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Penn & Teller
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Penn & Teller - Promotional Material
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Penn & Teller Theater at Rio

Every guest gets to meet Penn & Teller inthe theater lobby after every show!

Known for their outrageous blending of comedy and magic, that often skewers the genre of traditional magic, Penn & Teller´s live show has been a hit on Broadway and around the country and now has a permanent home in Las Vegas right here at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino!

Edgy, provocative and hilarious, Penn & Teller's live show on any given night can involve knives, guns, a fire-eating showgirl and a duck. Known as the "Bad Boys of Magic," for supposedly revealing the secrets to their tricks, they may show you how it´s done, but they still manage to leave you startled.

Be sure to stick around after the show, as both Penn and Teller hang out in the theater lobby, meeting and greeting guests, posing for photos and signing autographs.

Their weekly hit Showtime series, “Penn & Teller: BS!” as well as their Emmy-winning network specials and their legendary appearances on “The Late Show with David Letterman and “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,” had Entertainment Weekly name them two of the funniest comedians alive.
Product Details
Personal Details
Read It No
Location Magic Library (Home)
Condition Very Good
Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Notes
Penn & Teller
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Penn Jillette
Raymond Joseph Teller
Penn Jillette (March 5, 1955)
Teller (February 14, 1948)

Residence
Las Vegas

Known for
Magic
Comedy
Skepticism

Website
pennandteller.com


Penn & Teller (Penn Jillette and Teller) are Las Vegas headliners whose act is an amalgam of illusion and comedy. Penn Jillette is a raconteur; Teller generally uses mime while performing, although his voice can occasionally be heard during their performance. They specialize in gory tricks, exposing frauds, and performing clever pranks, and have become associated with Las Vegas, atheism, scientific skepticism, and libertarianism.

Contents
1 Careers
2 Off-stage relationship
3 Tricks
4 Filmography 4.1 Film
4.2 Television
4.3 Books

5 Other Media 5.1 Music
5.2 Theatre
5.3 Video games

6 References
7 External links


Careers

Penn Jillette and Raymond Teller were introduced to one another by Weir Chrisimer, and on 19 August 1975, Penn & Teller did their first show together at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival. [1] From the late 1970s through 1981, Penn, Teller, and Chrisimer made up an act called "Asparagus Valley Cultural Society" which played in San Francisco at the Phoenix Theater. This act was sillier and less "edgy" than today's Penn & Teller act. Chrisimer helped to develop some bits that continued, most notably Teller's "Shadows" trick, which involves a single red rose.

By 1985, Penn & Teller were receiving rave reviews for their Off Broadway show and Emmy award-winning PBS special, Penn & Teller Go Public.[2] In 1987, they began the first of two successful Broadway runs. Through the late 1980s and early 1990s, the duo made numerous television appearances on Late Night with David Letterman and Saturday Night Live, as well as The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, Today, and many others.

Penn & Teller had national tours throughout the 1990s, gaining critical praise. They have also made television guest appearances on Babylon 5[3] (as the comedy team Rebo and Zooty), The Drew Carey Show, a few episodes of Hollywood Squares from 1998 until 2004, ABC's Muppets Tonight, FOX's The Bernie Mac Show, an episode of the game show Fear Factor on NBC, NBC's The West Wing, in a two-part episode of the final season of ABC's Home Improvement in 1998, four episodes during season 1 of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch in 1996, NBC's Las Vegas, and Fox's The Simpsons episodes "Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder" and "The Great Simpsina" and the Futurama film Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder in 2009. They also appeared as three-card Monte scam artists in the music video for "It's Tricky" by Run-DMC in 1987, and were thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel room in the music video for "Waking Up in Vegas" by Katy Perry in 2009.

Their Showtime network television show Bullshit! took a skeptical look at psychics, religion, the pseudoscientific, conspiracy theories, and the paranormal. It has featured critical segments on gun control, astrology, Feng Shui, environmental issues, PETA, weight loss, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the war on drugs.

On Bullshit!, the duo described their social and political views as libertarian.

They have also described themselves as teetotalers. Their book, Penn & Teller's How to Play in Traffic, explains that they avoid absolutely all alcohol and other drugs, including caffeine, though they do appear to smoke cigarettes in some videos. Penn has said that he has never even tasted alcohol, and that his tolerance for certain drugs is so low that his doctor only had to administer a minute amount of anesthetic relative to what one would expect necessary for a man of his size to undergo surgery.

The pair have written several books about magic, including Penn & Teller's Cruel Tricks For Dear Friends, Penn & Teller's How to Play with Your Food, and Penn & Teller's How to Play in Traffic. Since 2001, Penn & Teller have performed six nights a week (or as Penn put it on Bullshit!: "Every night of the week ... except Fridays!") in Las Vegas at the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino.

Penn Jillette hosted a weekday one-hour talk show on Infinity Broadcasting's Free FM radio network from January 3, 2006 to March 2, 2007 with cohost Michael Goudeau.[4][5] He also hosted the game show Identity, which debuted on December 18, 2006 on NBC.

Their new television series Penn & Teller Tell a Lie premiered on the Discovery Channel on October 5, 2011.

Penn & Teller have also shown support for the Brights movement[citation needed] and are now listed on the movement's homepage under the Enthusiastic Brights section.[6] According to an article in Wired magazine, their license plates are customized so they read, "Atheist" and "Godless", and when Penn signs autographs, he often writes down, "there is no God" with his signature.[7]

Off-stage relationship

Penn Jillette has told interviewer Larry King that a big part of the duo's success and longevity is due to them never having been close friends. They enjoy working together immensely, but have little in common besides magic. As a result of their drastically different lifestyles and interests, they rarely socialize or interact when not working. Jillette believes that their partnership succeeds precisely because they give each other a great deal of space off-stage.

Tricks

Their tricks include Teller hanging upside-down over a cushion of spikes in a straitjacket, Teller submerged in a huge container of water, Teller being run over by an 18-wheel tractor-trailer, Teller swinging going through Penn's hands. Many of their effects rely heavily on shock appeal and violence, although presented in a humorous manner.

Sometimes, the pair will claim to reveal a secret of how a magic trick is done, but those tricks are usually invented by the duo for the sole purpose of exposing them, and therefore designed with more spectacular and weird methods than would have been necessary had it just been a "proper" magic trick. For example, in the "reveal" of one trick, while Teller waits for his cue, he reads magazines and eats a snack.[clarification needed] Another example is their rendition of the cups and balls, using transparent cups.

Penn and Teller perform their own adaptation of the famous bullet catch illusion. Each simultaneously fires a gun at the other, through small panes of glass, and then "catches" the other's bullet in his mouth. They also have an assortment of card tricks in their repertoire, virtually all of them involving the force of the Three of Clubs on an unsuspecting audience member as this card is easy for viewers to identify on television cameras.[8]

The duo will sometimes perform tricks that discuss the intellectual underpinnings of magic. One of their acts, titled "Magician vs. Juggler", features Teller performing card tricks while Penn juggles and delivers a monologue on the difference between the two: jugglers start as socially aware children who go outside and learn juggling with other children; magicians are misfits who stay in the house and teach themselves magic tricks out of spite.

In one of their most politically charged tricks, they make a U.S. flag seem to disappear by wrapping it in a copy of the United States Bill of Rights, and apparently setting the flag on fire, so that "the flag is gone but the Bill of Rights remains." The act may also feature the "Chinese bill of rights", presented as a transparent piece of acetate. They normally end the routine by restoring the unscathed flag to its starting place on the flagpole; however, on a TV guest appearance on The West Wing this final part was omitted.[9]

One of their more recent tricks[when?] involves a powered nail gun with a quantity of missing nails from the series of nails in its magazine. Penn begins by firing several apparently real nails into a board in front of him. He then proceeds to fire the nailgun into the palm of his hand several times, while suffering no injuries. His pattern builds as he oscillates between firing blanks into his hand and firing nails into the board. While performing he states that the trick is merely memorization, and explains that the fact that he does not flinch when he could be firing a nail into his hand should be a sign that the trick is not actually dangerous. A later revision to the trick replaced the false claims of memorization with a more open explanation, allowing the audience to enjoy the rhythm of the nail gun without fear of a serious mishap.[10]

A trick introduced in 2010 is a modern version of the bag escape, replacing the traditional sack with a black trash bag apparently filled with helium. Teller is placed in the bag which is then pumped full of helium and sealed by an audience member. For the escape, the audience are blinded by a bright light for a second and when they are able to see again, Teller has escaped from the bag and Penn is holding it, still full of helium, above his head, before releasing it to float to the ceiling. The duo had hoped to put the trick in their mini-tour in London; however, it was first shown to the public in their Las Vegas show on 18 August 2010. In June 2011, Penn and Teller performed this trick for the first time in the United Kingdom on their show Fool Us.[11]

Filmography

Film

1987
Penn & Teller's Cruel Tricks for Dear Friends

1989
Penn & Teller Get Killed

1999
Fantasia 2000
Presenting the "Sorcerer's Apprentice" segment

2005
The Aristocrats
Penn also co-directed the film

Television

1985
Penn & Teller Go Public
On KCET Los Angeles

1985–1986
Saturday Night Live
7 Episodes

1994
The Unpleasant World of Penn & Teller

1995
Phobophilia

1995
The Drew Carey Show
Archibald Fenn & Geller
2 Episodes: "Drew Meets Lawyers" (1995) and "See Drew Run" (1997)

1995–2008
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
4 Episodes: 14 November 1995, 27 November 1998, 13 May 2004, & 25 November 2008

1996 & 1997
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch
Drell & Skippy
4 Episodes: "Pilot" (1996), "Terrible Things" (1996), "Jenny's Non-Dream" (1997), & "First Kiss" (1997)

1997
Friends
Salesmen
Episode: "The One With The 'Cuffs"

1997
Muppets Tonight
Episode: "The Gary Cahuenga Episode"

1997–2003
Late Night with Conan O'Brien
3 Episodes: 16 October 1997, 7 June 2000, & 23 January 2003

1998
Babylon 5
Rebo & Zooty
Episode: "Day of the Dead"

1998–1999
Penn & Teller's Sin City Spectacular
24 Episodes

1998–2000
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
2 Episodes: 13 August 1998 & 5 June 2000

1998–2004
Hollywood Squares
60 Episodes

1999
Home Improvement
2 Episodes: "Knee Deep"

1999 & 2011
The Simpsons
2 Episodes: "Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder" (1999) and "The Great Simpsina" (2011)

2002
¡Mucha Lucha!
1 Movie: "¡Mucha Lucha!: The Return of El Maléfico

2002
Grand Illusions: The Story of Magic
Discovery Channel documentary: Penn & Teller present 200 years of the history of stage magic

2002
Fear Factor
Episode: "Celebrity Fear Factor 3"

2003
Las Vegas
Episode: "Luck Be a Lady"

2003
Penn & Teller's Magic and Mystery Tour
3 Part mini-series

2003
The Bernie Mac Show
Episode: "Magic Jordan"

2003–2010
Penn & Teller: Bullshit!
89 Episodes

2004
The West Wing
Episode: "In The Room"

2004–2010
Last Call with Carson Daly
6 Episodes: 13 July 2004, 16 November 2005, 5 April 2007, 16 June 2008, 5 April 2010, & 5 May 2010



2007 & 2008

Late Show with David Letterman
2 Episodes: #15.32 & #15.113

2009
Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder

2009
The Great American Road Trip
Guests

2010
FETCH! with Ruff Ruffman
They taught one of the show's contestants, Rubye, to perform magic tricks.

2011
Cash Cab
Guest contestants playing for charity

2011
Penn & Teller: Fool Us
9 Episodes (ongoing), ITV1 (UK)

2011
Penn & Teller: Tell a Lie
Premiered October 2011

Books
Penn & Teller's How to Play in Traffic (1997, ISBN 1-57297-293-9)
Penn & Teller's How to Play with Your Food (1992, ISBN 0-679-74311-1)
Penn & Teller's Cruel Tricks for Dear Friends (1989, ISBN 0-394-75351-8)
Sock 2004, ISBN 0-312-32805-2 (Penn Jillette sole author)
How to Cheat Your Friends at Poker: The Wisdom of Dickie Richard 2006, ISBN 0-312-34905-X (Penn Jillette and Mickey D. Lynn)
When I'm Dead All This Will Be Yours: Joe Teller—A Portrait By His Kid 2000, ISBN 0-922-23322-5 (Teller sole author)

Other Media

Music
"The Horse You Rode In On" by Pigface (Penn Jillette only)
"Penn & Teller Present: Music to Look at Boxes By" (With Mike "Jonesy" Jones)
"Never Mind the Sex Pistols" by Bongos, Bass, & Bob (Penn Jillette with Dean J Seal and Bob "Running" Elk)
"Tattoo of Blood" by the Captain Howdy (Penn Jillette with Mark Kramer)
"Money Feeds My Music Machine" by the Captain Howdy (Penn Jillette with Mark Kramer)
"It's Tricky" by Run–D.M.C. (Penn & Teller shown throughout the video and at the end appear to take over the persona of Run–D.M.C.)
"Waking up in Vegas" by Katy Perry (Penn & Teller are kicked out of their hotel room by Perry and her boyfriend. They later kick Perry out again.)

Jillette also toured with the Residents during the Mole Show, and hosted Ralph Records' 10th Anniversary Radio Special (1982). There is some mild controversy and confusion surrounding this. While the premise of 10th Anniversary Radio Special revolved around Jillette having never heard of the label or any of the bands on it (the Residents included), he was credited as a collaborator on the 1981 album Mark of the Mole,[12] and he can be heard giving news bulletins in the first track. This has led some to speculate that Jillette may have been a Resident at one point.

Theatre
In 2008 Teller co-directed a production of Macbeth in Red Bank, New Jersey and Washington, DC.[13]

Video games
Penn & Teller's Smoke and Mirrors 1995 – Absolute Entertainment for Sega CD & 3DO, Unreleased.
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch: Spellbound 1998 – Simon & Schuster for PC – Voices for Drell & Skippy
Desert Bus 2011 – Amateur Pixels.

The 1995 video game Penn & Teller's Smoke and Mirrors featured an unusual mini-game called Desert Bus in which the player drove a realistic bus route between Tuscon and Las Vegas. This mini-game became popular due to the fact that it imitated a real 8 hour bus ride. Once reaching the destination, the player gets 1 point and, if desired, can then drive the return route. The game was long and boring, but found a cult audience due to the dark humor and weirdness behind the idea.

The game has since been used in an annual charity called "Desert Bus for Hope" run by website desertbus.org. The site invites celebrities play the game streamed live online, with all proceeds being donated to Child's Play (charity). on November 14, 2011 an iOS port of Desert Bus was created and released in the Apple Inc iTunes store. The game was developed in conjunction with the Desert Bus for hope event and all profits from the game are donated to charity.

References

1. http://twitter.com/#!/pennjillette/status/104745893533716480
2. Booking Entertainment: Penn & Teller bio
3. Penn & Teller on Babylon 5
4. Infinity Broadcasting article on Penn
5. Penn & Teller website
6. The Brights' Net: Enthusiastic Brights
7. Gagnon, Geoffrey (November 2006). "The Illusionists". Faces of the New Atheism. Wired Magazine. Retrieved 14 March 2010. "Never shy about their atheism (Penn's got the Nevada license plates ATHEIST and GODLESS), the two have been raising their voices – even the oft-silent Teller – to decry the muddying line between church and state... Sometimes they'll even sign autographs with "There is no God.""
8. Penn & Teller on force trick
9. Guide to West Wing on Penn & Teller
10. Penn Says: Nail Gun Trick
11. [1]
12. Residents Web: Mark of the Mole information page
13. http://www.pennandteller.com/03/coolstuff/tellersmacbethindex.html Teller's MacBeth