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Magician Displays His Bag Of Tricks - The Argus
Monday, March 02, 1998
By Fariba Nawa
FREMONT -- With sparkling eyes, children watched Alan (The Amazing) Kahn
spiral balloons into swords and swans in a lickety-split.
More than a dozen impatient children lined up to order a custom-made balloon
from
the straight-faced magician before his magic show recently during the
afternoon rush in the Fremont Main Library.
Clad in a pink tie-dye shirt and a matching floppy hat, Kahn took his orders
like a waiter.
What would you like? he asked a black-haired boy.
A dog, the boy answered emphatically.
What color? Kahn asked, pointing out the rainbow of
elongated, deflated balloons.
The boy chose dark blue. And the order was completed.
Kahn stuck his blimp pumper into the balloon, pumped a funnel
and twisted it into a tiny dog with a tail and ears.
Founder of First Impressions Entertainment Group in Fremont, Kahn does more
than create shapes from balloons.With his wife as a partner, the tall, lanky
32-year-old paints faces, puppeteers and performs tricks.
A public relations specialist, Kahn makes the bulk of his income from entertaining.
"It's fun. I'm not the kind of person to sit behind a cubicle and push
papers," he said while pumping balloons.
While his wife goes to her other job as a subcontractor for the National
Aeronautics
and Space Agency, Kahn books appointments for their weekend performances.
The duo are hired and paid up to $150 at birthday parties, company picnics
and other celebrations.They also display their talents and tricks in festivals
but Kahn said his favorite place is the library where he performs for children.
In the children's section of the library, toddlers
and teens filled the reading room waiting for Kahn's magic show.
PROPS, PARTICIPATION
The entertainer used props and audience participation to delight the spectators
with magic.
Kahn held up in his hand a droopy plastic flower and it perked up as he
turned to face it.
But when he looked away, the flower sagged. The children giggled and cheered.
Then the storyteller read a black-and-white illustrated book Round Trip
and as he flipped the pages upside down, the pictures continued the
story about a journey into the city.
In the next trick, Kahn showed two adult-size, yellow rubber gloves and
turned one into a child-size glove in the palm of a skeptical young girl.
This is the imagination magic show, Kahn told his admiring audience.The
performer
said he likes to do tricks for children to see the expression on their faces.
"Magic is part storytelling," Kahn said.
ENGAGES SPECTATORS
And the longtime Fremont resident seems to concentrate on engaging his audience
rather than impressing them with fantastic tricks.
Kahn even shares the secrets of his magic in his business advertising kit.There
are precise instructions for card, coin and hat tricks in a booklet of Kahn's
25 Magical Miracles.
A magic lover since childhood, Kahn observed his father -- a magician on
the side -- do tricks at parties.
The ambitious son started his magic career at age 14 in San Jose.
Kahn said he and his friend rode their bikes to the library and showed off
their tricks to
patrons.Those tricks helped him pay the bills in college as he continued
to perform.
Kahn made a name for himself in the area and now he's one of the few magicians
in the Tri-Cities that entertains full-time.