Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Max Maven obit

Magician Max Maven has died

He was not on the list.


Maven often appeared on television magic shows to perform "interactive" mind reading tricks. Among other cities, including Rome, Maven grew up largely in Boston,Massachusetts, where he became known for his performances at several nightspots including the then popular Playboy Club. In Boston, he was formerly a radio deejay.

Maven was also a prolific author and conceived many magical and mentalist effects used by other magicians. He was a magic consultant for such performers as David Copperfield and Penn & Teller, Siegfried & Roy, and Doug Henning, and was a frequent contributor to industry journals such as Genii, The Linking Ring, and M-U-M.

Maven was featured on the cover of over 30 such magazines over the years, including The Linking Ring, Genii in 1983 (with Japanese magician Shigeo Takagi), and also in 2007 and in 2018, and on the cover of Penguin Magic Monthly in 2019. He was the featured magician at the annual conventions of both the Society of American Magicians and the International Brotherhood of Magicians.

His name was changed legally to Maven but he still used "Phil Goldstein" as a pen name for technical writings.

Maven was considered a legend in the world of magic, and had a broad knowledge of magic history and the origins of various tricks and methods. He stated that he believed it vital to preserve the history of the art and provide credit to the originators of ideas.

Although Maven did not consider himself a comedian, he spent much of the 1980s performing and headlining in comedy clubs throughout the United States.

His one man show, Thinking in Person, ran for two months at the Beverly Hills Playhouse in 1988, and an expanded version of the show was relaunched twenty years later in 2008. The show was later mounted Off-Broadway at the Abingdon Theatre Arts Complex in 2012.

Maven occasionally played a magician character (often as himself) on various television series, such as, "Magic", "The Art of Magic" and "The MAXimum Dimension". He appeared in television series in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Taiwan, England, Canada, Spain, Portugal, and Chile.

Maven appeared as a part of the traveling science exhibit called "Magic: The Science of Illusion" and the "Magic of the Mind Illusion," which toured in science museums such as Los Angeles and Boston. He performed often in Japan, and spoke Japanese.

Maven was a frequent speaker at the EG Conference on creativity and innovation.

Maven starred as the title role in FOX's 1992 Halloween special Count DeClues' Mystery Castle. His performed his interactive magic on The World's Greatest Magic, NBC's highest rated special of 1994.

Maven hosted his own show on Israel's Channel 2, a licensed version of Penn & Teller: Fool Us called Mi Yapil Et Ha Master ("Who Can Fool The Master?). He was a judge for a number of episodes of the 2008 TV reality tv series Celebracadabra.

Maven appeared in sitcoms and television dramas, including as "The Great Mentos" in the 1995 Fresh Prince of Bel Air episode "Save the Last Trance for Me," the 1982 episode of Mork & Mindy entitled "Drive, She Said," and episodes of General Hospital and Top Chef.

In 2019, he appeared on screen in the documentary about The Amazing Johnathan directed by Ben Berman and was interviewed by the Los Angeles Times about recent developments at The Magic Castle.

The well-reviewed feature documentary entitled Max Maven: A Fabulous Monster was released about him in 2007 by Reel Time Images. It is available for streaming on Amazon Prime.

Maven died from brain cancer on November 1, 2022, at the age of 71.

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