Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Out and About in the East Village

In this weekly feature, East Village-based photographer James Maher provides us with a quick snapshot of someone who lives and/or works in the East Village.



By James Maher
Name: Magic Brian
Occupation: Magician, Comedian, Performer
Location: East 3rd Street and 2nd Avenue
Time: 11:30 am on Wednesday, Dec 17

I was born in Long Island and I grew up in Cornwall, about an hour and a half north of the city. My mom’s from Brooklyn and my dad’s from Queens, but they moved out of the city and I moved back in.

I moved to the city in 1996, to an apartment on 51st Street between 2nd and 3rd Avenues. I didn’t know this neighborhood that well but I was always coming down here for shows or to go to the bar or whatever and then I just fell in love with it. I was just constantly taking the bus down here, so I moved to 7th Street a year and a half later. I then moved to 1st Avenue, above Lanza’s for four years, and 12 or 13 years ago I moved down to where I live now with my wife, to 2nd between C and D.

Any time friends come into town I just walked them around the neighborhood. Benny’s was a favorite place. There was great people watching at Benny’s. Now we’re like, I guess we’ll just set up lawn chairs on the corner and bring our own margaritas. It’s a great neighborhood, it’s just changing. I’ve started taking pictures of all the corners. I’ve got about 60 corners so far.

I started doing magic when I was a kid. My sister works at a daycare center. When she was working there as a teenager, there was construction, so she had a daycare center in our house basically. There was a room in our house with all these kids in it, and she was always trying to come up with stuff to do with them. I had always played around with magic. I had a friend who lived down the street and I said, ‘Hey what if we put on this show for the kids?’

So we started practicing on these same six kids over and over again. So I was like, ‘You know what, we can make money doing this.’ We became Abra and Cadabra. We did a lot of family shows, kids shows, senior citizen centers. I did that for a while and then when I went to college I started doing solo shows and more comedy shows.

It was a bit weird doing it without my partner because I had always had someone else, and then he completely lost interest. He had never really wanted to do it to begin with. So I started doing open mics and things like that. Magic is my tool, but [what I do] is like a comedian or a clown act. A juggler might use juggling clubs or balls, but they’re a comedian that juggles. Magic is my tool.

I started doing that and then I met this circus, the Bindlestiff Family Cirkus, based in Brooklyn. They were doing shows at the Brooklyn Brewery at the time, Winter Cabaret, and they always toured, so I started touring with them for a few years. I loved traveling around the world with the circus. It was kind of like we were a band. We would play rock venues. We had a trailer that said, Bindelstiff Family Cirkus and people would ask, ‘Are you guys in a band?’ ‘No we’re a circus.’ ‘Is that the name of your band?’ ‘We’re a circus, not a band.’ ‘What kind of music do you play?’ We’re a circus.’

After that I started street performing and then I started traveling the world. I had just done so many shows on the road with them that I thought, ‘Well, what else can I do?’ One of my friends on tour, him and his wife were street performing in Europe, so I just asked them some advice and I put a show together. The first time I did it was in Washington Square Park. That was 2000 or 2001. I worked there just at the very start and then left. It was just waiting around so long to do a show because there were so many acts that it took forever. It was hard. Yeah. Back then it was a lot of different acts and so many strange ones. Now it’s just the break dancers. Then I went up to Central Park and it was a nicer experience.

I’m back up in Central Park. [2014] was the first year where I was going up there regularly again. I started going up with a magician friend of mine. The break dancers took over the spot I usually work by the fountain. They kind of do that everywhere — everywhere in the world. They’re kind of a plague. There’s a code among street performers — you share. You show up at some place, you help somebody out. Someone’s new, you explain to them how it works. Break dancers don’t understand that at all. They just decide to do what they want, when they want. They’ll just do show, show, show, show, show and they don’t want to share. There’s only a few break dancers that I’ve ever worked with that are nice guys. They basically force people out of pitches, the spot you work.

It’s a crazy life to live, being a performer. We’re talking about the neighborhood and you’re used to the neighborhood being the way it is. Being a performer, I’m used to what it is that I do and I forget that it’s strange to people that don’t do this. It’s like, ‘Wait, what do you do?’ I hammer a nail in my nose. I swallow razor blades. I put a wig on and talk in an English accent. This is what it is. It’s normal to me and the people that I work with. My colleagues are the sword swallower and the lizard man. That’s not strange to me.

James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Another interesting neighbor. I love this series.

Anonymous said...

I've met Magic Brian through friends. I knew part of his story, and now I am glad to have the parts I didn't know filled in. An interesting, authentic person (who is not afraid to meet friends in a dive bar!!).