Paul Daniels
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Paul Daniels | |
Born | April 6, 1938 South Bank, Middlesbrough, England |
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Nationality | British |
Occupation | magician |
Website pauldaniels.co.uk |
- This article is about the stage magician. For the conductor see Paul Daniel.
Paul Daniels (born Newton Edward Daniels, 6 April 1938) is a British magician and television performer.[1] He achieved national fame through his television series The Paul Daniels Magic Show, which ran on the BBC from 1979 to 1994.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Daniels was born at 51 North Street in South Bank, Middlesbrough, the son of Handel Newton Daniels and Nancy Lloyd.[2] Handel Newton Daniels (known as Hugh) was a cinema projectionist at the Hippodrome Theatre and a former worker at ICI Wilton.
During the war Paul was evacuated to the Helmsley area. After Sir William Turners Grammar School on Coatham Road in Coatham, Redcar (now the Redcar & Cleveland College Connections Campus on Corporation Road) and his first job as a junior clerk in the treasurer's office of Eston council, Daniels served in the 1st Battalion, The Green Howards during his National Service and was posted to the British garrison in Hong Kong, before training as an accountant in the Civil Service. Even at this early age he had thinning hair which he claimed to be an act of 'magic'. Daniels later sported a wig for much of his television career.[3] After working as a junior clerk and then as an auditor in local government Daniels joined his parents in the grocery business they were running at the time. He later set up his own shop but eventually gave this up in favour of his growing career as a magician.
[edit] Showbusiness career
Daniels' interest in magic began at the age of 11 when, during a holiday, he read a book called How To Entertain At Parties. He has stated that: "From that moment, I can safely say that all I ever wanted to do in life was to become a professional magician". He began performing magic as a hobby, occasionally entertaining at parties and youth clubs and later doing shows for fellow servicemen during his national service.[4] After returning to civilian life he continued to develop his magic by performing in clubs in the evenings while working at his grocery business during the day. At one point he worked with his first wife Jackie under the name of 'The Eldanis', an anagram of Daniels. It was while working the clubs that he developed what would become his long running catchphrase, "You'll like this...not a lot, but you'll like it". He has stated that he first came up with the line at a club in Bradford as a way to deal with a heckler.[5]
A major turning point in Daniels's career came in 1969 when he was offered a summer season at Newquay. He decided to sell his grocery business and try magic as a full time business. He made his television debut on the long-running talent show Opportunity Knocks in 1970, and came second. Television producer Johnnie Hamp saw Daniels in that show and later gave him a regular spot on The Wheeltappers and Shunters Social Club for Granada Television.[6]
Daniels starred in his own stage show, It's Magic, at the Prince of Wales Theatre from 10th December 1980 until 6th February 1982. At that time, the show was one of the longest-running magic shows ever staged in London. By this point he was already working with his future wife, Debbie McGee, whose role as his assistant would become a major feature of his act. She had first worked with him on his summer season show in Great Yarmouth in 1979.
Daniels presented his own television series, The Paul Daniels Magic Show, on the BBC from 1979 until 1994. As well as featuring tricks and illusions for pure entertainment, he also included a regular segment (the "Bunco Booth") in which he exposed the confidence tricks of street charlatans. He also replicated the kind of results that have impressed researchers of the paranormal and parapsychologists (in a segment known as "Under laboratory conditions"), thereby demonstrating his skepticism about claims made in these fields.
In addition to his magic shows he hosted a number of other television series during the 1980s and 1990s, including three BBC1 quiz shows: Odd One Out, Every Second Counts and Wipeout, and the children's television programme Wizbit (also for the BBC), about a magician called Wizbit and a rabbit called Woolly, who lived in Puzzleopolis.
On the magic circuit, Daniels' appeal diminished as the 1980s drew to a close, and in the 1990s, ratings slumped. A 1995 magic show for the BBC entitled Secrets, set in a variety club, failed to catch on and was not renewed. He no longer makes his own series.[2] He has, however, made several guest appearances on television, though this has often been as the unsuspecting butt of the joke on satirical comedy shows, such as the Chris Morris show, Brass Eye. Daniels and McGee were the focus of one of the episodes of the 2001 BBC documentary series When Louis Met…, presented by Louis Theroux, with Daniels additionally appearing on Da Ali G Show in an Ali G costume, interviewed by Caroline Hook in her guise as Mrs Merton. In 2004, he and Debbie appeared in the Channel 5 reality TV show, The Farm, and in 2006, they appeared in the ITV show The X Factor: Battle Of The Stars. They were the first act voted off the show, after singing Let Me Entertain You by Robbie Williams. Daniels and McGee also made a guest appearance in the Wife Swap series in early 2007, with McGee changing places with journalist and presenter Vanessa Feltz. In 2008 Daniels was part of Dec's team in the Ant v Dec segment of Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, but was eliminated by Dec after the team lost the Bobsleigh challenge in show 3 (of 6).
Despite the end of his television show, Daniels still tours doing live magic and recently presented a show about magician 'Max Malini'. On 28 November 2006, Daniels presented a magic show at the Eton College Magic Society to about 500 Etonians.
[edit] Awards
Daniels was awarded the prestigious "Magician of the Year’" Award by the Hollywood Academy of Magical Arts in 1983, and was the first magician from outside the US to receive it. An Easter special of The Paul Daniels Magic Show won the Golden Rose of Montreux Award at the International TV Festival in Switzerland in 1985.
More recently he was named "World Greatest Magician" by students at Boston Spa School, Yorkshire. Daniels turned up to the ceremony and gave an impromptu show.[7]
[edit] Outspoken views
Daniels is known for being outspoken on a range of matters, including politics and current affairs as well as magic and entertainment.
On the subject of criminal justice, he has stated: "...make them afraid of the punishment...when I heard Ian Huntley had tried to commit suicide – I’d have helped him. There are no ifs or buts about Huntley. With him, I wouldn’t even have told him the result of the trial, he'd just have gone to sleep and never woken up".[8]
Daniels has stated that he has very little sympathy with the homeless since, in his words, "I was always trying to be best, to get ahead of the other guy. And I can't say why, I just knew I could...I saw Peter Stringfellow on TV one time, and we both have a little, but not very much, sympathy for the homeless, because both of us came from very poor backgrounds, got off our arses, and grafted".[2]
Daniels has often remarked that for his final trick he would like to make "disappear The Sun", a reference to the British tabloid newspaper.
He is dismissive of modern illusionists. He has described David Blaine as "not very original".[2]
[edit] Target of satire
Daniels's views and his manner of expression have contributed to him becoming a target for satirists, comedians and pranksters.
- He was humiliated by Chris Morris in the 1997 media spoof TV series, Brass Eye, in a segment where he was persuaded to appeal to viewers to help a fictional East German elephant that had got its trunk stuck up its anus.
- In one of the sketches in Rowan Atkinson's one-man show, the story of Jesus is read by Atkinson, dressed as a priest. In the sketch, Jesus is portrayed as a magician. In the end of the sketch, when Jesus is asked whether he is the son of God, he denies it, and claims the true Lord will be recognised by his name: "By his name shall ye know him. And he shall have a very religious name. He shall be called Paul; and Daniel, shall he be called."
- He has the unique distinction of being the only person who has been put in, taken out & been the guest on Room 101.
- Paul Daniels and Debbie McGee are the butt of a series of running jokes on the 6 episode series "The Unpleasant World of Penn and Teller", which competed with the Paul Daniels show during its short run.
[edit] Family and personal life
Daniels married his first wife, Jacqueline Skipworth (born 1942), in 1960, when she was 17 and he was 21. He has three sons by her: Gary, Paul and Martin. Martin sometimes appeared on The Paul Daniels Magic Show, and Paul's father, Hughie, often made props for the show, such as wooden boxes for the Selbit Sawing illusion. His nephew James Phelan is a budding young magician.
Daniels married his second wife, long-time assistant Debbie McGee on April 2, 1988. The couple first met in London in May 1979 during rehearsals for Daniels's summer season show in Great Yarmouth that year. At that time he was 40 and she was 20. McGee went on to work with Daniels in his 1980 summer show in Bournemouth and then his London stage show It's Magic before being offered the role of assistant in his long-running television series. Their relationship gradually became more established until he proposed in 1987. Early in their marriage they lived in a house in Denham, Buckinghamshire, that once belonged to Roger Moore. In 1998 they moved to a smaller house on the banks of the River Thames at Wargrave in Berkshire.[9][10]
Daniels' autobiography, Under No Illusions, includes descriptions of his and McGee's sex life:
"Once I got upstairs, Debbie was lying stark naked on the bed - eat your heart out fellas! She was wearing the sort of sleeping blindfold you get on long-haul flights. Printed on it was Do Not Disturb. But further down her body she had a sign that said Disturb!" [1]
Daniels also claims in the book to have had, as of the year 2000, sexual relations with more than 300 people.[2] This figure includes a Chinese girl he met on a Hong Kong ferry during his National Service, whom he recalls as being "rather throaty".[11]
Daniels maintains a website, including a blog and personal information, and records podcasts. He currently owns a magic/fancy dress shop in Wigan town centre. He has stated he has an ambition to star in a Hollywood film.[2] He has an Isuzu Trooper with the personalised registration plate that reads 'MAG1C'.[12]
Daniels is of strikingly small stature, at only 5'5" tall.
[edit] References
- ^ Scotland the Brave. Paul Daniels (29 August 2007). Retrieved on 2007-09-08.
- ^ a b c d e f Brooks, Libby (12 February 2001), “The same old magic”, The Guardian online (Guardian Newspapers Limited), <http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,436664,00.html>. Retrieved on 8 April 2007
- ^ Setting the Record Straight. Paul Daniels (28 March 2006). Retrieved on 2007-04-08.
- ^ How Paul got into showbusiness. Paul Daniels. Retrieved on 2007-05-07.
- ^ Now, that's MAG 1C. Regtransfers. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.
- ^ Now, that's MAG 1C. Regtransfers. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.
- ^ Williamson, Howard (06 November 2003), “Sixth formers enjoyed Paul's tricks - quite a lot!”, Yorkshire Evening Post (Yorkshire Evening Post), <http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/Sixth-formers-enjoyed-Paul39s-tricks.687228.jp>
- ^ Douglas, Ian (28 September 2006). Paul Daniels takes his show online. Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved on 2007-04-08.
- ^ Tyrrel, Rebecca (August 2000), “Deb's delight”, Telegraph.co.uk, <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/main.jhtml?xml=/health/2000/08/28/tldeb28.xml>. Retrieved on 18 November 2007
- ^ Debbie McGee Chats to Us about Her Celebrity Wedding to Paul Daniels. Weddingtv.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ Reader review of Under No Illusion. Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved on 2007-04-08.
- ^ Private Number Plates? Now, that's MAG 1C. Regtransfers. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.
[edit] Bibliography
- Paul Daniels, Under No Illusion, Blake Publishing (May 2000), ISBN 1857823141
[edit] External links
- Paul Daniels' National Service
- Paul Daniels' homepage
- Paul Daniels' weblog
- Paul Daniels' Ebay Transactions a blog about Paul Daniels' buying and selling activities on Ebay
- Paul Daniels takes his show online - interview on telegraph.co.uk
- Bio
[edit] Videoclips
Preceded by None |
Host of Wipeout 1994 - 1997 |
Succeeded by Bob Monkhouse |