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Johnny Ace Palmer, a world champion magician,
has, through a lifetime devoted to practicing magic, accomplished
what no other magician has been able to do. In the summer of 1988 in
the Netherlands, he became the first and only close-up magician in
history to capture the World Championship title across all
eight categories of the competition (i.e., even against the stage
magicians).
Every three years, the International
Federation of Magic Societies, known as FISM, holds the World
Congress of Magic, a gathering of magicians from all over the world.
By far the most significant event at the FISM Congress is always the
competitions. In 1988, they were held in several categories of
magic, including six stage categories and two close-up categories.
First, second, and third place prizes were awarded in each category,
and from among all the categories, one person was selected to
receive the overall Grand Prix award, giving that person claim to
the title of World Champion Magician. (Note: Beginning in 2003, separate
Grand Prix awards were created for the close-up and stage divisions,
so that Johnny's comprehensive win is unmatched and no longer
possible.)
Until recently, the winner of the Grand
Prix had always been chosen from one of the stage categories, and
since the focus of the FISM competition is generally oriented more
towards the stage, it was always assumed that there would never be a
Grand Prix winner from the close-up category. So it was that Johnny
Ace Palmer, a young close-up magician from Warren, Ohio, by
combining his winningly warm and appealing personality with a
mastery of sleight of hand skills, and by bringing the theatrical
elements of the stage up close, turned the magic world upside down
in the Hague, Holland, by becoming the only close-up magician in
history (and, incidentally, only the second American) to capture the
title of "World Champion Magician."
Johnny's quest to be the best has been a
lifelong endeavor, beginning with his first interest in magic at the
age of four. He spent many years honing and developing his act and
his world class abilities, winning a long list of performing awards,
both nationally and internationally, along the way.
In preparation for the World Championship
competition in 1988, Johnny spent several hours each day rehearsing
and perfecting his already near flawless act. The time limit for the
competition was ten minutes, and to go over meant instant
disqualification. Because of that, most competitors plan their acts
far short of the ten minute limit. Johnny, on the other hand, felt
that in order to demonstrate as perfect a performance as possible,
his act must be as close as humanly possible to the time limit
without exceeding it. He honed his act until it was consistently
within five seconds of nine minutes and fifty seconds. Even allowing
for and learning to carefully control audience response, Johnny's
act became incredibly tight, without a single second of wasted time.
When he finally arrived at the World
Congress in the Hague, Johnny discovered that because of a mix up in
registrations, his performance spot in the competition was the next
to last act in the close-up contest, normally a rather weak spot,
since the audience tends to be rather sluggish after having sat
through so many acts. He decided to make the best of it, however,
and make every effort to turn it to his advantage. His confidence
told him he could not lose, and word began to spread that Johnny was
the contender to watch for.
Even tightly packed, the room in which the
close-up competition was held allowed less than two hundred people,
so crowds also surrounded the TV monitors that were spread
throughout the convention center. From the moment he was introduced
and took his place behind the close-up table, Johnny was in complete
control. His personality was on, his energy was high, his timing
perfect, and his technique flawless. The performance was, even for
Johnny. whose act is always incredibly appealing, without a doubt
one of the best of his career. When he finished, the applause was
deafening. He received an instant standing ovation. The audience
began stomping their feet on the bleachers. The tumult continued for
so long that the judges, who were seated in the first row, finally
turned around and stared at the audience in wonder and disbelief.
Johnny was called back for three extended bows before the applause
finally subsided, a feat that not even any of the paid featured
performers at the Congress was able to duplicate.
At the awards ceremony when the first,
second and third place winners in close-up category were announced,
and Johnny was not one of them (the Grand Prix winner does not
receive a "place" award), many people were surprised and
confused. But when the Grand Prix overall World Champion was
announced, and fanfare music and fireworks began, Johnny was stunned
to hear his name called out. He had done the seemingly impossible.
He had become the first World Champion close-up magician!
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