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Drummond Money Coutts

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Magician

Name
  
Drummond Money-Coutts


Website
  
www.dmcmagic.com

Occupation
  
Magician, Cardsharp

Education
  
Drummond Money-Coutts DMC Curtis Brown

Born
  
11 May 1986 (age 37) (
1986-05-11
)
London, United Kingdom

Parents
  
Crispin Money-Coutts, 9th Baron Latymer

Grandparents
  
Hugo Nevill Money-Coutts, 8th Baron Latymer

Great-grandparents
  
Thomas Burdett Money-Coutts, 7th Baron Latymer

Similar People
  
Bill Deedes, Uri Geller, Harry Houdini, Dynamo

Profiles

Drummond William Thomas Money-Coutts (born 11 May 1986), also nicknamed "DMC", is an English magician and specialist card sharp. Money-Coutts is the heir apparent to the Latymer Barony. He is currently in a programme on National Geographic Channel with several magic tricks and deception, aired to over 175 countries, named "Beyond Magic with DMC".

Contents

Drummond Money-Coutts AWOLF MAGICIAN DRUMMOND MONEYCOUTTS for B BEYOND

Biography

Drummond Money-Coutts Escape artist patched up after botched golf cart stunt

He was born in London, the son of Crispin Money-Coutts and his first wife Lucy Deedes, the daughter of Bill Deedes. In 2003, on the death of his grandfather Hugo Money-Coutts, 8th Baron Latymer, his father became the 9th Baron Latymer, and as such Drummond Money-Coutts the heir apparent.

Money-Coutts became interested in magic in 1994 after visiting Davenports, London's oldest magic shop located on the Strand, underneath the family bank Coutts where his father worked at the time. He was interested in Magic from his childhood He was educated at Westbourne House School, and then Eton College, where he founded the Eton College Magic Society and also arranged a visit by Uri Geller, from whom he learned how to bend spoons. His first professional performance came in 2000 while he was still at school, at the Royal Horticultural Society.

Drummond Money-Coutts National Geographic Channels Int39l goes Beyond

When he left Eton in 2004, his conjuring career was already well under way. By 2005, when he was at Leeds University, he had already performed before Queen Elizabeth II, Hugh Grant, and Michael Parkinson. That year he made two visits to Asia, speaking at an International Brotherhood of Magicians convention in Calcutta, and subsequently spent several weeks in Bangkok learning from local professional hustlers. Also in 2005, while on a visit to New York City, he studied with the professional magicians Jamy Ian Swiss, Simon Lovell, and Billy McComb.

Drummond Money-Coutts Raffles 45th birthday Tatler

In July 2007, he published a booklet called Mr Magnificent: Highlight of the Night!, a concise guide to the professional and financial aspects of magic, written for magicians.

In 2009 he completed four months of training and qualified as a professional croupier and card dealer at the London Gaming College.

As a Brixton resident, DMC is a regular on the London party scene.

Film productions

In August 2007 he travelled to Kenya with his school friend and fellow performer Tom Lyon to film Kenyan Conjurations: the School Built By Magic, a DVD documentary released early in 2008 and sold to raise funds to build a primary school on the Kenyan coast. The project has raised over ₤17,000 to date.

In August 2008 he travelled again with Tom Lyon to Beijing for the 2008 Summer Olympics, where the pair filmed their second DVD together.

In August 2010 he spent a month in Tanzania, both performing and investigating the widespread beliefs in witchcraft. The short film, Tanzanian Devil - The Dark Truths B'hind the African Witchdoctors, was released on the internet on 26 October 2010. In February 2011, the film was featured on Derren Brown's blog with an article detailing the witchcraft issues in Tanzania and Swaiziland.

In January 2012, following the murder and ritual sacrifice of a young girl in southern India, he returned to the country to film the short film, Why Do We Believe?, which looked at why human beings today still believe in superstitions, rituals and beliefs in the face of modern-day technology and evidence.

In May 2012 he travelled to the supposed birthplace of magic, Egypt, in order to film his fifth solo short film, "DMC: What is Magic?". Staying in Cairo whilst the city was under military curfew, owing to the ongoing unrest after the 2011 Egyptian Revolution - the film seeks to find quite what magic really means today after so many thousands of years of development.

In June 2013 his first mainstream television special was aired worldwide on the National Geographic Channel. 'Card Shark' follows the story of the Three-Card Monte in which he travels from London to Paris and Bangkok to both perform and to meet with international card masters.

Public stunts

On 11 July 2011 he announced a public treasure quest to take place in London's Natural History Museum, in which over the course of one week, ten envelopes would be hidden throughout the museum - each containing a £50 note. Towards the end of the week, an eleventh envelope would then be concealed somewhere in the museum by an anonymous assistant - inside which was £1000 in cash. As he states in an online video - the contents and money would belong to whomsoever located each envelope. Once hidden in the museum, the £1000 envelope was not found for 72 hours - finally located by Chris Howard and Javier Trapero on the first floor of the Central Hall, on Monday 18 July. Although the Natural History Museum was not made aware of the stunt prior to its launch, staff and management confirmed record admittance numbers during the week of the treasure hunt.

In November 2011 he spent 8 consecutive evenings sleeping rough in London as part of a wider campaign for the youth homeless charity, Centrepoint (charity) - a campaign which went on to raise over £250 000 in total. In 2013, DMC attempted an escapology stunt in which he was injured. He was situated between two golf carts and planned to escape handcuffs and ropes before the carts accelerated away from him in opposite directions. He had still not undone one of the ropes and was dragged away by a cart and scraped badly up his torso. He called the performance "Torn Apart". He performed the stunt successfully in second try but this time with two trucks.

References

Drummond Money-Coutts Wikipedia