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The Invisible Pass - Hugard & Braue - Stevens Estate

Passage from the Book:

"Making the pass" with cards was described by Robert-Houdin as "the most important of the various artifices employed in the performance of card tricks," by Professor Hoffmann as "the very backbone of card conjuring," by Edwin T. Sachs as "the foremost of card sleights," and by Camille Gaultier as "the fundamental principle of magic, so far as playing cards are concerned." The first three of these authorities obviously regarded the pass as an indispensable sleight; but M. Gaultier, writing in 1914, suggested that its popularity was waning. "The present-day tendency of prestidigitators is to limit its use more and more," he said, "and this is definitely desirable, so far as those who cannot execute the sleight perfectly are concerned!"

Gaultier's statement was doubtless prompted by the difficulty experienced by most magicians in performing the sleight imperceptibly. S.W. Erdnase, in his great book on card work, had earlier noted the impossibility of executing the pass with the hands held stationary, and not show that some maneuver has taken place, however cleverly it may be executed." But despite this serious defect, the pass has continued to be used in many tricks, for the good and sufficient reason that some of our best card feats cannot be performed without its aid.

The need for a pass that would defy detection has given rise to the announcement, time and again, that an invisible pass had been invented, but invariably the sleight has failed to live up to expectations and its advance publicity. At last, however, this dream is a reality! The invisible pass has finally been achieved. It was demonstrated by Frederick Braue hundreds of times at the Washington Convention of the Society of American Magicians in 1946, and aroused the greatest possible enthusiasm. Scores of card experts have seen it and testified that it is absolutely invisible.

Mr. Braue and his friend Jean Hugard (the team that wrote the comprehensive treatise, Expert Card Technique) have collaborated in making this new pass available to lovers of card magic. They have published it in a 32-page book (the first complete book, we understand, ever devoted to the explanation of a single sleight), size 8 1/2 by 11 inches, printed on heavy coated paper and handsomely bound in blue cloth with silver stamping on the front cover. There are 22 pages of excellent text, presumably from the pen of Jean Hugard; 14 large photographic halftones, approximately 5 by 6 1/2 inches, giving almost life-size views of the hands of Fred Braue; 14 line drawings by Donna Allen which summarize the moves so that the learner can go through the sleight, step by step, from beginning to end without turning pages; and an introduction by Paul Rosini, who knows a real card sleight when he sees one!

The authors claim that this pass is far less difficult than the classic pass, and can be mastered in two months or less. Of its utility there cannot be the slightest doubt. This is, we feel sure, the card pass of the present and future. Though we have heretofore regarded Charles Bertram's version of the traditional two-handed pass as the best explanation of this sleight in print, we now recant and hasten to vote first honors to the Hugard Braue pass. Indeed, we are inclined to join John J. Crimmins in pronouncing this new pass "the biggest advance in card magic of this or any other generation." The invisible pass, both as a sleight and a book, is a thing of beauty. We recommend it unhesitatingly and enthusiastically.

1946 HC NO DJ - THE FRONT AND BACK PASTEDOWN WARPED AND TONED - BOOK IS IN VG COND