Potser yes, it would be nice to have had to pay the TV ads of our Infantes…
I’ve trobat this petite meravella from the passat to YouTube. At the beginning there was the announcement of the magic capsa that is going to be published after the magic collectible that is being proposed. And then you can stay and look at the announcements that I’m sure will take you on a trip in the weather…
Certainly, it’s a very good idea to watch YouTube all there, which is going to end up being lost, by chance, among those movies recorded and those that dissapeared late…
Search, search for belts to the golfs… Hi search for tresors…
Juan Manuel Tamariz-Martel Negrón (Madrid; October 18, 1942) is a Spanish magician and prestidigitator.
He has presented various shows to audiences throughout Spain, as well as performing in cities around the world, including Chicago, Tokyo, Paris, London, Bogotá, Cairo, New York, and Santiago, Chile, among others. He has published extensively, including several books, and is the creator of a mnemonic deck of cards.
Biography
Juan Tamariz was born in Madrid on October 18, 1942. He was introduced to magic at the age of four, when his parents, Consuelo and Julio, took him to a theater to see a magician, and from that moment on he decided to begin his magical apprenticeship. His parents gave him magic kits on Three Kings’ Day, and in this way Juan took his first steps in the art. In addition, the boy went to the circus whenever he could to watch the magicians, and to the magic shows of the magician Marlow at his older brothers’ school, and he watched the magic in awe.
As soon as he had mastered enough magic through empirical learning, he borrowed what would become his first magic books. He also began performing for larger audiences than before, preparing to join the Spanish Society of Illusionism (SEI). He applied to the SEI at the age of 16, but was not accepted because he was under the minimum age of 20. Juan, however, reapplied at 18 and took the entrance exam. After astonishing the examiners, who immediately recognized the young man’s undeniable talent, he was admitted to the society without being required to meet the minimum age requirement.
While at the SEI (School of Performing Arts), Tamariz met Juan Antón, with whom he formed the act “Los Mancos” (The One-Handed Ones), a routine in which they both performed using only one hand, alongside his teacher, Arturo de Ascanio, among others. He also began performing as a clown and puppeteer, practices that further enhanced his skill in the art of comedy.
Academically, Juan Tamariz studied Physics until his fourth year, but he didn’t finish his degree because his true interest lay in film. He enrolled at the Film School, where he met José Luis García Sánchez and Miguel Hermoso. However, Tamariz never graduated as a director, as the school was closed in 1970 by the government of the time due to the numerous strikes that took place there. After its closure, he and some classmates founded the Magic School of Madrid.
In 1973, Tamariz made his definitive leap to glory when he won the World Card Magic Prize with honors at the World Congress of Magic, held in France. The act he presented, known as “The Paris Act,” is an astonishing blend of card magic and coin magic, including transformations, disappearances, and reappearances, all presented with great humor while Tamariz plays music on a harmonica. Arturo de Ascanio stated that this effect was the greatest thing he had ever seen in magic. The legendary magician Dai Vernon, referring to Tamariz, asserted that in his more than eighty years of magical life, no one had ever fooled him as Tamariz did.
Tamariz has a daughter named Ana, who runs her own magic school, and a son who is also interested in the art. He currently performs extensively around the world, especially in Spain, and appears on various television programs and events about magic.


