Teller (magician)

Teller

Teller after the Penn & Teller show at the Rio in Paradise, Nevada on August 5, 2007
Born Raymond Joseph Teller
(1948-02-14) February 14, 1948
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Residence Las Vegas Valley, Nevada
Nationality American
Occupation Magician, illusionist, writer, actor, painter, film director
Years active 1974–present
Known for Half of the comedy magic duo Penn & Teller
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Political party Libertarian Party
Parent(s)
  • Irene B. Derrickson
  • Joseph Teller (1913–2004)
Website Penn and Teller.com

Teller (born Raymond Joseph Teller;[1][2] February 14, 1948) is an American magician, illusionist, actor, comedian, writer, director and half of the comedy magic duo Penn & Teller, along with Penn Jillette. Teller usually does not speak during performances. He is an atheist, debunker, skeptic, and a fellow of the Cato Institute (a free market libertarian think tank that also lists Jillette as a fellow), an organization which featured prominently in the duo's Showtime television series Bullshit!. Teller legally changed his name from "Raymond Joseph Teller" to the mononym "Teller", and possesses a United States passport issued in that name.[3][4]

Early life

Teller was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,[5] the son of Irene B. (née Derrickson) and Israel Max (later Joseph) Teller (1913–2004).[6][7] His father was of Russian Jewish descent, born in Brooklyn, New York and grew up in Philadelphia. His mother was from a farming family in Delaware; the two met as painters attending art school at Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial.[8][9] His mother was Methodist, and Teller was raised as "a sort of half-assed Methodist".[10] He graduated Central High School (1965) and Amherst College (1969).

Career

Teller taught English and Latin at Lawrence High School in Lawrenceville, New Jersey.[11][12] In 2001, he was selected to be a member of the Central High School Hall of Fame.

Performing

Teller began performing with his friend Weir Chrisemer as The Othmar Schoeck Society for the Preservation of Weird and Disgusting Music. Teller met Penn Jillette in 1974, and they became a three-person act with Chrisemer called Asparagus Valley Cultural Society, which started at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival and subsequently played in San Francisco. In 1981, they began performing exclusively together as Penn & Teller, an act that continues to this day. On April 5, 2013, Penn and Teller were honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the live performance category. Their star, the 2,494th awarded, is near the star dedicated to Harry Houdini.[13] The following day they were recognized by the Magic Castle with the Magicians of the Year award.[13]

Voice

Teller almost never speaks while performing. There are exceptions, such as when the audience is not aware of it; for example, he provided the voice of "Mofo the psychic gorilla" in their early Broadway show with the help of a radio microphone cupped in his hand. Teller's trademark silence originated during his youth, when he earned a living performing magic at college fraternity parties.[14] He found that, if he maintained silence throughout his act, spectators refrained from throwing beer and heckling him and focused more on his performance.[15]

Other exceptions to his silent act include instances in which his face is covered or obscured, as when he spoke while covered with a plastic sheet in the series premiere of Penn & Teller: Bullshit!,[16] and when he was interviewed while in shadow for the 2010 History Channel documentary, Houdini: Unlocking the Mystery,[17] while Teller spoke at length in an NPR story on Houdini in 2010.[18] He was also interviewed, with his mouth obscured in shadow, in the Nova ScienceNow episode "How Does the Brain Work?". Teller appears to say "Science!" in a falsetto voice in Penn and Teller's appearance on the television show Bill Nye the Science Guy, episode "Light Optics", but it was actually spoken by Penn, using a ventriloquist technique combined with the movement of Teller's mouth. Teller also spoke in his 1987 guest appearance in "Like a Hurricane", a fourth-season episode on NBC's Miami Vice[19] and had speaking parts in the movies Penn & Teller Get Killed (he speaks in the final scene), Long Gone and The Aristocrats. He gave voice to an animated version of himself in two episodes of The Simpsons ("Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder" and "The Great Simpsina"), and voiced a series of cloned store clerks in "Zoey's Zoo", an episode of Oh Yeah! Cartoons, as well as the English version of the 1988 animated feature Light Years (original French title: Gandahar), where he was the voice of Octum. Teller speaks at length about magic performance and sleight-of-hand in the documentary "Penn & Teller's Magic and Mystery Tour". Teller has been shown screaming and swearing in the "Anger Management" episode of Penn & Teller: Bullshit!. Teller has a brief speaking part in Atlas Shrugged: Part II, where he advises Dagny Taggart (played by Samantha Mathis) to go out the side door of the Taggart Transcontinental offices.

Teller did break his silence in his portrayal of Mortimer in the 1995 film version of The Fantasticks, though almost all of his dialogue was edited out of the film's final version (his "Dying isn't easy" scene is included among deleted scenes on the DVD release). He appeared as a "cat" in the Dharma & Greg Season 1 episode "The Cat's out of the Bag". He also appeared in an episode of Tosh.0 giving "advice" to a fellow magician. He stood staring at the gentleman for several seconds before uttering "Practice once in a fuckin' while" while walking away. Teller spoke at length during an interview on the Charlie Rose television program on January 27, 2014. During their performance in the Series Premiere of Penn & Teller: Fool Us, Penn is rambling on and Teller yells out his name, Teller can then be heard telling Penn to "shut up". Also, during their performance on the Season 1 Finale, he tells Penn that he is okay after breathing helium and while he is in a trash bag. In another episode, he says "Fuck no".

Teller's voice can be heard on Season 13 of Celebrity Apprentice, "Episode 10: The Mayor of Stress Town", when speaking with contestant Penn Jillette over Penn's mobile device. He also spoke about Tim's Vermeer, the feature documentary he directed, on KCRW's The Treatment.[20]

Writing

He collaborated with Jillette on three magic books, and he is also the author of "When I'm Dead All This Will Be Yours!": Joe Teller – A Portrait by His Kid (2000), a biography/memoir of his father. The book features his father's paintings and 100 unpublished cartoons which were strongly influenced by George Lichty's Grin and Bear It. The book was favorably reviewed by Publishers Weekly. Teller's father's "wryly observed scenes of Philadelphia street life" were created in 1939. Teller and his father's "memories began to pump and the stories flowed" after they opened boxes of old letters that Teller read out loud (learning for the first time about a period in his parents' lives that he knew nothing about, such as the fact that his father's name is really Israel Max Teller). Joe's Depression-era hobo adventures led to travels throughout the U.S., Canada and Alaska, and by 1933, he returned to Philadelphia for art study. After Joe and Irene met during evening art classes, they married, and Joe worked half-days as a Philadelphia Inquirer copy boy. When the Inquirer rejected his cartoons, he moved into advertising art just as World War II began. Employing excerpts from letters and postcards, Teller successfully re-creates the world of his parents in a relaxed writing style of light humor and easy (yet highly effective) transitions between the past and present.[7]

Teller is a co-author of the paper "Attention and Awareness in Stage magic: Turning Tricks into Research", published in Nature Reviews: Neuroscience (November 2008).[21]

In 2010, Teller wrote Play Dead,[22] a "throwback to the spook shows of the 1930s and '40s" that ran September 12–24 in Las Vegas before opening Off Broadway in New York. The show stars sideshow performer and magician Todd Robbins.[23]

Directing

In 2008, Teller and Aaron Posner co-directed a version of Macbeth which incorporated stage magic techniques in the scenes with the Three Witches.[24] In 2014, Teller and Posner co-directed a version of The Tempest, which again made use of stage magic; in an interview Teller stated that "Shakespeare wrote one play that's about a magician, and it seemed like about time to realize that with all the capabilities of modern magic in the theater."[25]

Teller directed a feature film documentary, Tim's Vermeer, which was released in 2014.[26][27][28][29][30] He and Jillette served as executive producers, with distribution by Sony Pictures Classics.[31]

Works

See also

References

  1. "Penn and Teller". The Advocates. Archived from the original on December 21, 2013. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  2. "Teller". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  3. della Cava, Marco R. (November 16, 2007). "At home: Teller's magical Vegas retreat speaks volumes". USA Today. Retrieved June 27, 2012.
  4. "Penn & Teller: Rogue Magician Is EXPOSING Our Secrets!!!". TMZ.com. April 12, 2012. Retrieved June 27, 2012.
  5. Morrow, Kathleen (Summer 2007). "Teller". Penn State University, Pennsylvania Center for the Book. Retrieved October 8, 2013. Biography based on sources including "Email correspondence with Teller. 12–14 August 2007".
  6. "Obituaries: Newspaper and Funeral Home Obituaries and Death Notices from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand". legacy.com.
  7. 1 2 "Forecasts", Publishers Weekly, August 15, 2000.
  8. "'The Exorcist' at the Geffen: No green vomit, but plenty of evil – The Ticket". Jewish Journal.
  9. "Joseph Teller, artist, father of magician". philly-archives.
  10. "Hollywood Now: The Monuments Men, Teller Directs, Jason B". interfaithfamily.com.
  11. "Reparations". Penn & Teller: Bullshit!. Season 4. Episode 7. May 15, 2006. Showtime (TV network).
  12. Lahey, Jessica (2016-01-21). "Teaching: Just Like Performing Magic". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2016-01-24. Teller taught high school Latin for six years before he left to pursue a career in magic with Penn...
  13. 1 2 "Magicians Penn & Teller Get Star on Walk of Fame". CBS Los Angeles. April 5, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  14. Elber, Lynn (April 25, 2007). "'Silent' Teller to magically make 'Macbeth' a 'horror thriller'". Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved May 21, 2007.
  15. "For Penn & Teller's Magical Partnership, The Trick Is Telling The Truth". National Public Radio. August 1, 2015. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
  16. Penn & Teller: Bullshit!; "Talking to the Dead"; Episode 1.1; January 23, 2003
  17. Houdini: Unlocking the Mystery, History Channel, October 31, 2005
  18. Smith, Robert (October 30, 2010). "The Magic of Harry Houdini's Staying Power". NPR.org. NPR. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  19. frankenbenz (August 10, 2007). ""Miami Vice" Like a Hurricane (TV episode 1987)". IMDb.
  20. Teller (December 11, 2013). Teller: Tim's Vermeer. The Treatment. Interview with Elvis Mitchell (KCRW).
  21. Macknik, S.L., King M, Randi J, et al. (November 2008). "Attention and Awareness in Stage Magic: Turning Tricks into Research". Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 9 (11): 871–9. doi:10.1038/nrn2473. PMID 18949833.
  22. "Play Dead". Playdeadnyc.com. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  23. Chareunsy, Don (September 16, 2010). "Teller's Las Vegas-born Play Dead is headed to off-Broadway". Las Vegas Weekly. Retrieved September 27, 2010
  24. Kaufman, Joanne (January 8, 2008). "The Magician Not Only Speaks, But Chooses to Utter 'Macbeth'!". The Wall Street Journal (New York). Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  25. Shea, Andrea (May 14, 2014). "The Silent Man Speaks: Teller Re-Imagines ‘The Tempest’ With Magic". WBUR.org (Boston: WBUR). Retrieved 2014-06-10.
  26. "Sony Pictures Classics Unlocks Tim's Vermeer - ComingSoon.net". ComingSoon.net.
  27. "Teller's 'Tim's Vermeer' Bought By Sony Classics". Variety. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
  28. Itzkoff, Dave (July 29, 2013). "A Documentary by Teller Explores the Magic of Vermeer". The New York Times.
  29. "Sony Pictures Classics picks up "Tim's Vermeer"". realscreen.com.
  30. "Telluride Film Review: ‘Tim’s Vermeer’". Variety. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
  31. "Triangulation 118". TWiT.tv.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, May 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.