Effect:
The magician shuffles the deck and takes the top thirteen
cards. Holding the cards face down, he proceeds to spell
the first card name, Ace. "A C E," and for each
letter, he puts one card under the packet of thirteen cards.
He then flips over the next card (the fourth,) and it is
an Ace. He repeats this process for each card number, Ace
through King. At the end, he has all thirteen cards face
up on the table, in sequential order.
Preparation:
First, take out 13 cards from a deck, the cards do not have
to be the same suit, but you need the thirteen cards from
Ace to King. After you have them out, place them in this
order, begin by placing the three face-up on the table.
On top of that, place the eight. Then, place the Seven,
Ace, Queen, Six, Four, Two, Jack, King, Ten, Nine, and last
of all Five. And then put these on top of the deck
face down.
Performance:
The trick almost works itself. To start, pretend to shuffle
the cards, leaving the top thirteen untouched. You can do
some false shuffles, or you can do real shuffles but keep
the top 13 cards on top. After you shuffle, you can fan
through the deck, and show every card, for the pre-arranged
13 cards don't look like they are arranged at all. Remove
the top thirteen cards as a group and arrange them like
a fan, so that your audience can see their faces. Square
up the cards, and hold them face down.
When
you spell out each card, do it as follows: let's say you're
spelling the word . Spell A, remove the top card and place
it on the bottom. Then spell C, and remove the top card
and place that on the bottom. Next spell E, remove this
top card and place it on the bottom. Flip the new top card
and show that it's an Ace, and place it on the table.
Continue
in this manner until all the cards are face up on the table.
(You spell the cards in order: Ace,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, J, Q, K) Your audience
may realize that the cards must have been set up beforehand,
but this only adds to the mystery and you can treat it as
a puzzle for them to try to figure out to add to the mystery,
don't use cards all of the same suit. A mixed group of suits
makes it seem less like a "stacked" deck.
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