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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Clowns need excellent communication skills to do their job. Body movement, facial expressions and tone of voice all help make a gag successful. "You work with other people all the time," says Levene. "You've got to like them and know how to get them to react."

But in order to communicate well with an audience, a clown needs to have researched their act.

You are a birthday party clown and have been working on a new act. You want to seem like a mind reader. You think you need one more gag at the beginning of your act that would involve the audience and convince them immediately that you have the ability to read their minds.

"You have to read a lot of different articles and books to come up with fresh ideas for your acts," says Bernie Levene, a clown.

You leaf through a book and think you've found the perfect gag. Read over the description and by answering a few questions, you'll discover if it's what you're looking for.

Mind Reader

For this trick, you will need a secret helper. Remember to select an unexpected helper. The guest will appreciate it and the secret will be safer from the others.

Place a glass face down on a table and invite any member of the party to place a small article beneath it when you have turned your back or left the room. When you return, you will be able to discover who placed the object under the glass by reading his mind.

When you return, you place a finger on the bottom of the upturned glass and ask each guest in turn to place a finger for a moment on the glass with yours as you try to contact their thoughts.

When you have given everyone who wishes an opportunity, you deliberate a moment and then confidently announce the name of the person correctly. This is easy because your helper placed his finger on the glass immediately after the person who placed the object. If anything goes wrong or the person who placed the object tries to trick you, your helper won't touch the glass, and you will speak vaguely of confused vibrations and start again.

(Summary from Party Games You Will Play Again by C.W. Rees. A.S. Barnes and co: New York)

Questions:

  1. Why does it seem as though you can read minds?
  2. What type of person usually makes a good helper?
  3. What happens if the person who placed the object tries to trick you?