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Barry and Stuart

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Barry and Stuart
File:Barry and Stuart.jpg
Barry Jones (left) and Stuart MacLeod
Known forMagic
Comedy
Sketch comedy
Websitebarryandstuart.com

Barry and Stuart (Barry Jones and Stuart MacLeod) are two Scottish BAFTA nominated[1] magicians and comedians whose work has been seen on television and on stage around the world. The double act are known for their comically dark performing style, for taking as inspiration the accounts of Biblical miracles and faking paranormal phenomena to form the basis for some of their illusions.

Biography

Jones was born on 16 April 1982 in Aberdeen and grew up in Portlethen, Scotland. MacLeod was born on 4 July 1980 in Aberdeen and grew up in Peterhead, Scotland. MacLeod attended Peterhead Academy before studying philosophy and psychology at Aberdeen University, while Jones grew up in Old Portlethen, before moving to London to study multimedia computing.

They met in Aberdeen in 1994 and started making videos of themselves performing magic.[2] This is where their double act style of acting out scenes in character while performing illusions developed.[3] The filmed results of these magic sketches eventually reached a television production company and led to the making of their first TV series "Magick. The show was nominated as Best Comedy Series at the Rose d'Or international television awards in Montreux in 2004.[4]

In 2005 they hosted the television series "Dirty Tricks" and television special "When Magic Tricks go Wrong" and in 2006 the pair created two one hour specials for Channel 4, "Tricks from the Bible" and "The Magic of Jesus" where they took inspiration from and duplicated the miracles described in the Old and New Testament.

In 2009, Jones and MacLeod were awarded the 'Best Comedy Illusionist' Award at the World Magic Awards.[5]

They have toured the UK extensively throughout from 2010 with their live shows as well as performing at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe with new shows between 2008 and 2011.

In 2011 and 2012 they were part of both seasons of BBC1's "The Magicians" a live magic show drawing in over 6 million viewers weekly.[6] They most recently made "The Happenings" four one hour specials for Watch, where the duo use their magic to fake paranormal events.[7]

Television

Magick

Jones and MacLeod's first television series Magick (aka "Sick Ticks" also, "Crack Magick") debuted on 5 October 2003 and was described as "comedy magic featuring surreal characters in bizarre and uncomfortable situations."[8] It began airing in Australia on SBS on 1 February 2007 under the title Sick Tricks.

This series featured reverse film magic, where the magic was performed backwards and the film later reversed to reveal the backmasking.

In one of a series of ‘crimes’ caught on CCTV, footage captures two men being caught en flagrante in a public toilet by a police officer. To get out of trouble, one of the men hides the other behind his coat and makes him disappear. In another incident, a man breaks into a car by sticking his hand through a glass window without breaking it.

Secret filming in a supermarket captures MacLeod and Jones magically sabotaging the products by putting dead insects into sealed bottles of mineral water and penetrating razor blades through the foil lids of ready-meals.

In 2004 this four-part series was nominated for a Rose D'Or comedy award in Montreux.[9]

Dirty Tricks

Dirty Tricks was a six-part series hosted by Jones and MacLeod. It was described as "magic meets Natural Born Killers."[10] The show also had regular spots from Pete Firman, Ali Cook and Jonathan’s Escapes as well as guest appearances from international variety acts and celebrities. These acts included Penn & Teller and Kevin James.

At the end of every show, the presenters "killed" the radio and TV presenter Neil Fox in a horrific and painful manner. These included him being cremated, stabbed and crushed.

The Magic of Jesus

This one hour special aired over the Christmas holiday period in December 2005. In this show Jones and MacLeod drew inspiration from the accounts of Jesus' miracles in the New Testament to present illusions which included apparently walking on the surface of water in a glass tank, turning water into wine, causing a blind person to temporarily 'see', appearing to raise a deceased person, causing a virgin to apparently become 'pregnant' and feeding 5000 people.

The show caused controversy among newspapers and other press, with John Beyer of Mediawatch describing it as "a calculated attempt to cause offence".[11]

Tricks from the Bible

Following on from "The Magic of Jesus" this one hour special aired in June 2006. The duo drew inspiration from the miracle accounts in the Old Testament. Jones and MacLeod performed illusions such as turning staffs into snakes in Egypt, exactly where it was said to be performed in the Old Testament, casting some of the plagues of Egypt on two fans in an enclosed part of a restaurant, a transformation into a pillar of salt, exorcism of a demon, robbing a man of his strength as Samson had, apparently raising someone from the dead and pulling a coin from the mouth of a fish, performed on a boat in the Red Sea.

The Magicians

The Magicians is a BBC primetime show, that aired its first series during January 2011. It featured Barry and Stuart alongside host Lenny Henry and fellow magicians Luis de Matos and Chris Korn. The show returned for its second series on 7 January 2012, with Barry and Stuart being the only personalities retained from series one.[12] The second series featured two new magicians alongside Barry and Stuart; American magician Jason Latimer and English magician Pete Firman. This second series was broadcast live and was the first magic series to do so in the UK in 30 years [13]

The Happenings

In December 2013 Barry and Stuart's latest show, "The Happenings" a four x 60 min series debuted in the UK on the digital channel Watch HD. The duo went undercover as they set about making the unbelievable paranormal-like events believable to the unsuspecting residents of towns across the UK and America.

Each episode was a self-contained narrative and featured their magic and illusion under the guise of mysterious incidents that were played out over the course of a few weeks in four different towns.[14] Episodes featured, ghosts, vampires, aliens and government cover-ups.[15] A number of events filmed for the program made national headlines including their faked ghost sighting and alien landing.[16]

The program was first broadcast internationally in April 2014 on the National Geographic Channel.[17]

Theatre

In 2008 the duo took their debut live show "Part Time Warlocks" to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Following 5 star reviews[18] and a total sell out run, extra dates of the show were staged in a larger venue.[19] In 2009 they returned to the Edinburgh Fringe with a new show "Powered by Demons" which they later performed at the Soho Theatre, London.[20] Returning to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe In 2010 they performed "98% Séance" a show where they used their magic to fake ghostly apparitions under the guise of a Séance. In a five-star review, Time Out London described the show as, "a triumph of astonishing illusions, inventive technology, and unexpected frights."[21] This show was the most positively tweeted about show at the Edinburgh Fringe 2010 according to the Realtime, crowd-sourced review website, EdTwinge.[22]

They toured the UK in spring 2010 with "Barry and Stuart: Live". In 2011 they performed two shows at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, "The Show" and "The Tell." In "The Show" they performed an hour of magic, then a limited number of that audience had the chance to buy tickets for "The Tell" where they would witness the explanations to the all tricks they had just witnessed. In 2012 they toured the UK with "Show and Tell," a joint version of the two separate Edinburgh shows, and due to popular demand extended this tour into 2013.

They brought their live show for the first time to audiences in United States with "Barry and Stuart Live" at Coronet Theatre Los Angeles in April 2013.[23]

Filmography

Year Title Notes
2003 Magick 4 x 30 minute episodes
2005 Dirty Tricks 6 x 60 minute episodes
2005 The Magic of Jesus TV Special
2005 When Magic Tricks Go Wrong TV Special
2006 Tricks from the Bible TV Special
2007 Music Hall Meltdown for BBC4
2007 Twisted Tricks TV pilot
2009 Derren Brown: The 3D Magic Spectacular TV Special
2011 The Magicians (season 1) 5 x 60 minute episodes
2012 The Magicians (season 2) 6 x 75 minute episodes
2013 The Happenings 4 x 60 minute episodes

References

  1. ^ "BAFTA Awards, Scotland". BAFTA Awards for 2006 on imdb. 12 November 2006. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "How we met: Magicians Barry and Stuart". The Independent Blog. 6 February 2013. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ "Barry and Stuart: Was Jesus A Huckster With Charisma, Or Were The Miracles Really Miraculous?". Transcribed from The Sunday Times. 29 May 2006. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "Rose d'Or Light Entertainment Festival Winners 2004". Rose d'Or Winners for 2004 on imdb.com. 13 April 2004. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ "Barry and Stuart – Best Comedy Illusionist 2009". itricks.com. 11 October 2009. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  6. ^ "Popular hit magic show returns to BBC One". BBC. 22 December 2011. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  7. ^ "The Happenings Review". Time Out, London. 9 December 2013.
  8. ^ "Magick Full Episodes". Hulu.
  9. ^ "Rose D'OR Awards".
  10. ^ "The Man with the Maggots in his Eyes". The Guardian. 8 October 2005.
  11. ^ "Fury at C4 Jesus Show". The Sun. 1 August 2007.
  12. ^ "Barry and Stuart interview". 22 December 2011.
  13. ^ "Magicians wins BBC1 recommission". Televisual. 5 October 2011.
  14. ^ "UKTV's Watch commissions Four-Part Illusion Show". Televisual. 31 October 2013.
  15. ^ "UKTV Watch Happenings Website".
  16. ^ "Bristol Alien Revealed". UKTV.
  17. ^ "The Happenings at National Geographic". National Geographic.
  18. ^ "Barry & Stuart: Part-time Warlocks (5 stars), Part-time warlocks, full-time fun". The List. Retrieved 14 August 2008.
  19. ^ "News, Number 426 - 23rd August 2008". MagicWeek.co.uk. Retrieved 28 August 2008.
  20. ^ "Barry & Stuart - Powered by Demons at Soho Theatre - Comedy".
  21. ^ "Barry and Stuart Review – Comedy – Edinburgh Fringe 2010".
  22. ^ "The BBC goes over to the dark side with magicians who mix a little blood with their new tricks". The Scotsman. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  23. ^ "Barry and Stuart, Two of the Darkest, Weirdest Magicians in the U.K., Perform Tonight at Largo". LA Weekly. Retrieved 13 April 2013.