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What Men Know About Women
O'Dell, Dell
Dell O'Dell
In Collection
#4704
10*
Conjuring
Ephemera
Softcover 
USA  eng
O'Dell, Dell: What Men Know About Women
©1940's Dell O'Dell
Softcover, 12 pages

What Men Know About Women
By Dell O'Dell, World's Leading Lady Magician

It has a blank interior. It measures 4 1/4" by 2 3/4" and has 12 blank pages. It was published by Dell O'Dell of Long Island NY.

A Vintage Original

Small joke booklet called 'What Men Know About Women!' that advertises Dell O'Dell, sensational television star and World's Leading Lady Magician. The joke is that there are 8 blank pages in the booklet. Measures 2 3/4" x 4 1/2". The back has her slogan 'Don't fool yourself - That's my business'. Not dated, but it is from 1951 or 1952 because that is when her pioneering TV show ran on ABC. Her address on the back is Santa Monica Palisades, California. She move to California from Long Island, NY, when she got her TV show, which was probably the first magician's TV show.
Product Details
No. of Pages 12
Personal Details
Read It No
Location Magic Library (Home) Shelf R
Condition Very Good
Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Notes
Dell O'Dell

Dell O'Dell was the stage name of Nell Newton (20 Oct 1902 - 5 Feb 1962) an American magician regarded in her profession as a pioneer who provided a role model for modern female performers and noted for being one of the first magicians to appear on television. At the height of her career she was billed as "The World's Leading Lady Magician" and "The Queen of Magic."

Nell Newton's father worked in carnivals and she began learning magic from him when she was young. She developed a style that featured snappy patter and cute rhymes, which became something of a trademark. She married Charles Carrer, a famous juggler, who managed her show and constructed props for her.

She became a pioneer of television magic when The Dell O'Dell Show began transmission on a local station in the Los Angeles area in California on 14 September 1951. She thus pre-dated several other noted pioneers of television magic, such as Mark Wilson, whose first television show began in 1955, and Richiardi Jr who made the first of his record run of appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1956.

O'Dell wrote extensively on the subject of magic. She contributed a column titled "Dell-lightfully" for the magicians' magazine The Linking Ring. She also produced a number of books of tricks and performance routines, including Presenting Magical Moments (1939) and On Both Sides of the Footlights (1946). Her "Stamp Album" presentation was published in volume 4 of the Tarbell Course in Magic.