Joseph Jacobs (magician)
Joseph Jacobs (c. 1813 โ 13 October 1870), also known by the stage names The Wizard Jacobs, Jacobs the Wizard, and The Great Jacobs, was an English magician, improvisatore, and ventriloquist. BiographyJacobs was born to a Jewish family in Canterbury, Kent.[1] He appeared on stage at an early age, visiting Dover, Brighton, Bath, and other provincial towns during the summer and autumn of 1834.[2] He first appeared in London at Horn's Tavern, Kennington, in 1835, where he performed the Chinese ring trick.[3] Four years later he had the honour of performing before the Princess Augusta at Brighton.[2] At the Strand Theatre in 1841, he made a great show of expensive apparatus in imitation of J. H. Anderson.[4] He performed in 1846 the trick of turning ink into transparent water in which goldfish swam, and in 1850 he introduced the trick of producing from under a shawl bowls of water containing goldfish, afterwards throwing the shawl on the floor, and then, on raising it again, disclosing live ducks or rabbits.[2] He appeared at the Adelaide Gallery in 1853, in America in 1854, and in 1860 in Australia and New Zealand. In 1860 he also opened the Polygraphic Hall in London.[4] ReferencesThis article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Jacobs, Joseph; Lipkind, Goodman (1904). "Jacobs, Joseph (known as Jacobs the Wizard)". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 46.
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