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Charles Joseph Carter

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Occupation
  
Magician

Died
  
February 13, 1936, Mumbai

Role
  
Magician

Name
  
Charles Carter

Spouse(s)
  
Corinne


Charles Joseph Carter wwwfindacadabracomphpthumbphpThumbphpsrc

Born
  
June 14, 1874 (
1874-06-14
)

Books
  
Torsional Analysis of Structural Steel Members

Charles Joseph Carter (June 14, 1874 – February 13, 1936) was an American stage magician, also known as Carter the Great.

Contents

Charles Joseph Carter Charles Joseph Carter Wikipedia

Biography

He was born on June 14, 1874 in New Castle, Pennsylvania.

Carter began his career as a journalist and lawyer. As time passed, he grew an interest in magic. Due to stiff competition from the number of magic acts on the American stages at the time, Carter opted to pursue his career abroad, where he achieved his greatest fame. Among the highlights of Carter's stage performances during his career were the classic "sawing a woman in half" illusion (an elaborate surgical-themed version with "nurses" in attendance), making a live elephant disappear and "cheating the gallows", where a shrouded Carter would vanish, just as he dropped at the end of a hangman's noose.

Carter's first theatrical experience occurred at the Herzog's museum and Pat Harris' Masonic Temple in Baltimore at the age of 10, where he appeared as "Master Charles Carter the Original Boy Magician".

Carter purchased the famous Martinka Magic Palace in 1917, a time when he was unable to continue his world touring magic show. The story goes that he kept his lion, Monty in the back room of the shop and when it would roar, the startled customers would run for the door.

He died on February 13, 1936, aged 61, in India.

Legacy

Carter's home in San Francisco was rented by the Sumitomo Bank of California in the 1980s-90s and used as a residence for the Bank's President. Carter used to put on shows in the basement and people still discover occult references in the stained glass windows. The house is in the Seacliff District of San Francisco near the Pacific Ocean. It is sometimes mistakenly referred to as the "Houdini Mansion". It is now used as a foreign consulate.

Following Charles Carter's death from a heart attack in 1936, his son Larry Carter took over as Carter the Great.

A variety of vintage posters, advertising his shows, are on display at the House on the Rock in Wisconsin.

A highly fictionalized account of his life can be found in Carter Beats the Devil (ISBN 0-7868-8632-3) by Glen David Gold.

Timeline - touring dates

1906
  • September 15–21  : Decatur, Illinois
  • September 27 - Oct 3 : Cleveland, Ohio
  • October 4 - ?  : Cincinnati, Ohio
  • October 28 - ?  : Holland, Michigan
  • November 8 - ?  : Chicago Heights, Illinois
  • November 19 - ?  : Fairmount, Indiana
  • November 30 - ?  : Tecumseh, Michigan
  • 1907
    1912
  • December 25  : Terre Haute, Indiana
  • 1917
  • March 15  : New York City (Moss' Jefferson Theatre)
  • References

    Charles Joseph Carter Wikipedia