicians in the country.

Read more: French performance artist locked inside statue of himself for 7 days

Stage magic in France today

Zatanna said good contemporary French magicians include Antonio, who often appears on television and was the first magician to win M6’s La France a un incroyable talent, in 2016, and Fabien Olicard, who started on YouTube but went on to fill venues such as Paris’s Zénith and Olympia.

In close-up and card magic, she said Bernard Bilis stands out. He used to appear regularly on TV show Le Plus Grand Cabaret du Monde, which ran from 1998 to 2019. 

“Also Dani Lary for big illusions, who also appeared on that show,” she added.

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