toronto fringe

Checking in with Canada's Magic

In the lead-up to our new show Mysteries and Lies at the 2026 Toronto Fringe Festival, I sat down with the editor of Canada’s Magic to answer some questions about the show:

What is your first memory of magic?

Memory is tricky at that age. I can reconstruct after the fact that I definitely saw Penn & Teller do “Blast-Off” on the Muppet Show

 

How long have you been performing professionally?

My first paid performance was in 2007. I think I started identifying as a professional around 2012. 
 

Why is now the right time for you to be at the Fringe?

At any given time, I have three or four shows I could do. I interact with the audience a lot. So what I do really has to be grounded in the space I’m in. Magic & Martini (2016-2020) always took place in a cocktail lounge. My virtual show, Bring Magic Home, never tried to hide the fact these weird Zoom get-togethers were utterly mad. 

The Toronto Fringe is enormous. This year it has one hundred twenty-three shows. And those slots are assigned by lottery. Some years I get busy and don’t get around to applying. But really it was a random number generator that decided this was the time. And so I didn’t know what the show would be until I found out where it was going to be. But once we knew, the whole show basically came together in one afternoon of shuffling index cards around a coffee table. 


What is the title of the show?

Mysteries and Lies. I’m chronically obsessed with the paradox of truth in magic — that there is no way to do what we do honestly. My last Fringe foray was called Lies, Damn Lies & Magic Tricks. There’s a naive version of magic which is about fooling people — I know something you don’t know, Nyah! But there’s a more interesting more grown up version which is about getting people to think about what shouldn’t and shouldn’t be possible. But fooling someone is tightly bound up in that project so it’s a very fine line to walk.

I want people to have an amazing — maybe even a profound — experience. But I don’t want to fall into the trap that so many in the industry do of thinking that you need people to think it’s “for real” in order to be respectable. There shouldn't be a contradiction between being totally amazing and being “just a magic trick”. 

 

How, if at all, does this show differ from your previous shows?

Because the theatre is a very intimate space, 46 seats, with raked seating, we decided this was going to be a close-up show — like what you might see at the close-up room of the Magic Castle. The format is one I hadn’t really worked in before 2020. I never really sat down, even to do close-up magic. I got used to it doing virtual shows, where I opted to sit behind a desk. And during re-opening after the pandemic, there was an awkward period in Canada where you weren’t allowed to have more than ten people in a gathering. So my private shows moved from the end of the room to around the coffee table or the dining room table. (Again, so that the magic can be grounded in the environment. The show happens in your living room. I don’t try to make you pretend your living room is a bar or a theatre or a comedy club.) 

But it also means this show is really brand new. If you saw Magic & Martini, before the pandemic, this will be completely different.

The show is thematically richer — maybe just because I’m older. Recently truth has been top of mind. We’re bombarded by fake headlines, fake experts, AI slop and the threat a Large Language Model is coming for your job. So as someone who is trying to walk this tightrope of honest lying, my job is to channel all that angst into a real experience, but without making things explicit so you feel like you’re watching a TED talk about what to do if you think your toaster might be conscious.

 

When did you start writing and preparing for this show?

I found out where the show was going to be in mid January and that’s when I seriously started preparing. The origin of the show we wound up doing is actually a bit stranger. 

I did get used to the idea of performing at the table during re-opening. But the first one of those shows was actually in January of 2020. I received a last minute inquiry on a Sunday morning for a show that night. It was for four people. They wanted something to lighten the mood after they got back from a funeral. (Friends of mine know that the stranger the request, the more likely I am to say yes.) So in my mind, that show was Mysteries and Lies v1.0. And there is actually one trick from that which survives into this version. 

The other weird thing that seeped into this show is that the theatre is inside of a converted school classroom. It’s one of the old red brick kind built in 1914. So the hallway has that odd proportion designed to funnel hundreds of kids to and from recess. The doors are classroom doors. So we’re playing with the idea that we’re surveying all of the regular school subjects — science, history, math — through the lens of magic. 

Will you tease an effect or two for us?

I would rather people be surprised. But if someone is willing to do some work, they can earn a spoiler. When The Beatles appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, we got so swept up, we forget that immediately after that, there was a magician on, who did two tricks. The show contains one of those. There is also a piece by Tommy Wonder that he was so protective of that he withheld it from publication in The Books of Wonder. (But he later softened and ultimately shared it in 2003.) I’ll be doing a version of that. 

 

Is there anything else you’d like to share with the readers of Canada’s Magic?

If they have the time, they should take the time to experience the Fringe. There are over a hundred different shows. So part of the fun is making a day of it, and seeing what new and different things you can experience. 

Tickets for the show are now available. There are just 8 performances.

Stage Door Dialogues

I sat down (digitally) with Janine Marley at A View From the Box for their “Stage Door Dialogues” series to discuss my new show Mysteries and Lies premiering at this summer’s Toronto Fringe Festival.

Could you please introduce yourself to my readers?

I spend most of the year as a professional magician. I also manage the My Magic Hands program at Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital. I have been practicing for over twenty years and I’ve lived in Toronto my whole life. I’ve done a number of shows in the city over the past several years: James Alan’s Magic Tonight (2013-2026), Magic & Martini (2016-2020), the virtual experience Bring Magic Home (2020-22). My last Fringe production was fourteen years ago, called Lies, Damn Lies & Magic Tricks

Please tell us more about your upcoming show in the Toronto Fringe Festival!

MYSTERIES AND LIES is first and foremost a magic show. We are messing with reality, or at least your perception of it in really fun ways. And we felt it was important to be able to do that playfully in an environment saturated with “alternative facts”, deepfakes, AI slop and fake experts. I’m a classical sleight-of-hand artist, so we’re doing all of this the old fashioned way. There’s no special technology involved, just the minds of the audience.

Through the magic of the Fringe lottery we found ourselves in the Sweet Action Theatre, which is a wonderful intimate space on Queen West. There are forty-five seats per performance. And we decided to take advantage of that intimacy to get up close and personal with the audience. Inspired by magicians from Spain and Argentina, we have members of the audience on stage the entire show. They make the magic happen as much as I do. We’re giving up a lot of control and a lot of certainty. It also means each show will be different and anything can happen. 

Describe the essence of your show in 3 words.

Magic Live Unrepeatable

What’s your favourite part of performing in a Fringe Festival?

Fringe audiences are special. They comes looking for something. They’re not there by accident — they’ve chosen to seek out something different, something they can’t find at a mainstream venue. That means when you build something live with them in the room, they’re genuinely present for it. Every show becomes its own unrepeatable thing, shaped by the specific people who showed up that day. That’s rare, and it’s the whole point.

What’s another show that you’re looking forward to seeing at the Toronto Fringe Festival?  

I have to shout out Keith Brown in 110% Wizard. He’s incredibly talented and charming. We have been watching Keith perform since before he was old enough to grow that beard. And we have the photos to prove it!

The show opens June 30 at the Sweet Action Theatre (Arstcape Youngplace, 180 Shaw Street, Queen & Ossington). Tickets are now available!

 



Announcing: Mysteries and Lies

We are thrilled to announce a new show coming to the Toronto Fringe Festival this summer. My new show, Mysteries and Lies will be at the Sweet Action Theatre for just eight performances starting June 30.

This is not a standard magic show. We have taken advantage of the special conditions (Sweet Action has only forty six seats) to create something truly unique and intimate. We’re involving the audience and challenging them to get up close and personal, even help the magic happen. It’s going to be a lot of fun.

Tickets are now available from the Fringe website. The are $18, including all taxes and fees. The show is not recommended for children under 14. As mentioned, we have very limited seating. So book yours as soon as possible.

Performance Schedule:

Tuesday, June 30, 8:00 PM
Thursday, July 2, 4:00 PM
Saturday, July 4, 8:15 PM
Sunday, July 5, 12:30 PM
Monday, July 6, 9:30 PM
Thursday, July 9, 6:30 PM
Friday, July 10, 1:00 PM
Saturday July 11, 4:45 PM

The Sweet Action Theatre is located inside Artscape Youngplace (180 Shaw Street, Queen & Ossington). The Theatre is wheelchair accessible.

 

My last Fringe production was in 2012 in Hamilton with a show called Lies, Damn Lies and Magic Tricks. As you can see I the intervening fourteen years have not made me any more honest. Looking forward to sharing this new show with everyone next month!


Strange and Unusual

My friend Nicholas Wallace will be appearing in Toronto in January as part of the Next Stage Theatre Festival with his show Strange and Unusual.

Back when we were hosting Magic Tonight, Nick was one of our most requested guests (certainly the creepiest guest), and earlier this year he received the Allan Slaight Award for Canadian Rising Star in Magic.

Unfortunately, Nick lives rather far away, out in that mysterious void on the other side of Hamilton, so getting a chance to see him perform in Toronto is rare. But he’s here for five nights at the Factory Theatre and there is an early bird discount up until this Friday, December 7. Just use the promo code EARLY BIRD (with the space) at checkout. The show is definitely worth seeing!

11-07-2018-193242-3748.jpg
 

Factory Theatre

At the Fringe Part 1: Redefining Wonder

Last night I went to the Toronto Fringe and Chris Funk's Redefining Wonder. I felt some sympathy because I've had my own Thursday 10PM opening night at a theatre festival, but the show came recommended to me so I went to go see. Magic shows tend to be slightly out of place in theatre festivals. Maybe it's just a phase, but independent theatre seems to lean such that if you're not coping with abuse, death, coming out of the closet or thoughts of suicide, they don't really want to hear from you. That's not to say that some people don't take those serious issues and address them in upbeat and genuinely uplifting ways, but a huge swath of the theatre community is unable to distinguish between sombre and serious. I remember reading the Summerworks program when I was accepted and my own show (which had to do with lying to people non-stop) was the single most cheerful thing in there.

Magic shows also have a tendency to be more like rock concerts - a collection of individual songs. If you add one in, take one out or mess with the order no one would really notice the difference. As such, they tend to be theatrical without necessarily being theatre.

All that being said, Redefining Wonder, is a wonderful and fun magic show. The protagonist, is a charming and disarming caricature of a stage magician; chuckling at his own bad puns, striking a few too many Copperfield-like poses, and dripping with a bit too much ego for someone with the complexion of a sixteen year old.  He calls himself the "wonderist" — a word he had to invent himself — so he appears at first blush to be a bit too pompous to be taken seriously. Then the magic will start to hit you. This is cutting edge stuff with a nice balance of sneaky gizmos, modern technology and good old fashioned cleverness.

What I appreciate most is that it's magic for magic's sake. I'm going to make your $50 appear inside this sealed back of Pepperidge Farm Goldfish because why not, not because of [insert awkward overextended metaphor here].

Although the show does nothing to "redefine" wonder (although one person sitting near me remarked audibly that she left feeling a mixture of astonishment and terror seeing what he could do) it's certainly worth the climb up the stairs to the third floor Robert Gill Theatre (inside the UofT Bookstore building).

There are six shows left between now and July 11. Buy tickets to Redefining Wonder at the Toronto Fringe.