The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Uri Geller: I’ve spent a mind-bending £2m to house my spoons

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Q What did your parents teach you about money?

A I GREW up poor. My parents escaped the Nazis in Europe and brought me up in Tel Aviv, Israel. My father was a sergeant major in the Israeli army. My mother was a seamstress. She earned little and was frugal out of necessity. Sadly, although I loved him dearly, my father was a womaniser who spent his money and even the cash my mother was making on other women. I remember that it would take my mother months to be able to afford to buy me even a small toy.

I used to help her make money playing cards by telepathic­ally reading the hands of the other players and kicking her under the table when the person next to her had a joker.

Q What was the first paid work you ever did?

A AT age 13, I would run errands for Mossad, the national intelligen­ce agency of Israel on my bicycle. By then, my mother had moved to Cyprus and set up a hotel which became a Mossad safehouse. Mossad spies used to stay there and paid me £1 to deliver any post that came for them when they were not around to the Israeli consulate in Nicosia.

Q Have you ever been paid silly money?

A YES, in the late 1970s, I was paid $1million to locate oil in Mexico. At that time oil companies were pouring tens of millions of dollars into oil exploratio­n so they thought why not pay me to see if I could find it for them. And I did, and gold too.

Q What was the best financial year of your life?

A IT WAS 1978. That year, I filled stadiums worldwide with my live shows. I used to get paid up to $70,000 a night. I cannot remember how much I got paid in total though. I did not pay attention to that. I have never cared how much money I have sitting in the bank.

Q What is the most expensive thing you bought for fun?

A IT WAS a Fleetwood Brougham Cadillac. It cost $15,000 but it was so huge I never drove it. I have since turned it into an art piece. I riveted 2,000 spoons to its body. All the spoons used to belong to famous people, including John F. Kennedy, Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson, the Dalai Lama, Napoleon and Gandhi.

Q What is the best money decision you have made?

A BUYING the property for my new museum in Jaffa, Israel. It cost £1.9million two years ago and it will open next year. It will house my Cadillac spoon art piece, gifts I have been given from people like Salvador Dali and John Lennon, artwork by Congo the painting monkey and iconic items such as Yves Saint Laurent’s chair.

I am also building the largest spoon in the world to put outside it. It will be 18 metres long and weigh ten tons by the time I am finished. I hope that the museum will bring more tourists to Israel. It is going to be an eclectic collection.

Q Do you own any property?

A YES. As well as the museum, I own my home, which is a twobedroom apartment in Jaffa (just south of Tel Aviv). It is tiny but has an amazing view of the Mediterran­ean.

Q How much cash do you carry?

A I DO not carry money or cards, not even a wallet. I am like the Queen in that respect. I keep a few small coins – the equivalent of about 10p in shekels – with me so that I can show people I meet on the streets how I can bend them with the power of mind. I do this because everyone knows me in Israel but people do not carry spoons on them. If I need to buy something, my family purchases it for me. I do not handle money myself. I even have an account at my local coffee shop.

Q What little luxury do you treat yourself to?

A I AM a wealthy man but all the furniture in my flat, including the dining table and the sofa, comes from Ikea. I do not need luxuries at this point in my life.

Q Do you donate money to charity?

A YES, all the time. I support many charities and raise money for them through the Uri Geller Charitable Foundation.

Q If you were Chancellor, what would you do first?

A I STAY away from politics, but I would like the people of the UK to be happy and not struggle financiall­y.

I think they should have the medical services they need as they get older and that the National Health Service should work properly. So I would focus on funding the NHS and care services for the elderly.

Q What is your number one financial priority?

A TO MAKE sure my children never have to struggle in the way that I had to when I was a child.

 ??  ?? DRIVEN: Uri Geller riveted 2,000 spoons owned by famous people including JFK to the body of his $15,000 Cadillac which will be in his museum
DRIVEN: Uri Geller riveted 2,000 spoons owned by famous people including JFK to the body of his $15,000 Cadillac which will be in his museum

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