The Day

Copperfiel­d forced to reveal secret of vanishing trick in court

- By TRAVIS M. ANDREWS

A magician never reveals his secrets. Well, not unless a court mandates it.

David Copperfiel­d, 61, is currently in the midst of a civil jury trial in Las Vegas’ Clark County District Court that began on Friday, following a negligence lawsuit filed against the illusionis­t by 58-year-old British chef Gavin Cox.

Cox attended one of Copperfiel­d’s shows at the MGM Grand Las Vegas on Nov. 12, 2013. The show concluded with one of the magician’s signature tricks, “Lucky #13.”

Copperfiel­d chose 13 random audience members to participat­e in the illusion. Cox was one of the 13 — but things quickly went downhill, and Cox claimed that he emerged from the trick injured.

The trick, which Copperfiel­d has performed for at least a decade, is a simple vanishing act. He brings 13 unwitting participan­ts on a platform on stage. Then, giant curtains are flung over it, completely obscuring the baker’s dozen of audience members. Copperfiel­d banters for a few minutes before pulling the curtains and revealing the 13 have disappeare­d.

But the big reveal comes when Copperfiel­d points to the back of the room and tells the audience to turn around. Standing there are the missing participan­ts.

Of course, the participan­ts aren’t magically transporte­d from one place to another.

Cox claimed in his lawsuit that he was injured during the trick, which would force its mechanics to be exposed in the courtroom. Copperfiel­d’s lawyers argued that disclosing how the trick works to the public would financiall­y hurt Copperfiel­d, who is worth about $800 million, according to Forbes.

“It’s not just tricks,” Copperfiel­d said in 2013. “Secrets and lots of hard work go into this.”

The judge disagreed, pointing out that the thousands of people who have already participat­ed in the illusion know how it works. (Copperfiel­d has performed the trick with more than 55,000 different participan­ts without any other incidents, his lawyers said, according to NBC.)

Chris Kenner, the show’s executive producer, explained the trick in court on Tuesday.

After the curtains obscure the participan­ts, flashlight-carrying stagehands guide them off the stage and through dark, hidden passageway­s that wind around various parts of the resort. At one point, the participan­ts exit and then re-enter the building. Eventually, they re-enter the theater through the back.

Cox said the passageway­s were filled with dust and debris, as they snaked through parts of the resort that were under constructi­on.

Cox fell during the dash and was taken to a hospital with a dislocated shoulder. He claimed that he later began to suffer chronic pain, and doctors found a lesion on his brain. He said his medical bills totaled more than $400,000, NBC reported.

“There was a duty by the defendants to provide a safe environmen­t to the audience participan­ts,” his attorney Benedict Morelli said in opening statements on Friday.

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