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Penn & Teller: Naughty, Nice and Back on Broadway

When Teller – first name discarded long ago - was five, he sent away for a Howdy Doody Magic Kit. (FYI for Millenials and such, HD was a geeky puppet with a hit TV show in the 1950s...just Google it.) Mostly cardboard—“It involved a lot of punching things out and putting them together,” recalls Teller—the kit became the catalyst to a lifetime fascination, not only with tricks per se, but with creating and performing atypical, and occasionally twisted, magical stuff.

It doesn’t hurt that he’s a perfectionist. Or that his co-conspirator Penn Jillette has shared his passion for pushing the envelope during their nearly 40 years together. Still, in 1985 when the two made their New York debut Off-Broadway, the words “Penn & Teller” did not conjure up the current visual of 6’6” dark haired Penn and blonde, 5’9” Teller as they are today: dazzling gobstruck audiences at the Penn & Teller Theater in the Rio Las Vegas Hotel, popping up regularly on television, snagging a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and, now, returning to New York for an all too brief Broadway run at the Marquis Theater where, among other things, they’ll pull a rabbit out of a hat.

“Penn and I were talking one day and realized that while pulling a real rabbit out of a top hat is the quintessential magic trick, we’d never actually seen it done—nor had anyone else we talked to,” says Teller. This compelled them to create their own version. “It took about six months to get it right and it turned out to be a real test of our machismo as magicians,” he adds, saying it’s definitely “one of the most ‘show-offy’ pieces of magic we do.”

Notably, all the new pieces were created in their Vegas theater, a space Teller sees as a kind of personal laboratory. “We have a free hand to devel- op material and rehearse any time we want,” he notes, calling the space “a luxury you can’t get anywhere else.” 

Balancing out the show...and catering to long-time fans, Penn and Teller will also be performing some of their classic material, including Teller’s needle-swallowing act and Penn’s monologue about the Ten-in-One Show with fire eating.

Joining Penn and Teller onstage are bebop pianist Mike Jones, the gorgeous and glitzy Georgie Bernasek and, apparently, 40 audience members—the latter for the Vanishing Pygmy Elephant act.

But perhaps I’ve revealed too much. Without compromising anymore awe, I leave you with these suggestions: 1) This is not a kids show, but if your 7 or 8-year old can handle (or relishes) madcap gore, go for it; 2) Come ready to laugh, Teller’s physical comedy alone (he doesn’t speak in the show, you know), is worth the price of admission; and 3) Get your tickets NOW—yes, the Marquis is big, but Penn & Teller are going to sell out... trust me.

Penn & Teller will run July 12-August 16 at the Marquis Theatre, 1535 Broadway (at W. 46th St.). For more information, check out pennandtelleronbroadway.com.

About the Author

City Guide Theatre Editor Griffin Miller moved to New York to pursue an acting/writing career in the 1980s after graduating magna cum laude from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Since then, she has written for The New York Times, For the Bride, Hotels, and a number of other publications, mostly in the areas of travel and performance arts. An active member of The New York Travel Writers Association, she is also a playwright and award-winning collage artist. In addition, she sits on the board of The Lewis Carroll Society of North America. Griffin is married to Richard Sandomir, a reporter for The New York Times.

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