Al Hirschfeld’s magicians

Posted October 29th, 2009 at 7:42 PM by Steve Cohen in Art I Like, Magic

I have fond memories of Sunday mornings as a boy, searching the Arts page of the NY Times for the “Nina’s” hidden in Al Hirschfeld’s illustrations. It was a clever game of hide-and-go-seek, since Hirschfeld hid his daughter’s name so well, and in such whimsically obscure spots – in the folds of a coat sleeve, a feather’s bristles, somebody’s sideburns, or the ashes at the end of a lit cigar.

“Can you find all the Nina’s?

I remember my first Al Hirschfeld. It was his illustration of magician Harry Blackstone, Jr.  A budding magician myself, my parents drove us to West Point Military Academy in 1981 to see his full-evening show on the stage of the Eisenhower Hall theater. As memorable as the show was (a lightbulb floated out, illuminated, over the heads of the audience!), equally memorable was the playbill.

There on its cover was Blackstone, captured by Hirschfeld’s pen, five Nina’s hidden away in a pigeon’s tailfeathers. There were just enough pen strokes in the drawing to capture the essence of the subject, no more and no less. As I write this, it reminds me of my high school English teacher who said that the Red Badge of Courage contained precisely the number of words necessary to deem it a great American novel, no more and no less. Hirschfeld’s illustration of Blackstone did the same sort of thing, but with lines.

I became fascinated by Hirschfeld’s work, and over the years have been collecting both originals, lithographs, and gicleé prints by Hirschfeld. The crowning glory was when, in 2000, Hirschfeld did an illustration of me.

Steve Cohen illlustration, Al Hirschfeld

What an honor – I’ll explain the whole experience in another blog post, including the unveiling at Margo Feiden’s gallery on Madison Avenue (she’s since moved to a townhouse downtown).

What I’d like to do here is record every magician that Hirschfeld drew, to my knowledge. Some are professional magicians, some are amateurs. Some I have scans of, and others I don’t.

Magicians captured by Al Hirschfeld’s pen:

Houdini

David CopperfieldCopperfield

Copperfield didn’t like the original Hirschfeld illustration for his Broadway show “Dreams and Nightmares” (pictured above) so he commissioned Hirschfeld to create another one:copperfield-hirschfeld

Penn & Teller

(I photographed this illustration when I visited the Monkey Room after their Las Vegas show at the Rio)

PennTeller Hirschfeld

Harry Blackstone, Jr.Blackstone hirschfeld lo-res

Ricky Jay (w/ David Mamet)Ricky Jay hirschfeld

Orson WellesWelles

Danny Kaye (also an amateur magician)Danny Kaye

Cary Grant (on board of directors of the Magic Castle, Hollywood, CA)cary_grant

Johnny Carson (known as the Great Carsoni, early in his career)Carson

Woody AllenWoody Allen Hirschfeld

Harry LorayneHarry Lorayne

(I don’t have images for the following magicians, but I’ve seen their Hirschfeld illustrations:)

Bob Fitch

Alan “Ace” Greenberg (of Bear Stearns)

Harry Anderson (I have not seen, but have heard that he has a Hirschfeld)

If you know of others, please post to this blog. My goal is to list every known magic-related Hirschfeld illustration.

, ,
To post comments, please sign-up to the Chamber Magic Blog. If you have done so, please sign-in to post.