Jump to content

Tony "Doc" Shiels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Cydebot (talk | contribs) at 11:01, 6 September 2018 (Robot - Moving category People from Salford, Greater Manchester to Category:People from Salford per CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2018 August 29.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Tony "Doc" Shiels
Doc Shiels at a pub in Killarney, Ireland, in November 2015
Born
Anthony Shiels

1938 (age 85–86)
Occupation(s)artist, magician, writer, busker, psychic entertainer, hoaxer
SpouseChris Shiels
WebsiteBritish

Anthony "Doc" Shiels (born 1938) is a Salford-born artist, magician and writer. After attending the Heatherley School of Fine Art in London, he moved to St Ives, Cornwall where in 1961, following the resignation of Barbara Hepworth, he was made a member of the committee of the influential Penwith Society of Arts.[1] In St Ives he ran the progressive 'Steps Gallery', where he showed artists like Brian Wall and Bob Law.[2] He had several solo exhibitions in London before then leaving St Ives following a drunken incident, in which he threatened police with a gun that he had obtained from painter-friend Terry Frost.

History

In the late 1960s after moving to live in Ponsanooth near Falmouth, he rediscovered stage magic - something he had been taught as a boy by his father and grandfather - and wrote articles for The Linking Ring and The Budget magazines. This included interviews with Ray Harryhausen and Ray Bradbury. He also published a trio of magic books: 13, Something Strange and Daemons Darklings and Doppelgangers which were sold in both the UK and the US and led to him being associated with 1970s bizarre magic.[3]

Between 1970 and 1974 he performed as 'Doc Shiels: Wizard of the West' at festivals and fayres in Cornwall, UK.[4] This, presented with the help of friend Vernon Rose and the rest of the Shiels family, was a magic show that incorporated illusions such as the headless woman, the sub-trunk and the buzz-saw.

In 1975 he set up 'Tom Fool's Theatre of Tom Foolery', which started as a troupe of 'mummers', before worked closely with the famous Footsbarn theatre.

In 1976 he was involved with a series of 'monster-raising' exploits, which brought him extensive media coverage, particularly when he started 'invoking' the monsters with the help of a coven of nude witches. His attempts to 'raise' Morgawr the Cornish sea monster, were covered by BBC TV, Fortean Times, local newspapers, and appeared in national newspapers such as the Reveille and News of the World. At around the same time he reported on sightings of the now legendary 'Owlman' of Mawnan. In 1977 he obtained photos of the Loch Ness Monster which appeared on the front page of The Mirror newspaper.[5] This and his associated 'Monstermind Experiment' featured in numerous other media outlets including The Daily Telegraph and Radio One's Newsbeat.[6]

Alongside the monster-raising, Shiels continued to perform both as Doc Shiels and as a member of Tom Fools Theatre, and he wrote several plays including Spooks, The Gallavant Variations, Nightjars, Cloth Owl the Winking Curtain and Dr Beak Hides his Hands. One of his plays, Distant Humps, was co-produced by Ken Campbell and co-starred Christopher Fairbank. He also had other magic books published such as The Shiels Effect, Bizarre and The Cantrip Codex.

The events of the 1970s and 1980s were covered in his own book, Monstrum,[7] and in the 1996 book Owlman and Others by Jon Downes.

During this period and in the years since he has continued to paint and have exhibitions.[8] He considers himself an artist first and foremost, and his life's work to be a form of surrealism that he refers to as 'surrealchemy'.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Cousins, Steven (1995). Tony Shiels. Mark Space Publications. ISBN 1871315549.
  2. ^ Whybrow, Marion (1994). St Ives 1883-1993 Portrait of an art colony. Suffolk: The Antique Collectors Club. ISBN 1851491708.
  3. ^ White, Rupert (2015) Monstermind: The magical life and art of Tony 'Doc' Shiels Antenna Publications ISBN 978-0993216411
  4. ^ Shiels, Tony 'Doc' (Summer 1974). "The tent-show summers". The Cornish Review (26): 43.
  5. ^ "Daily Mirror". September 6, 1977.
  6. ^ Downes, Jonathan (1997). The Owlman and Others. Bideford: CFZ Press. ISBN 9781905723027.
  7. ^ Shiels, Tony 'Doc' (1990). Monstrum: a wizards tale. Fortean Tomes.
  8. ^ White, Rupert Monstermind: The magical life and art of Tony 'Doc' Shiels. Antenna Publications ISBN 978-0993216411