Okito Performing The Floating Ball

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Tobias Bamberg

Okito performing the floating ball.

Tobias "Theo" Leendert Bamberg (1875–1963) was a professional magician. Born in the Netherlands,
Bamberg performed under the name Okito which is an anagram of Tokio (Tokyo). His father had been
court magician to King William III of the Netherlands, making Okito the sixth generation in a family of
outstanding magicians known as the Bamberg Magical Dynasty.

Contents

1 Early life

2 Early career

3 Later career

4 Works

5 References

6 Further reading

Early life

Bamberg was the son of Judic Simon Delden and David Tobias Bamberg. His family were Dutch Jews. As
a young boy, Theo Bamberg nearly drowned while ice skating. The accident left him almost completely
deaf and as a result, he performed entirely in pantomime. As a young man, inspired by a performance of
the great French magician, shadowist and mimic Felecien Trewey, Bamberg developed a shadowgraphy
routine which he performed professionally, beginning in his early teens.
Tobias Bamberg
Early career

In 1893, Bamberg created his first Japanese-style act in Berlin at the age of eighteen. Success was
virtually immediate, but he eventually abandoned the show to elope with the theater manager's
daughter. Shortly after, his new wife convinced him to change his name from "Tobias/Toby" to
"Theodore/Theo". When he returned to performing, Bamberg altered his Japanese act to become a
Chinese-style act to better facilitate a new illusion he had designed. Unlike William Ellsworth Robinson
who performed as Chung Ling Soo, Bamberg didn't make an attempt to hide his European identity.

February 1907 brought the birth of his son David Bamberg (who would later perform under the Stage
name Fu Manchu) in England. Bamberg and his family eventually moved to The United States of America
where, beginning in 1908, Okito worked as an off-stage assistant/advisor and on-stage feature in the
shows of illusionist Howard Thurston. On the Thurston show, he was billed as "Europe's Greatest
Shadowist."

Later career

In 1909, through SAM, Bamberg had become friends with other notable magicians including Clement de
Lion, Nate Leipzig, and many others. Frustrated with his lack of success, Theo sold his Okito act to a
Brooklyn magician and plumbing contractor, W.J. "Doc" Nixon. It was in that year that Bamberg opened,
with partner Joe Klein, the Bamberg Magic & Novelty Co. in New York City. The company was the
primary representative of the German firm of Carl Willmann. While minding the store and toying with a
pillbox, Bamberg invented his famous Okito box used to perform coin magic. Eventually, Bamberg
returned to the road (playing vaudeville and variety theatres), selling his interest in the shop to Klein.
Bamberg's skills were such that existing handmade props created by Bamberg are highly prized by
collectors today. Many of Okito's props were described by Robert Albo in his Classic Magic with
Apparatus and The Ultimate Okito series.

Eventually, Doc Nixon gave Theo the "Okito" title back. Discarding the old act, Okito built many larger
effects that would make him into a legend. When he returned to Europe, success finally found him. He
traveled the world working large prestigious contracts. He was reunited with his son David and made
him his assistant like his father did and his father's father as well.

Following a South American and European tour in 1932, Theo decided to settle down and he returned to
the Netherlands. Meanwhile, David had established himself in South America and persuaded his father
to come and visit him. Okito did so just as the Nazis invaded Belgium and the Netherlands. As a result, all
of his possessions were either confiscated or destroyed. Theo Bamberg, known as Okito and frequently
billed on posters as The Mystic ended his last years in Chicago where he won the friendship, respect and
admiration of everyone interested in magic. and died in 1963.

Squash Publishing is scheduled to release an anthology of selected Okito tricks, illusions, reminiscences
and his never-before-published hand shadow routine.
Tobias Bamberg
Works

Okito (1921). Quality Magic. Will Goldston Ltd.

Okito; Parrish, Robert (1952). Okito on Magic. Edward O. Drane.

References

George B. Anderson (1972). "The Collector: OKITO". Magic Digest: Fun Magic for Everyone. Follet
Publishing Company. pp. 265. ISBN 978-0-695-80339-1.

https://goudsmit.home.xs4all.nl/CollateralFamiliesPersonsV2/wc37_209.htm

https://www.ochjs.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/OCHJS-Annual-Report-2009-10-.pdf

Albo, Robert J.; Lewis, Eric C.; Bamberg, David (1973). The Oriental Magic of the Bambergs. San
Francisco: San Francisco Book Co. ISBN 978-0913374030.

Albo, Robert J. (February 2007). "Okito and the Bamberg Dynasty". Magic Magazine. Vol. 16 no. 6. pp.
62–67.

Bobo, J.B: Okito coin box, page 217. Dover, 1982.

Walker, Byron (February 2011). "Dr. Robert J. Albo". Linking Ring. Vol. 91 no. 2. pp. 24–27.

Squash Publishing: About. Accessed February 16, 2020.

Further reading

Albo, Robert J.; Lewis, Eric C.; Bamberg, David (1973). The Oriental Magic of the Bambergs. San
Francisco: San Francisco Book Co. ISBN 978-0913374030.

Bamberg, David (1988). Illusion Show – A Life in Magic. David Meyer Magic Books.

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