Hypnotic Comedy: Volunteers Welcome

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This article was prepared for the October 6, 2004

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Hypnotic Comedy: Volunteers Welcome

There were requests for refunds at Ricky Kalmon’s first professional

appearance as a magician. He was eight, and was charging friends and

neighbors a nickel. By the time he was 10, Kalmon had improved enough

to pull in paying gigs at birthday parties. Within another few years

he had added hypnosis to his shows, and had begun to bill himself as a

hypnotist/comedian.

Kalmon brings his show, which relies heavily on audience

participation, to the Stress Factory in New Brunswick from Thursday,

October 7, through Sunday, October 10.

Speaking from his office in St. Louis, Missouri, Kalmon says he has

been hooked on magic — and on performing — since the age of five, when

a magician performed at his birthday party. “I’ve never had another

job,” he says.

Kalmon grew up in St. Louis, where his parents, both of them

salespeople, supported his early career choice. He studied education

at the University of Missouri (Class of 1991), but says he frequently

skipped class to perform.

He added hypnosis to his show, he says, because “after a while with

magic, it’s the same trick.” With hypnosis, however, the same

suggestion — perhaps “you’re a sumo wrestler who speaks no English” or

“these napkins are $100 bills” — given to five different people is

likely to elicit five very different responses. Kalmon is a certified

hypnotist, but does not use the technique in a clinical sense.

Instead, he sees it as a tool that frees people to think and act

without the everyday constraints that define most of life. “No one is

asleep or unconscious,” he says. “They’re just so relaxed that they

are no longer judging themselves.”

Kalmon spends the first five to ten minutes of his hourlong shows

persuading his audiences that, yes, they really do want to volunteer

to come up on stage and be hypnotized. He takes approximiately 12

volunteers, but invites the entire audience to “go under” too. He then

invites them to come up on the stage, too. Whether they are in a

hypnotic trance or not, everyone is likely to participate. “I often

send some of the volunteers back into the audience,” he explains.

There they try to engage those around them.

Kalmon’s show at the Stress Factory will feature adult — “HBO-type” —

material but he also does family shows. The bulk of his work, however,

is done neither for comedy club patrons nor families. “I’ve scaled

back,” he says. “I don’t do many public appearances anymore. About 70

percent of my clients are corporations.” The experience of being

hypotized together is great for building comraderie among the troops

and promotes creative thinking, in his opinion. “It’s a great ice

breaker,” he says. “It’s not about me; it’s about them becoming the

stories.”

It is impossible to predict what will happen during Kalmon’s upcoming

shows at the Stress Factory. “You never know where to look,” he says

Ricky Kalmon at the Stress Factory. 90 Church Street, NewBrunswick; Thursday through Sunday, October 7 – 10. $22. 732-545-4242or visit www.stressfactory.com. For a preview, visitwww.rickykalmon.com.Top Of PageAuditionsCheng/Ferrara Productions seeks actors for “The Last Five Years” to beproduced in January at Kelsey Theater. Auditions are Saturday andSunday, October 16 and 17. Call Frank Ferrara at 609-499-1388 forappointment.Dance Conservatory seeks singers, dancers, and actors over the age of6 for “A Christmas Carol” to be performed in December. Audition isSunday, October 17, 6 p.m. at Vermillion Square, 8919 New Falls Road,Levittown, PA. Call 215-946-0100 for information or to set up aprivate audition.Kelsey Players seeks actors ages 8 and older for “‘Twas the NightBefore Christmas” to be produced in December. Audition at KelseyTheater is Saturday, November 6, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call Lorraine Wargoat 609-530-0912.Top Of PagePeace PianoJacobs Music Company has been instrumental in the inaugural leg of thePeace Piano’s three-year tour through the United States, Europe,Africa, Asia, and Australia, being in Philadelphia. The campaignsupports UNICEF and raises awareness and funds for children in needaround the world. The piano will be at the Kimmel Center for a “Playfor Peace Perform-a-thon during which hundreds of children fromPennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware showcase. The piano will be atthe Trenton War Memorial on Saturday, October 30. Call Tim Cifelli at610-642-8253.Top Of PageCall for EntriesRutgers Center for Innovative Print and Paper calls for entries forthe 18th annual two-week residency program for New Jersey artistsworking in any medium. Deadline is Monday, November 8. For informationvisit www.masongross.rutgers.edu or call 732-932-2222, ext. 838.Art First! seeks works from artists with disabilities for the annualinternational juried exhibition and sale held March 7 through April15, 2005, sponsored by the Auxiliary of University Medical Center ofPrinceton. All work must be for sale and must have been executed sincethe onset of disability or injury. Oils, watercolors, pastels,sculptures, photography, jewelry, fiber art, and fine crafts areinvited. Slides must be submitted by Friday, November 5. Call LoisLevy at 609-497-4211 for information.Focus on Sculpture 2005 is a juried photography exhibition of imageswith the common theme of sculpture. Open to serious amateurphotographers 18 years and older. Limited to two per person. No entryfees. Photojournalist Bryan Grigsby is the jurer. All photographs mustinclude sculpture, must be suitably framed with glass or plexiglassand ready to hang. Entry labels must be affixed to the back of works.Hand delivery is expected on Saturday December 4, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Grounds for Sculpture, Domestic Arts Building, 18 Fairgrounds Road,Hamilton. Call 609-586-0616 ext 18 for information.Villagers Theater is accepting submissions of small musicals andone-act plays from directors for its 2005 to 2006 Black Box Series.Directors should submit the title, author, and a brief synopsis ofeach play to be considered, a current resume, references, andavailability from September, 2005 to July, 2006. Deadline isWednesday, December 29. Visit www.villagerstheatre.com for informationor send to Stephanie Youngman, The Villagers Theater, Box 6175,Somerset, New Jersey 08875.Top Of PageParticipate PleaseGarden State Wood Bat League has openings in upcoming tournament forages 14 and up. Visit www.gardenstatebaseball.com or call732-382-4610.Princeton YMCA seeks children ages 5 to 18 for the Piranhas swim team.Call 609-497-9622 for information.GNC is distributing a woman’s health guide focusing on early detectionand prevention of breast cancer in participating stores. In addition,all customers who wear a pink ribbon to stores on Friday, October 15,(National Mammogram Day) receive a discount on their purchase.Long & Foster Companies offers college $1,000 scholarships to 200students with the money payable directly to the college in thestudent’s name. Criteria include a 3.0 GPA, be in leadershippositions, and have a financial need. Applications are available atwww.longandfoster.com/scholarship or at any of the sales offices.Deadline: March 1, 2005.Top Of PageNJ Film FestivalNew Jersey Film Festival screenings are Fridays through Sunday inScott Hall, Room 123, Rutgers College Avenue campus, near the cornerof College Avenue and Hamilton Street. Thursday screenings are inLoree Hall 024, Douglass College campus, near the corner of NicholAvenue and George Street. Admission $6; all programs begin at 7 p.m.Information 732-932-8482 or www.njfilmfest.com.Experimental Films by Sidney Peterson. Three rarely-seen films bySidney Peterson, the originator of American avant-garde cinema, madewhile working for Walt Disney Studios. Films include “The PetrifiedDog,” 1948; “Alice in Wonderland: The Lead Shoes,” 1949; and “MrFrenhofer and the Minotaur,” 1949. Thursday, October 7.Strayed. A film about survival in France circa 1940. Directed byAndrew Techine (2004). In French with subtitles. Friday, Saturday andSunday, October 8, 9, and 10. 7 p.m.Last Year at Marienbad. A key film in the development of cinematicmodernism. Directed by Alain Resnais. (1961). French with subtitles.Thursday, October 14.Previous StoryNext StoryCorrections or additions?This page is published by PrincetonInfo.com— the web site for U.S. 1 Newspaper in Princeton, New Jersey.

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