Norbert Ferré
Norbert Ferré
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Norbert Ferré

Norbert Ferré (born 23 September 1975 in Marseille) is a French magician and artistic director. He specialises in scene manipulation and prestidigitation. Though he no longer competes, Ferré continues to perform at magic conventions, cabarets, festivals and circuses.

Born 23 September 1975 in Marseille to a sales manager father and a nurse mother, Ferré is the youngest of two children.[citation needed] In 1986, when he was 11, he attended a magic show at La Ciotat and became instantly enamored. Over the next several years, he taught himself magic tricks and by age 14 had been accepted into the Magicians Club of Marseille, a local organisation affiliated with the FFAP. He served as the club's president between 1998 and 2001, at age 22 becoming the youngest president of an FFAP club up to that point. He performed under the pseudonym Maginor but dropped it by 1999 in favor of his real name.

Ferré studied business, as well as sociology and psychology, and finished with a master's degree. After graduating, he opted to pursue a career as an illusionist.[citation needed]

Ferré's main acts of prestidigitation center on manipulation. In 1989, he won second prize in the Jean-Eugène Robert-Houdin magic contest, his first ever competition. There, he met Pierre Brahma, a Marseille native who was the only Frenchman at the time to have won the FISM Grand Prix (1964 and 1976). At the FISM national convention in 1999, Ferré won third prize in manipulation and subsequently submitted his act to the 26th Convention of the Royal Club of Magicians, a IBM-affiliated group, in Belgium. He came third in manipulation. Six months later, he won the same prize at the 22nd FISM convention in Lisbon. In September 2000, he became the first French performer to be invited to the Tenyo International Magic Convention. At this time, he primarily performed at festivals and conventions.[citation needed]

In 2001, he received the Originality Award at the World Magic Seminar in Las Vegas. That December, he was granted membership into the Magic Circle's highest tier, the exclusive Inner Magic Circle, with a gold star.[citation needed] In 2003, at the 23rd FISM convention in The Hague, he won first prize in the handling category and the Grand Prix general in all categories, becoming World Champion of magic.

Ferré no longer competes but regularly performs at festivals and conventions, both in France and abroad, including in Germany, Russia, India, Japan, Brazil and the United States. He traveled as part of the cabaret act for Crazy Horse, a gig considered within the magic community to be a high honor. He appeared at the 2011 First International Festival of Modern Circus "White Magic" in Perm, Russia and at the 2017 Circus Conelli in Switzerland. He appeared in a 2005 episode of Le plus grand cabaret du monde and a 2016 episode of the Russian show Golden Magic XXI (Золотая магия XXI века).[citation needed]

Ferré occasionally writes articles for magician's magazines, such as the Revue de la Prestidigitation, Idem and Magische Welt. On 19 March 2012, he became president of MAGEV - Charity magic, a foundation whose aim is to offer shows, balloon sculpting workshops and more to disadvantaged children and to adults with disabilities.[citation needed] He is mentioned as one of the ten great French magicians in the book La magie pour les nuls (Magic for Dummies).

Ferré's signature act, One for Two, Two for One, is a parody version of the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, similar to Jerry Lewis's Dr. Jerry and Mister Love. He can perform this in nine languages: French, English, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, Japanese, Korean, and Portuguese.[citation needed]

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