- OTHER MEDIA
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- Now and at the Hour is Time Well Spent
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- The last major magic show to hit the Bay Area theater scene involved
Siegfried and Roy giving their stamp of magical approval to a kid who sang
show tunes while doing fairly lame tricks. Its no wonder that magic
gets such a bad rap for being such a cheeseball staple of the Las Vegas
showroom.
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- But when magic is done well, its tremendous. Free of schmaltz
and full of ingenuity, genuine theatrical magic is a joy, and thats
what youll find in Christian Cagigals Now and at the Hour
now at the EXIT Stage Left. After a successful run in New York followed
by a well-received San Francisco run, the magical Cagigal has revived the
show, much to the delight of his adoring audience.
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- Cagigal doesnt waste a lot of time with the usual flash-and-flair
gimcrackery. He doesnt need to impress us with empty gesturing and
phony-baloney showmanship because he has plenty of genuine wonder at his
disposal, and if that fails to make an impression, then magic is simply
not for you.
- Part autobiographical solo show, part mind-reading festival, Cagigals
show is a spellbinding hour that puts a fresh spin theatrical magic. He
enters the theater and sets up his stage. He turns over an hourglass and
sets a metronome in motion. He checks his pocket watch and he wonders aloud,
Did you ever get the feeling that everything has happened before
and it will all happen again? He attempts to prove the notion of
time travel or at the very least, time bending during the
next hour, and he makes a pretty good case.
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- Whatever his methods, be they manipulation, trickery, suggestion or
genuine magic, Cagigal elicits gasps of amazement from his audience as
he quite effectively reads peoples minds. Theres quite a lot
of audience participation in this show, but not to worry its
not obnoxious in the least. Cagigal is not only a genial host but also
unfailingly polite to his volunteers. If some detail he intuits turns out
to be too personal, he wont share it with the crowd, but hell
make sure you know he knows whats going on in your dirty mind.
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- Holding a stereoscope (usually used to view old-fashioned 3-D postcards),
Cagigal stares at blank cards that volunteers have supposedly filled with
visions from their memories. He then describes what he sees with seemingly
remarkable acuity. He does card tricks and even, for one trick, makes the
audience the magician.
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- In between tricks, he tells us stories from his childhood and what
it was like growing up in San Francisco with a father whose mental balance
was upset by a stint in Vietnam. His fathers presence looms large
in the show because as the elder Cagigal battled his demons, the younger
retreated into a world of magic as a means of escape. The power of memory
and the passage of time fuel the smoke and mirrors of the show and raises
it far above the sort of parlor tricks that can sometimes pass for theatrical
magic.
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- How many shows are both astonishing and moving? Cagigals Now
and at the Hour is both. Cagigal engages the heart and the imagination,
making him a magician to watch with a show to see sooner rather than later.
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