KEN BROOKE - The Lost Lecture - Part One
KEN BROOKE - THE LOST LECTURE - A THREE PART SERIES.
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1h 3m
WELCOME to part one of the Ken Brooke Lost lecture.
Hear Ken talk about the business, how to be a pro, how to open an act, how to grab attention. Listen to Ken demo fun gags and business that can be done anywhere,
A priceless piece of history, just for you.
I have great friends in magic, I really do. Friends who understand what Magic On the Go is all about and support in many different ways!
Thanks to my friend Quentin Reynolds, I am able too present a very special - exclusive - three part series,
Ken Brooke - The Lost Lecture
I will explain all about it in the videos but basically…
In the 1970s Ken Brooke lectured in Ireland, the lecture was audio recorded, but thought lost…
Not anymore….
You now get a chance to listen to Ken lecture as if you were there, and what a wonderful lecture it is.
A wonderful opportunity to listen to Ken Brooke give his opinions on gags, business, lazy magicians, the multiplying bottles, the chop cup, and so much more. Not to mention some comments about a young lad called Paul Daniels that are prophetic.
And thanks to Quentin Reynolds, this will be exclusively for Magic on the Go members for the time being.!
Not only that, because Quentin was actually there at the lecture, he remembers all the bits and so has kindly provided us with his own video, visually explaining the gags and business that Ken Brooke talked about in the lecture, as well as a full transcript of the entire lecture.
Quentin was just a young man back then, but he remembers it like it was yesterday!
This is what Magic On the Go is all about, not just great Magic, but brilliant history, performance hacks, and so much more!
It’s not just how to DO it.. but HOW to do it!
Up Next in KEN BROOKE - THE LOST LECTURE - A THREE PART SERIES.
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KEN BROOKE - The Lost Lecture - Part Two
and now the grand finale to ken Brooke's Lost Lecture! Here Ken continues to give us real usable material and gags, and we get to hear him perform his multiplying bottles, his big closer, get a sense of the timing, and more. A final reminder of his influence on the art of comedy magic.
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