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HASELMAYER, THE CONJUROR.

As Haselmayer is about to visit this district, we give the Star's critique of his opening performance at Dunedin :—: —

The Masonic Hall on Saturday evening furnished a useful example of the advantages of advertising by ordinary and extraordinary means the merits of any new entertainment. Professor Haselmayer was brought under almost everyone's notice long before his arrival here ; and as a natural result there was % general anxiety to witness his opening performance. A good crowd assembled outside the hall some time before the doors were opened ; ana fully a quarter of an hour before the performance began, ail mission had to be refused. We are assured that those turned away would have constituted a respectable audience on any ordinary occasion.

Professor Haselmayer, unlike most performers in the same line as himself, t uscs very little apparatus in carrying out his tricks His sta^e is a perfect model of simplicity ; all he uses are three tables, stripped »t all finery ; and two of them appear to be more for ornamentation ' than anything else. Being a foreigner, he is of necessity compelled at the outset to ask the indulgence of his audience, on account of his imperfect English ; which, in many castfs, is a serious drawback. One misses the elegant conversation of Heller ; but Haaelmdyer is capable of saying in his own way som« very witty things, tiis performances on Saturday Wght, though clever aud welt received, arc iiitasm ill moiticum of what we have seen him do. Yet such as they were, they are equal to tho&e of any conjuror who has yet appeared in Danedin ; while his tricks are in many cases decidedly superior. There were the tricks with cards; those clever manipulations by which waves and an imitation of a suspension bridge were given ; and the throwing of a number of cards tied in a handkerchief into a glass frame. Not less successful were the abstraction of coins from a glass held by one of the audience, and the placing of them into another held by himself ; and tLe rapid aud wonderful growth of flowers in sand. Cleverly done as all these things were, they were succeeded by others more astonishing. The mice and canaries are alone worth seeing. Their performances are evidence of careful aud paiustakiny tiition. They leave and enter their cages on being so directed ; climb poles, sw.ng one another with the utmost enjoyment of the sport; while a female mouse is drawn in a carriage fur an ailing by one of her offspring. But the most surprising and wonderful trick of all is the drum tr ek, which is performed on an ordi-nary-sized k<>ttle-drum. Placing it on a staud in the midst of the audience, and taking his position on the platform, the Professor makes the drum answer him whatever questions he puts to it— a single beat signifying the affirmative, aud silence expressing a negative reply. He takes the dice amongst the audience, gets this and that one to throw, the drum beating the number thrown by each individual. He then reverses the trick, the drum foretelling the number that will be thrown, and in every instance successfully. Then two of the audience in different parts of the house are invited to write down five figures on separate sheets of paper, which a c retained by them without interference by the Professor. The drum is asked to indicate the figures that have been written down, aud does as directed with never-failing accuracy, besides telling the figures that will form the total and giving them in regular order. In addition to all this, the Professor is a musician .'of considerable ability. He plays the piano and all instrument of his invention, called the stylocarf. On Saturday evening he only played the last mentioned instrument, which greatly resembles the reck harmonicon, but is capable of producing better maw. It is made of wood and leather ; and with. >a hammer in each hand he strikes the. bars,*iavoriug his audience with a pleasant mazurka, which being encored, was succeeded l«y a medley of popular airs.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TT18720502.2.15

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Tuapeka Times, Volume V, Issue 222, 2 May 1872, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
680

HASELMAYER, THE CONJUROR. Tuapeka Times, Volume V, Issue 222, 2 May 1872, Page 5

HASELMAYER, THE CONJUROR. Tuapeka Times, Volume V, Issue 222, 2 May 1872, Page 5

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