Ambitious card
The Ambitious Card, or Elevator Card, is a magic effect in which a playing card seems to return to the top of the deck after being placed elsewhere in the middle of the deck.[1][2] This is a classic effect in card magic and serves as a study subject for students of magic. Most performing card magicians will have developed their own personal Ambitious Card routine.
The effect is often credited to French magician Gustav Alberti, in the mid-19th century.[3] However, there is a related idea in Ponsin's Nouvelle Magie Blanche Devoilée, published in 1854, that might precede that.
Effect
The magician usually gets a card signed by an audience member and inserts it into the middle of the deck. It reappears on the top. This is repeated under more and more impossible conditions.
Methods
There are many methods for accomplishing the basic effect. These are often based, in part, on the Double lift or a Stripper deck[4] as well as a good number of other sleight of hand. More detailed descriptions can be found in books such as The Royal Road to Card Magic,[5] The Expert at the Card Table[6] and Card College.[7] Many magicians have come up with their own method, for example Dai Vernon. His Ambitious Card Routine can be found in the book Stars of Magic.[8]
Variations
Variations to this trick can be linked together to create routines. Many magicians perform the same routine every time, though the trick is structured such that one is able to link these variations in random order to produce a completely different routine at each performance. This is one factor which has earned the Ambitious Card the status of a classic effect.
Variations of this effect include:
- The magician has the spectator sign the card to prove there is no double.
- The spectator is handed the "ambitious card" and asked to put it in the middle, then asked to hold the deck and do some type of magic move, essentially calling the card to the top of the deck himself.
- The spectator marks an X on the back of an indifferent card at the top of the deck, only to see the same X appear on the back of the "ambitious card" after it has risen to the top.
- The "ambitious card" is bent so that it is seen to be physically different from all the other cards, making it clear that it is placed into the middle of the deck, and increasing the amazement of the spectator as it is seen to rise to the top.
- It is told that the "ambitious card" has a connection with the spectator and is shown to come to the top only when spectator commands.
Some variations include an ending to the ambitious card routine, such as a card to shoe, or a card to wallet.
References
- ↑ kammagic. "Ambitious Card Routine Kamm". YouTube. Retrieved 2008-01-05. One of many versions of the Ambitious Card Routine available on internet video.
- ↑ Wilson, Mark (1988) [1975]. Mark Wilson's Complete Course In Magic. Courage Books. ISBN 0-89471-623-9. The Elevator card, p. 85
- ↑ "Who Invented It?". Magic Tricks .com. Archived from the original on 31 December 2007. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
Alberti ... French magician, late 1800s, said to have invented Ambitious Card.
- ↑ Jean Hugard; John Joseph Crimmins; Glenn G. Gravatt (1974). Encyclopedia of Card Tricks. Courier Dover Publications. p.282
- ↑ Hugard, Jean; Braue, Fredrick (1999). Royal Road to Card Magic (1st Ed. reprint ed.). Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-40843-9.
- ↑ Erdnase, S. W. (1995). The Expert at the Card Table: The Classic Treatise on Card Manipulation (1st Ed. reprint ed.). Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-28597-9.
- ↑ Giobbi, Roberto (2000). Card College. Vols 1-5. (Illustrated ed.). Seattle, WA: Hermetic Pr.
- ↑ Tannen, Louis (1961). Stars of Magic (1st ed.). New York: Louis Tannen Publishers.