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- <text id=94TT0030>
- <title>
- Jan. 10, 1994: Tonight! Miracles, Live!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- Page 48
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>TONIGHT! MIRACLES, LIVE!
- </p>
- <p>
- By Penn Jillette
- </p>
- <p> With Siegfried and Roy pulling down eight figures a year, David
- Copperfield levitating on the cover of Forbes (I'm guessing
- camera trick), and Vegas competing with Anaheim for the family-vacation
- market (if Treasure Island = Pirates of the Caribbean, and Excalibur
- = Cinderella's Castle, Mr. Toad's Wild Hotel and Casino must
- be next), magic is running a close third to Elvis spin-offs
- and female breasts as entertainments in Vegas.
- </p>
- <p> According to December's Magic magazine, there are nine major
- shows in Vegas that are either full-tilt magic acts or feature
- magicians big. But that's an underestimate, because it doesn't
- count Vegas regulars like the Pendragons (husband and wife magicians
- and body builders--it had to happen). Nor does it count the
- acts that play the celebrity rooms several weeks a year, such
- as Harry Blackstone Jr., David Copperfield and, yes, Penn &
- Teller. Then there are the close-up guys who sit at your table
- and do tricks and jokes right in your and your date's collective
- face--like the amazing Mike Skinner. Throw in all the comics
- making condom jokes while sticking needles through balloons
- at the brick-wall comedy clubs, and you probably have two or
- three dozen magic acts working Vegas as I type.
- </p>
- <p> What you need to know: Siegfried and Roy, two nuts from Germany,
- are out of their wealthy little minds. They live in a mansion
- whose ceiling is painted like the Sistine Chapel, with either
- Siegfried or Roy (who can remember?) in place of Adam. Roy has
- a "meditation chamber" (the rest of us have dressing rooms)
- furnished with a mystic rug and cages for his tigers. They wow
- the crowd with heavy machinery and endangered-species eugenics.
- I love S&R. They march to the beat of a different drum machine.
- </p>
- <p> Speaking of selective breeding, Lance Burton, who does one of
- the finest dove acts in the history of the bulging vest, has
- actually married Melinda, "the First Lady of Magic." They have
- joined their hearts and lives but still have separate, competing
- shows in Vegas. Melinda, who has the best hair in magic next
- to mine, floats in the air while talking about Jesus. (If it
- really were Jesus holding her above the stage, would it have
- to be lighted so carefully?)
- </p>
- <p> There's more coming. Caesars Palace plans to open Caesars Magical
- Empire, with no fewer than three theaters. What's going on?
- Elvis died, and it takes a platoon of rabbit tuggers to fill
- his jumpsuit? I think the answer is pretty simple. People go
- to Vegas to see something they can't see back home. They can
- see comedians at the mall, celebrities on TV, singers doing
- hit songs repeatedly in whatever-VH-1-is videos.
- </p>
- <p> But magic doesn't really work on TV. Miracles have to be seen
- live. You can't bet on things that are in the can; horse races,
- boxing, keno--they all happen in real time. And in a city
- where getting 97 cents back for every dollar invested is advertised
- as a good return, you're going to want willing-suspension-of-disbelief
- by the truckload. The casino oligarchs figure you will start
- by believing you saw a hanky transformed into a pigeon, and
- be on the road to believing it really is your lucky day. If
- that nut can turn into a white tiger, I should be able to roll
- another seven, easy. If you don't believe in a little bit of
- magic, you don't gamble. And if you don't like magic and you
- don't gamble, you're better off in Branson.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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