Boston Sunday Globe

Harry Lorayne, dazzling master of total recall, at 96

- By Margalit Fox

Harry Lorayne, who parlayed a childhood reading disability and the brutal punishment it engendered into an internatio­nal career as a memory expert, summoning the names of roomfuls of strangers in a single sitting, rattling off entire small-town telephone books, and telling astonished audiences what was written on any page of a given issue of Time magazine, died Friday in Newburypor­t. He was 96.

His death, at a hospital, was confirmed by his publicist, Skye Wentworth, who did not specify a cause. He had lived in Newburypor­t.

Fleet of mind and fleet of mouth, Mr. Lorayne was a sought-after guest on television shows and a particular favorite of Johnny Carson’s, appearing on “The Tonight Show” some two dozen times.

Mr. Lorayne had begun his profession­al life as a sleight-ofhand artist and well into old age was considered one of the foremost card magicians in the country. As both magician and mnemonist, he was a direct, gleeful scion of the 19th-century midway pitchman and the 20thcentur­y borscht belt tummler.

By the 1960s, Mr. Lorayne was best known for holding audiences rapt with feats of memory that bordered on the elephantin­e. Such feats were born, he explained in interviews and in his many books, of a system of learned associatio­ns — call them surrealist visual puns — that seemed equal parts Ivan Pavlov and Salvador Dalí.

Mr. Lorayne demonstrat­ed his act on the night of July 23, 1958, when, in his first big break, he appeared on the TV game show “I’ve Got a Secret.”

While the host, Garry Moore, was introducin­g members of the show’s panel, Mr. Lorayne was at work in the studio audience, soliciting the names of its members. He was then called onstage. Moore asked the audience members who had given Mr. Lorayne their names to stand. Hundreds did.

“That’s Mr. Saar,” Mr. Lorayne began, pointing to a man in the balcony. (The transcript­ions here are phonetic.)

“Mr. Stinson,” he continued in his rapid-fire New Yorkese, gathering speed. “Miss Graf. Mrs. Graf. Miss Finkelstei­n. If I can see correctly, I believe that’s the Harpin family: Mr. and Mrs. Harpin; there was Dorothy Harpin and Esther Harpin. Mrs. Pollock. And way in the corner — it’s a little dark there — but I believe that’s Mrs. Stern.”

And so it went, through scores of names, each impeccably recalled.

How did he do it? “You have to take the name, make it mean something, and then associate it to one outstandin­g feature on the person’s face,” he explained, indicating a man in the audience named Theus.

“I thought of the United States: ‘the US,’” Mr. Lorayne continued. “It’s spelled T-H-EU-S. And I picked out his character lines, from the nose down to the corner of the lip, and just drew a map of the United States there.”

Absent the time constraint­s of television, Mr. Lorayne often said, he could handily memorize the names of 500, or even 1,000, people in a single outing. Over the years, he said, he had met and recalled the names of more than 20 million people.

To naysayers who contended that he routinely seeded his audiences with friends, Mr. Lorayne’s reply was unimpeacha­ble: “Who’s got 500 friends?”

Nor, as the skeptics sometimes suggested, was Mr. Lorayne a mnemonic freak, endowed with a preternatu­rally good memory. He was born with quite ordinary powers of recall, he often said, and that was precisely the point. Memory, he maintained, was a faculty akin to a muscle that could be trained and strengthen­ed.

Mr. Lorayne did not claim to have invented the mnemonic system that was his stock in trade: As he readily acknowledg­ed, it harked back to classical antiquity. But he was among the first people in the modern era to recognize its use as entertainm­ent, and to parlay it into a highly successful business.

At the height of his renown, Mr. Lorayne traveled the country demonstrat­ing his prowess on theater stages, at trade shows, and in corporate training seminars. During the 1960s, he ran a memory-training school in New York. In later years, he starred in

TV infomercia­ls for his home memory-improvemen­t system. His scores of books were translated into many languages.

He was awash in celebrity friends, many of whom were reported to use his techniques. Among them were Anne Bancroft, who spoke of using Mr. Lorayne’s methods to learn lines, and New York Knicks star — and memory expert in his own right — Jerry Lucas, with whom Mr. Lorayne wrote “The Memory Book” (1974), a New York Times bestseller.

For many years Mr. Lorayne lived in a gracious town house at 62 Jane St., in New York’s Manhattan borough. (In sly tribute, his friend Mel Brooks planned to give that address as the home of playwright Franz Liebkind in his 1967 film, “The Producers.” After Mr. Lorayne’s wife, Renée, objected that the moviegoing public would be banging on their door day and night, Brooks changed it to the fictional 100 W. Jane St.)

Mr. Lorayne’s attainment­s are all the more noteworthy in light of the fact that he grew up in poverty, struggled academical­ly as a result of undiagnose­d dyslexia, and concluded his formal education after only a single year of high school.

He was born May 4, 1926, in Manhattan to Benjamin and Clara (Bendel) Ratzer. His father was a garment cutter.

The family was poor — beyond poor, Mr. Lorayne often said. “They were profession­al poor people,” he told an interviewe­r, invoking his parents. “I remember having a potato for dinner.”

Benjamin Ratzer was a violent man, and whenever young Harry brought home failing grades on an exam — and because of his dyslexia, he often did — his father beat him.

One day, Harry had an epiphany. If only he could learn to memorize, he realized, his problems would end. At the library, he found a shelf of dusty books on memory training, some dating to the 18th century. Most were beyond him, but he fought his way through.

Using elementary versions of the techniques he would later employ profession­ally, he began earning perfect marks.

“My father stopped hitting me for my grades,” Mr. Lorayne told The Chicago Tribune in 1988. “He hit me for other things.”

When Harry was 12, his father, plagued by illness, died by suicide. Soon afterward, Harry left high school to work a series of odd jobs.

“I was a Lower East Side ‘dese, dem and dose’ kid with no money, no prospects, no education, no nothing,” Mr. Lorayne wrote in a self-published memoir, “Before I Forget” (2013).

He did not yet conceive of memory as a marketable skill: His profession­al aspiration­s lay in magic. As a child, he had watched, entranced, as neighborho­od men did card tricks in Hamilton Fish Park, on the Lower East Side. He stole milk bottles, recouped the deposits, bought his first deck of cards and began to practice.

He embarked on his magic career in the 1940s, adapting his stage name from the middle name of his wife, Renée Lorraine Lefkowitz, whom he married in 1948. He performed on local television in the early 1950s and did close-up magic at Billy Reed’s Little Club on East 55th Street.

Actor Victor Jory, a keen amateur magician, visited the club often to catch Mr. Lorayne’s act. One night, performing at Jory’s table, Mr. Lorayne realized he had exhausted his vast repertoire of card tricks. Seeking to keep Jory entertaine­d, he idly tossed off a stunt in which he recalled the location of all 52 cards in a shuffled deck.

Jory raved so much about the feat, Mr. Lorayne wrote, that he realized his future lay in memory. He made it his act, beginning at Catskill hotels.

Mr. Lorayne’s wife, who assisted in his stage act for two decades, died in 2014. His survivors include a son, Robert, and a granddaugh­ter.

His other books include “How to Develop a Super Power Memory,” “Miracle Math,” and “Ageless Memory.” In 2018, at the age of 92, he published his last book, “And Finally!”

Throughout his career, Mr. Lorayne continued to ply the magician’s trade, for many years publishing Apocalypse, a magic magazine, and producing books and videos on card magic.

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