The reverse of these two cards show a couple of early Bicycle
backs. The card on the left is the Wheel No. 2 back first released in 1907. The
card on the right is a Sprocket No. 2 which came out in 1905.
According to an interview Lorenzo Dana Walden gave to The
Sphinx in May of 1915, he said that he was born on October 16, 1885 in
Syracuse, New York. Walden was able to do something that many of us that are
interested in magic wish we could have done. He got to witness a performance by
Alexander Herrmann, “Herrmann the Great”, when young Walden was seven years
old. He was so impressed, that he decided that becoming a magician was in his
future.
The Sphinx for September, 1906 |
When the Lyceum and Chautauqua magician Edward Maro passed
away in 1908, Walden stated, “I filled the remainder of his season at Alkahest (Lyceum),
Georgia”. A bio I found on Maro however, claims Eugene Laurant took Maro’s
place on the circuit. Further research
leads me to believe it was two different entertainment bureaus in which these
two magicians acted as replacements. Walden however, did go on from there to
become a well-known and admired magician himself on the Lyceum and Chautauqua
circuits.
Walden was mentioned in the magic magazines of his time for
many years. In February, 1910, Walden wrote that “he has cut his show from a
dozen trunks to two only, and is giving a better show”…”and greater
satisfaction to his Lyceum audiences than ever before”. In 1922, T.W. McGrath
writing in The Sphinx stated, “We never tire of Dana Walden, and his act is an
inspiration, and no one we have ever seen has as much real magic at his finger
ends as our Walden on the stage”.
From The Sphinx for August, 1915 |
Walden also marketed some of his magic effects, including a
version of Houdini’s Needle Trick, in which a number of sewing needles,
together with some thread is swallowed and then, the needles are pulled from
one’s mouth strung on the thread. Walden called his trick, “Supper of Pins”.
Ad in The Sphinx for March 15, 1920. |
One really interesting story about Walden is that for a
period of time from between 1916 and 1918, he gave up magic in order to buy a
ranch in California to grow grapes… to be made into raisins! By July of 1918
however, the ranch was sold, and The Sphinx reported that Walden and his wife
“will return to the stage”. Dana Walden went on to live until sometime in the
1930’s. I have not been able to find his exact date of death.
“Herrmann the Great” inspired a lot of magicians in the early
part of the twentieth century, and many went on to uphold his standards when it
came to pleasing their audiences. It sounds like Dana Walden was one of those
magicians. Here is a final comment from The Lyceumite and Talent magazine from
1912.
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