S.A.M Assembly 88

April 2026

I.B.M. Ring 210

The Magic Messenger

April for April
streaming onstage at
our March Meeting

Annual Calendar

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Other Events

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Coming Up

10 June
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Plymouth Community Arts Council

June Meeting

โ€‹774 N. Sheldon Road,Plymouth, MI 48170

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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

Presidentโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ...Sean Howell
Vice-President...................Wendy Stone
Treasurer................................Rob Krozal
Secretary..................................Karl Rabe
Sgt at Arms..........................April Barrett

Website:
Email:
US Mail:

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

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

  • Club Calendar (inside cover)
  • The Ring Report
  • Hocus Focus
  • Ex Libris
  • The Vanishing Archives
  • Funny Business

The Ring Report

By Club Secretary Karl Rabe

Vice-President Wendy Stone presided over this monthโ€™s meeting while President Sean Howell is away performing at the Bay Area Renaissance Festival in Florida. With the room full and energy high, we jumped straight into our Featured Performer.


๐ŸŽฉ Featured Performance โ€“ Phil Mann, The Magic Mann

Phil opened with a beautiful roseโ€‘themed sequence: single roses appeared, vanished, and multiplied until a full bouquet of a dozen roses bloomed in his hands.
He followed with a lively take on The Yellow Bandana, then closed by transforming delicate soap bubbles into a solid glass sphere, delighting the younger audience members.


๐ŸŒž Summer Camp Reminder

Karl reminded everyone that we are still seeking a few more volunteers for our Magic Summer Camp for Kids. Details and signโ€‘ups are available on the club website.


๐Ÿƒ Learning Session โ€“ Led by Mike Thornton

Mike guided members through practical card handling, including:

  • Basic false cuts
  • Smooth false shuffles
  • A couple of reliable card forces

Everyone had decks in hand and time to practice the moves together.


๐ŸŽญ Member Performances

โญ Robert Langefeld

Robert kicked things off with a slick Sharpieโ€‘throughโ€‘card effect using a gimmick he built himself. The marker slid sideways through the card in full view before everything returned to normal.

โญ Mike Bogdas

With Lincoln Stone assisting, Mike performed a comedy prediction routine. His โ€œperfect matchโ€ turned out to be a mirror, only for him to flip it over and reveal the real correct prediction after all.

โญ Karl Rabe

Karl shared a trio of what he calls โ€œStupid Card Reveals.โ€

  • A classic Karrell Fox gag he first saw at the Grand Hotel: the failed search ending with the chosen cardโ€™s pips reflected on his sunglasses.
  • A jumbo Panella-style reveal where the selected card appears between two blank boards.
  • A quick comedic kicker to close the set.

โญ Chuck Kimbrough

Chuck amazed the room by locating a selected card from a shuffled deck behind his back, with the deck sealed back inside the box.

โญ April Barrett

April demonstrated how to twist a short string of beads into a tiny bead dog, balloonโ€‘animal style. She followed with a charming Easterโ€‘themed change bag routine, finishing with the production of a long, multicolored paper streamer.

โญ Dan Jones

Dan performed a clever routine where the spectator ultimately selected the only nonโ€‘blank card in the entire deck.

โญ Ryan Hoffman

Performing for the club for the first time, Ryan delivered a smooth card routine in which his spectator, Mike Bogdas, impossibly located all four aces.


๐ŸŽ‰ Social Time

We wrapped up the evening with a relaxed half hour of socializing and jamming, sharing ideas, moves, and good conversation.


Hocus Focus

By various club photographers

Hocus Focus is member photo contributions. If you have photos you want to share post them on our private Facebook page under the meeting they were taken at.

ย 

Ex Libris

By Dr. Joaquin M. Ayala, PhD

Max Malini: King of Magicians โ€“ Magician of Kings by Steve Cohen

Hello folks and welcome to the Ex Libris article for April 2026! I know I bid you all a good incoming Spring season last month, and for most of you, that has been mostly the case. As for me, we received a massive dump of snow from an historic blizzard on March 16th and 17th, which completely our car and half of our house. Thankfully, no damage occurred, but the icy conditions did remind me of something, which brought me to the book for this month.

Most of you will have heard a lot about the magician named Max Malini. He was famous for many things and quite a few quotes, but how much do we really know about the man behind his own legend? Max Malini: King of Magicians โ€“ Magician of Kings by Steve Cohen is a 521-page 8 x 10 format hardcover book, originally published in 2021 by Squash Publishing in Chicago, IL.

Many readers will know the author Steve Cohen, whose Off-Broadway show, Chamber Magic, is one of the longest-running, highly successful formal parlour shows in the history of the art. He is famous for his Any Drink Called For with the magic tea kettle, and of course, his expertise on Max Malini. He has also authored articles and small booklets for the magic community as well.

This book is genuinely luxurious, everything from the blue gilt book cloth and the textured end papers to the period-style Smyth-bound glossy archival paper. This book even weighs in at an impressive FIVE pounds! Cohen begins the book by covering the early life and the beginning of Malini himself, addressing some of the things that people already know or have heard about, and correcting some minor inaccuracies about that knowledge. There are some funny Yinglish quotes in there, to boot!

The first eight chapters cover a myriad of topics, from biographical information on Malini and his family, his business practices, his reputation (he was truly a well-respected man and magician), his travels and exploitations, along with lots of photos (both colour and B&W), illustrations and poster reproductions. There are even a few magical techniques and one-off effects thrown in here and there for good measure. I thoroughly enjoyed this portion of the book because it was very well-written and covered a lot about an iconic magician, giving you insights to his charisma and character that were interesting, both on a professional and personal level.

The rest of the book is dedicated to his body of work across five further chapters (fourteen total), including impromptu magic and techniques such as palming, vesting, ditching of objects, etc. Some of the effects detailed in the impromptu section will be familiar to those of you who have read various beginner magic books, effects like Ring on Stick, coin vanishing/manipulation, impromptu Cups & Balls, Cut & Restored String, Obedient Matchboxes, and the Vanishing Glass Under Newspaper (which often performed with a coin and a saltshaker). These handlings, however, contain the Malini Touch. Among my favourites here include his equally famous Button Biting โ€“ wherein you bite the button off the jacket of an unsuspecting person and then restore it. The method(s) are varied, and not truly impromptu, but stellar if you can pull it off, and they are just oh, so Malini!

Among the effects in this chapter is the Brick from Hat, which leads right into the legendary โ€œholy grailโ€ effect for which Malini is best known: his production of a big block of ice from under his hat. Just think of the impossibility, given all that you know about ice, time, and whatnotโ€ฆThis is covered in great detail, including how anything can so easily become so legendary.

Chapter ten covers card magic, including several standard card sleights adapted by Malini. The effects themselves are all good, but they are nothing terribly uncommon among studied card workers. They include things like the General Card (one of my favourite effects, also related to Everywhere and Nowhere and The Universal Card), Card to Mouth, Card on Ceiling/Wall, Rising Cards and even a multiple-selection routine.

One killer bit that is hidden among these is under the subtitle of Gutter Magic. It details the story about Malini planting a worn and beat-up card for something that could potentially happen later, but which also may never come to fruition. Absolutely brilliant and very, very powerful. Side note: If you have seen the At the Table LIVE lecture by Nicholas Einhorn, you may remember that this idea was used in conjunction with a Rainbow Deck routine, which, in my opinion, is one of the strongest things ever. If you have not seen this lecture, you can find it through your favourite dealer as a DVD or a download. VERY HIGHLY recommended!

Chapter Eleven covers Platform Magic, things like Color-Changing Silks, Cut & Restored Rope (which includes some work by Detroit-native magician Bob Stencel), Button Biting (again, with different methodology), Chinese Linking Rings, Chinese Water Bowl Production and two more legendary (thereโ€™s that word again) effects, the Malini Egg Bag and the Blindfold Card Stab, the latter two being effects most associated with Malini outside the ice block production, in my opinion. Both effects receive a veritable workshopโ€™s worth of space in this book, and rightly so.

The Blindfold Card Stab and the Malini Egg Bag were effects also associated with another megastar of magic, the venerable Johnny Thompson, who certainly popularized both with a modern audience, alongside magician Bob Sheets, who gives his insightful thoughts to the Card Stab herein.
Chapters Twelve, Thirteen and Fourteen cover a bit more about Malini and his magical philosophy, as well as his obituary in Yiddish and Japanese. The rest of the almost-100 pages covers the appendices I-III and the acknowledgements for this book. In 2026 a second edition was printed and released; the second printing includes minor corrections, updates, and additions, as well as a new binding color, but is not substantially different in content from the first edition. It is also exactly the same in terms of its luxurious features.

Until next month (May?!?!), keep the magic alive and enjoy whatever weather you have โ€“ we may be snow-free by July up here!

-jma

The Vanishing Archives

By Mike Bogdas

As I flip through dusty old magic club magazines from years gone by, itโ€™s fun to revisit the creative ways our Ann Arbor Magic Club kept the wonder alive before everything went digital. Back then, sharing a great lecture meant more than just hitting play โ€” it often involved real effort, creativity, and a touch of old-school showmanship that feels charmingly antique today.

Remember when our in March meeting of 1985 was grandly advertised as โ€œM&M Niteโ€ and Ron Sturgell single-handedly turned the church basement into a 1980s Blockbuster? In an era before smartphones could hold an entire magic library in your pocket, Ron heroically dragged in a television the size of a small refrigerator and a VCR that looked like it could double as a medieval torture device. He wrestled that beast into the room with all the grace of a magician attempting the Miserโ€™s Dream with bowling balls.

The payoff was pure gold: first up, the legendary Ed Marlo calmly demonstrating card sleights so devious they still make todayโ€™s Instagram card flourishes look like a toddler playing with Uno cards. Then came the riotous Tom Mullica show, taped live at The Tom Foolery in Atlantaโ€”a man so smooth he could vanish cigarettes, bills, and probably your dignity, all while leaving a room full of jaded magicians howling with laughter. And because nothing says โ€œsophisticated magic lectureโ€ quite like a giant bowl of M&Ms being passed around the room with the precision of a classic Cups and Balls routine, we had Marlo, Mullica, and M&Msโ€”proof that even the treats were performing sleights of hand that night.

Fast-forward to today, and we just pull out a phone, tap once, and boomโ€”same classics appear instantly. No extension cords that could trip a herd of elephants, no frantic rewinding, and zero chance of the tape getting tangled like a botched linking rings routine. Times have definitely changed, but the magic remains eternal!

Funny Business

Various Contributors

Your board hard at work!

One of the Kings of Funny Business Soupy Sales!