翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Dorothy Davies (pianist)
・ Dorothy Davis
・ Dorothy Day
・ Dorothy de Rothschild
・ Dorothy Dean
・ Dorothy DeBorba
・ Dorothy Dehner
・ Dorothy Delasin
・ Dorothy DeLay
・ Dorothy Dell
・ Dorothy Dene
・ Dorothy Dermody
・ Dorothy Detzer
・ Dorothy Devore
・ Dorothy Dickson
Dorothy Dietrich
・ Dorothy Dinnerstein
・ Dorothy Dix
・ Dorothy Dixer
・ Dorothy Dobbie
・ Dorothy Dodson
・ Dorothy Donaldson Buchanan
・ Dorothy Donegan
・ Dorothy Donnelly
・ Dorothy Dorow
・ Dorothy Doughty
・ Dorothy Dow
・ Dorothy Draper
・ Dorothy Drew
・ Dorothy Du Boisson


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Dorothy Dietrich : ウィキペディア英語版
Dorothy Dietrich

Dorothy Dietrich, American stage magician and escapologist, the first and only woman to have performed the bullet catch in her mouth. Also the first woman to perform a straitjacket escape while suspended hundreds of feet in the air from a burning rope (as shown on a Home Box Office Special). The first woman to gain prominence as a female escape artist since the days of Houdini, breaking the glass ceiling for women in the field of escapes and magic. She has been named as one of the top four escape artists in history.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=10 Greatest Escape Artists in History )〕 The 2006 Columbia Encyclopedia included Dietrich among their "eight most noted magicians of the late 20th century", and entertainment writer Samantha Hart in her definitive book "The Hollywood Walk of Fame" called her a "world-class magician" and "one of the world's leading female magicians". Early on as a teenager she already was dubbed as "The First Lady of Magic." Dietrich, often called the female Houdini, has duplicated many of Houdini's original escapes, and has gone one step further by doing the Jinxed Bullet Catch Stunt — the one that Houdini backed away from.
==Early career==
Dorothy Dietrich is a native of Erie, Pennsylvania. In a six-page article about the history of women in magic in the women's magazine, ''Bust'', which contained only two full-page pictures, one of Adelaide Herrmann and the other of Dietrich, Nichole Summer writes:
Among the books that inspired her as a child was a biography of Houdini, who became a childhood idol, a fact that later influenced her desire to perform magic and escapes.
Early on, she learned her craft mostly from books. In New York, she auditioned for Westchester Department of Parks from an ad in a show business newspaper and was booked on the spot for a full summer of work,〔 was recommended to the school district for the winter months, and re-booked the following summer for an increase in dates and price. Around this same time she earned her performing chops working a dime museum "grind show" Ten-in-One operation in hectic Times Square run by legendary mouse pitchman Tommy Laird with such performers as Earl "Presto" Johnson, Lou Lancaster, Chris Capehart, Dick Brooks and others. Showcasing for the Parent Assembly of the Society of American Magicians at about the same time, well-known magicians Russell Swann and Walter B. Gibson, captivated by her performance style, took her under their wing. Walter Gibson, who was a confidant and biographer of Houdini's said〔 "What you have is very reminiscent of Houdini, when Houdini come out on stage, the audience automatically fell in love with him. In my long years I've never seen anyone who had that." Dietrich also studied with "Coney Island Fakir" Al Flosso, a regular performer on the Ed Sullivan television show, Jack London (for the bullet catch) and Lou Lancaster with the Milk Can and the Straitjacket escape, as well as slight of hand magic. "The recognition gradually put Dorothy Dietrich and her magic into resort hotels, nightclubs, school and college auditoriums, trade shows."〔 She became a favorite of several New York booking agents.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Dorothy Dietrich」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.