Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!
The Encyclopedia Of Stage Hypnotism
McGill, Ormond
Abbott Magic Novelty Co. (1947)
In Collection
#4579
10*
Hypnotism
Spiral-bound 
USA  eng
McGill, Ormond: Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism
©1947 Abbott's Magic Novelty Co., Colon, MI
Softcover, comb-bound, 8.5x11", 301 pages

Comments:Illustrations by MAC

Contents (from book ToC):
9 Preface
11 Introduction
13 Obtaining the First Subject
17 Some Preliminary Tests
28 Experiments in the Waking State
44 How to Hypnotize
52 A Variety of Hypnotic Methods
71 Phenomena of the Trance
78 Experiments in the Hypnotic State
100 Awakening the Subject
103 A Bit of Theory
107 Questions and Answers
114 Some Useful Suggestions
126 Introduction to Stage Hypnotism
131 The Opening Lecture
143 The Hypnotic Show
204 Further Experiments in Stage Hypnotism
211 Sensational Stunts
228 Hypnotic Misdirections
247 Inner Secrets of Stage Hypnotism
259 Hypnotism as Entertainment
268 Hypnotic Stagecraft
300 And in Conclusion
Product Details
No. of Pages 301
Personal Details
Read It No
Location Magic Library (Home) Shelf Q
Condition Very Good
Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Notes
Ormond McGill was born in Palo Alto, California, in1913, the son of the city's telephone manager. At a young age, McGill became interested in magic, and eventually took a correspondence course through the Tarbell Music School in Chicago while still in high school.

After graduating from high school in 1931, he attended San Jose State, studying psychology, commercial art and advertising. He relates how his love affair with hypnosis was triggered as a university student when he saw a performance of a stage hypnotist named De Walzoa. Fascinated, McGill began reading books on the subject, and gradually started to incorporate a little bit of hypnosis into his magic shows. Eventually he began performing hypnosis shows as well. In the early days, he recalls, Palo Alto had a clause in its laws that prohibited gypsies from coming to Palo Alto, along with fortune tellers and hypnotists.

He remained interested in magic, and soon began traveling as an assistant to "Mandu the Magician.” Continuing his interest in stage hypnotism, in which volunteers from the audience are willingly hypnotized in the course of the performance, he continued to travel to wherever his jobs would take him.

After one Canadian performance, McGill was awakened late at night by an officer of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police at his door. He explained that a woman at his performance had failed to come out of her hypnotic trance for nearly three days, was at a local hospital and could he please come to help. By the time McGill showed up, she was out of the trance. The incident was picked up by news radio commentator Paul Harvey.

From 1947 to 1954, McGill performed hypnotism and magic under the stage name of Dr. Zomb. His "Séance of Wonders" show featured horror-themed routines and costumed assistants typical of the midnight "Spook Shows" which were popular during that era.

In addition to his career as a world-traveling magician and stage hypnotist, McGill was also a skilled hypnotherapist and a student of Eastern mysticism. He wrote somewhere between twenty-five and forty books (sources disagree on the total), including such titles as “Grieve No More Beloved” (about his afterlife contact with his deceased wife), “Hypnotism and Mysticism in India”, and his autobiography, “The Amazing Life of Ormond McGill”, "The Encyclopedia of Genuine Stage Hypnotism” and a number of books with Hypnotist Tom Silver, two of which are “The How To Book of Hypnotism” and “Hypnotism Training & Techniques Manual.”

Ormond McGill made many of his greatest insights in recent years. He has combined his profound mastery of many hypnotic techniques; his deep personal understanding of Eastern systems of meditation, mysticism, wisdom and healing; and his creativity, vision, compassion, humor and life experience.

Known as “The Dean of American Hypnotism”, Ormond McGill continued to teach courses and lecture right up until a few days before his death. He passed away on October 19, 2005 in town where he was born – Palo Alto.

His best piece of advice: "Make life your playground,
not your battlefield."