ENTERTAINMENT! Celebrated Illusions Bring World Fame Wishing all of our customers and friends a happy and healthy New Year! RITA CHARLESTON Special to The Jewish News 1‘11.1: %140° maw 3ilux V4,4 ., %i t Johnny and Pete Ginopolis and the employees of 0/0 as Oa 851-8222 27815 Middlebelt at 12 Mile • Farmington Hills Heartily Wish Their Customers, Friends And The Entire Community A VERY HEALTHY AND HAPPY NEW YEAR IIIIMMON•••••• MMMMMMMM IBMOOMMEM•1111•11111•11111•1111111111111•1111111111110• 1111 ••• 1111111 Tom Goulas, Management and Employees of Gratefully Extend Best Wishes To Their Customers & Friends For A Healthy and Happy New Year 31005 Orchard Lake Road Fax: 855-8429 • Hunters Square • Farmington Hills 855-4866 Hours: Monday-Thursday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. • Friday and Saturday 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. •••••••rn mimes UNI•em••••••••••osommosmosormso 144 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1991 n 1982, a television audi- ence of millions watched in amazement as he made a seven-ton airplane vanish while it was surrounded by a ring of disbelieving spec- tators. For an encore, the following year he made the Statue of Liberty disappear. Next, live and TV au- diences watched as David Copperfield literally walked through the Great Wall of China and became the first person to successfully escape from Alcatraz. He also challenged the deadly Bermuda Triangle, survived the implosion of a 14-story hotel and lived to tell about his harrowing en- counter with Niagara Falls. Today, after a dozen Emmy Award-winning network specials and years of exten- sive touring, Mr. Copperfield has been seen by more people than any other magician in history, including Harry Houdini. His celebrated illu- sions, along with his im- maginative use of theatrics, have led him to be named "Entertainer of the Year" by organizations such as the American Guild of Variety Artists. Thirty-five years ago, back in Metuchen, N.J., where Mr. Copperfield was born David Kotkin, his middle-class Jewish parents may have had other dreams for their son. But the shy little boy, like a lot of other shy little boys, looked to various theatrical outlets as a way of expressing himself and becoming more involved with his peers. He first decided to try his hand at ventriloquism. "I wasn't very good at it," he says, "but in the same places you find ventriloquist figures and things like that, you also find magic. So I got involved in magic instead and began to get a lot of strokes and accep- tance from my friends and family. Through the years, I continued to develop my talents even further." By the time he was in his teens, Mr. Copperfield was performing professionally and soon was honored by becom- ing the youngest person ever to be admitted to the Society of American Magicians. His stature as a magician grew rapidly, and by his late teens, he was teaching magic at New York University. After high school gradua- tion, he enrolled at Fordham David Copperfield University. But his college career was cut short after three weeks when he was cast as the lead in a new musical opening in Chicago called <:\ The Magic Man. Mr. Copper- field sang, danced, acted and created all the magic for the show, which was to become the longest-running musical in the town's history. When the show finally clos- ed, Mr. Copperfield moved back to New York to continue to hone and develop his per- sonal style of magic. By studying acting, danc- ing, singing and music, by learning the importance of lighting, staging and scenery, he was able to do just that. "Magic has a horrible stigma attached to it, in that everybody at one time thought it was just somebody pulling a rabbit out of a hat at a birthday party," he says. "I never wanted to be associated with that at all. I always wanted to take magic and make it acceptable as an art form, something people would go out and see and en- joy as much as they would any other Broadway show." 7 And so he has, winning various accolades along the way, but not without facing danger. "The Statue of Liberty stunt took a tremendous amount of effort," he says. "We had to get permission from the White House. It was more difficult making the red tape disappear than the statue itself." Mr. Copperfield likens himself to a mountain 7 climber who is compelled to climb that mountain simply because it is there. "You have to understand," he concludes. "My whole career has been about living on the edge and taking risks, both professionally and physically. Some people are afraid of challenges in life. I embrace them." ❑