Servais Le Roy

Poster for a magic show by Servais Le Roy (ca. 1890)

Servais Le Roy (May 4, 1865 – June 2, 1953 [1]) was a Belgian magician, illusion designer and businessman. He is known for the act Le Roy, Talma and Bosco and as the inventor of the classic levitation illusion Asrah the Floating Princess.[2][3]

Le Roy was born in Spa, Belgium. He began his career in Belgium but later moved to London, where he established a supply house for illusions and scenery.[3] At one time he performed with German-born illusionist Imro Fox and Frederick Eugene Powell as The Triple Alliance. However he is best known as a performer for the long-running act he developed with his wife Talma and Leon Bosco. Working as "Le Roy - Talma - Bosco" they were sometimes also billed as The Comedians de Mephisto Co. Talma (whose real name was Mary Ford), specialised in sleight of hand and was known as a brilliant manipulator of coins.[3][4] Bosco, who was a rotund man, played a buffoon character.[3] Although the act was very much a partnership to which all three contributed as magicians, Servais Le Roy sometimes received additional headline billing.[2] According to William Rauscher's biography, Monarch of Mystery, Bosco was played by no less than nine different performers over the years.

Servais Le Roy and Talma first performed the Asrah levitation in London in 1914. In this trick, Talma would lie on a couch and Servais would cover her with a sheet. He would then appear to make her rise into the air, pass a large hoop over her floating body, and finally pull away the sheet to reveal that she had vanished.[3] Le Roy is also credited with developing other respected tricks and illusions, including Where do the ducks go?, Modern Cabinet, the Palanquin and the Costume Trunk.[4]

Le Roy later put his own show into storage and accepted a contract from Horace Goldin to front one of several companies that were touring with Goldin's show, featuring the then sensational Sawing a woman in half illusion.[5]

He died in 1953 in Keansburg, New Jersey.

References

  1. http://www.thehunthouse.net/ghtout/gp274.htm
  2. 1 2 Dawes, Edwin A (1979). "The Great Illusionists". Chartwell Books (New Jersey). ISBN 0-89009-240-0.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Roy & Andrews (1985). "Illusions: Secrets from the world of magic". Methuen. ISBN 0-423-01300-9.
  4. 1 2 "Brief Biographies of Magican Inventors". MagicNook.com. Retrieved 2007-04-12.
  5. Brown, Gary R. "Sawing a Woman in Half". AmericanHeritage.com. Retrieved 2007-03-29.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.