~ Office Supplies ~~ Buy Posters ~~ A-Z Products ~~ Website Advertising


Ventriloquism - Wikipedia

<<Up     Contents

Ventriloquism

Redirected from Ventriloquist

Ventriloquism is an act of deception in which a person manipulates his or her voice so that it appears that the voice is coming from someone or more often, something else. The most familiar type of ventriloquist today is a nightclub[?] performer sitting on a stool with a wooden dummy on his lap. This comedic style of ventriloquism, however, is a fairly recent innovation, less than 100 years old.

The roots of ventriloquism are ancient. Some claim that possessed people mentioned in the Bible were just ventriloquists, and the case has been made that diviners in many religions, including perhaps the Oracle of Delphi, were ventriloquists, or as they were once called, "Belly Talkers."

The version of ventriloquism with which most people are familiar, ventriloquism as entertainment, began in the days of Vaudeville in the late 19th century. The vaudeville acts did not concentrate on humor as much as on demonstrating the ventriloquist's ability to deceive the audience and his skill in switching voices. For this reason, many of the performers used multiple figures, switching quickly from one voice to another. Jules Vernon[?] was one of the more famous American vaudeville ventriloquists who used multiple figures. Perhaps the most famous vaudeville ventriloquist, however, The Great Lester[?], used only one figure, Frank Byron, Jr.[?], and it is the Great Lester's success which paved the way for the one ventriloquist with one figure routine which is so common today.

Ventriloquism was immensely popular in the middle of the 20th century, thanks in great part to the work of one of the Great Lester's students, Edgar Bergen. Bergen popularized the idea of the comedic ventriloquist, and together with his favorite figure, Charlie McCarthy[?], hosted a radio program that, in the 1930s and early 1940s, was the number one program on the night it aired. Bergen continued performing until his death in 1979, and his popularity inspired many other famous ventriloquists who followed him, including Paul Winchell, Jimmy Nelson[?], and Senor Wences[?].

See List of ventriloquists.

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump




 
 
40 ct mint green HIDDENITE Faceting cabbing rough raw uncut gemstone crystal nice jewel Beautiful 4
 40 ct mint green HIDDENITE ing cabbing raw uncut crystal nice jewel Beautiful 4 
 
10 grams creamy blue AZURITE tumbled polished raw gemstone cabbing rough jewelry 50 carats PRETTY
 10 grams creamy blue AZURITE tumbled polished raw cabbing jewelry 50 carats PRETTY 
 
10 carats maroon red Jasper agate gem Polished rectangle blocks Cabbing cab cabochon rough gemstones
 10 carats maroon red Jasper agate Polished rectangle blocks Cabbing cab cabochon  
 
Tanzanite blue IOLITE gems jewels Loose natural 5mm square faceted cut jewelry gemstone pair 5 mm pr
 Tanzanite blue IOLITE jewels Loose 5mm square ed cut jewelry pair 5 mm pr 
 
62 carat LABRADORITE feldspar gemstone Blue gold large hand polished gem stone jewelry 12 gr PRETTY
 62 carat LABRADORITE feldspar Blue gold large hand polished jewelry 12 gr PRETTY