John Mulholland (magician)


John Mulholland was an American magician, author, publisher and intelligence agent.

Early life

Mulholland was born on June 9, 1898, in Chicago, Illinois. His parents were John and Irene Wickizer. While still at school Mulholland started his professional magic career from 1913. He was educated at Columbia University and College of the City of New York. Mulholland supplemented his income by teaching industrial arts at Horace Mann School during 1919-1925.

Life and work

Mulholland learned the art of magic as a teenager with John William Sargent, President of the Society of American Magicians. Mulholland was a professional magician for two decades, working in small companies and large stage shows. He ran one of the first magic workshops and was from 1930 the editor of the magical trade magazine . He published many books on magic and its history.
Mulholland was a close friend of Harry Houdini. Mulholland asserted that "Houdini once told me that he considered no man to be a magician until he was able skillfully to perform the cups and balls."
His other friends included Gene Tunney, Harold Ross and Bert Terhune. Mulholland married Pauline Pierce on May 17, 1932.
In 1939, he was the only foreign officer in the British Magical Society, and by that time had studied his craft in 42 countries.
During World War II, he wrote a spellbook for soldiers. His impressive collection is now owned by David Copperfield.
In 1949, Mulholland was issued a public $10,000 challenge. John J McManus issued the challenge in the Conjurors' Magazine. The full page ad called for Mulholland to re-create his famous 'Hooker Rising Trick' under controlled stage conditions with McManus providing the necessary props. Failure to answer the challenge or to correctly recreate the trick would call for publicly accepting the story of his trick as an 'exaggerated myth'.
He was the editor of the Conjurer's Journal and was the only living magician listed in the book Who's who in America immediately after the death of Howard Thurston.
He left his editorial position at The Sphinx in 1953, officially due to health problems but actually to work for the CIA.
During the Cold War, Mulholland was paid by the CIA to write a manual on deception and misdirection. Copies of the document were believed to have been destroyed in 1973, however, copies later resurfaced and were published as "The Official CIA Manual of Trickery and Deception".
In 2008, magician Ben Robinson authored The Magician: John Mulholland's Secret Life which documented his work with the CIA.
Mulholland was a member of Inner Magic Circle, International Brotherhood of Magicians and Society of American Magicians.

Skepticism

Mulholland had criticized the claims of parapsychology and exposed the tricks of fraudulent spiritualist mediums. His book Beware Familiar Spirits revealed many of these tricks.
A review which highly praised the book, stated that Mulholland had "been sworn at, threatened, and even shot at while acquiring the information".
In 1952 for Popular Science, he published a skeptical article on flying saucers and UFOs.

Books

Articles
Books