If you’ve ever watched a magic show, you might think everything is carefully planned. Most of it is – but every now and then something completely unexpected happens, and that’s where the real fun begins
Many years ago, I was performing a comedy handcuff routine for an audience of about 300 to 400 people. The show was on a stage about four feet high, and I needed a volunteer. The routine worked best with a lady who was trim and a little shorter than me, so I spotted what looked like the perfect volunteer sitting far back in the audience.
I sent my assistant to ask if she would be willing to participate. He came back and said, “She said yes.”
Halfway through the show, I invited her on stage.
As she walked up and stood next to me, I immediately realized I had made a mistake. From a distance, she had looked several inches shorter than me. Standing beside me, she was actually several inches taller!
No problem, I thought. We’ll make it work.
The routine involved both of us being locked in handcuffs, with the cuffs linked together in a way that appeared impossible to escape. At one point, she was supposed to step through my extended arms, creating a funny situation before the magical escape.
The problem was that she was too tall.
As we tried to maneuver, we became completely tangled. The audience started laughing. She started laughing. I started laughing.
Then her long dreadlocks got caught in the handcuffs.
Now we were really tangled!
The audience was roaring. She was laughing so hard she could barely stand. I was laughing so hard that tears were running down my face.
To this day, I honestly don’t remember exactly how we got ourselves separated and finished the trick. Somehow, we did.
What I do remember is the laughter.
That experience taught me something about performing: sometimes the moments you never planned become the moments the audience remembers most.
And after all these years, I still laugh every time I think about it.