[Hans Klok and Pamela Anderson combine talents in the Las Vegas magic show, The Beauty of Magic; Ms. Anderson taking over for Carmen Electra who was slated to open the show's run at The Planet Hollywood Theatre.
What does Mr. Klok think of David Blaine?
How did he view Siegfried & Roy's dominance on the strip?
Why is Inside Magic Favorite Carmen Electra no longer with the show?
How long will the show run?
Allison Kugel interviewed Mr. Klok for a recent issue of PR.com. She does a great job of showing Mr. Klok's excitement and interest in Magic, gets honest answers to our questions and more. She even attempts to confirm rumors he is dating Pamela Anderson.
You can read more about Ms. Kugel and her work at the Allison Dawn website. - editor].
His love affair with the mystery and glamour of magic was set afire as Klok's father supported his growing passion for the illusive art form, taking him to magic conventions around Europe and constantly practicing with the budding performer.
Earl brought Klok to the states, creating his current show
and making him the latest it magician on the legendary Las Vegas
strip.
It was after arriving in Vegas that Hans Klok pulled off what
could arguably be considered his most spectacular magic trick to
date, making Pamela Anderson appear as his assistant on stage and
renaming his illusion-filled spectacular, The Beauty of Magic, paying homage to both the splendor
and captivity of his illusions and the visual landscape of
Anderson's presence.
True to form, Pamela Anderson first appears on stage during
each show as a poster that comes to life.
According to his fellow magicians, Klok's illusions are fast
even by illusionist standards, considerably adding to Klok's
growing appeal as well as adding extra pressure to the talented
performer to maintain a seamless sequence of events throughout
each show.
At the beginning of our interview Hans mentioned to me that
he was suffering from the flu and was not only doing press (with
moi) that day but would also be performing that very night.
Throughout our conversation he struggled a bit to enunciate
each spurt of laughter and each lengthy anecdote and I struggled
to clearly understand him through his heavy Dutch accent and even
heavier congestion, but we both made it through.
His enthusiasm for magic transported me back to childhood
when you simply accepted what was presented before you and felt
the freedom to allow yourself to be dazzled.
Allison Kugel: Congratulations on the success of the show
(The Beauty of Magic, featuring Pamela Anderson). How did this
particular show and the Planet Hollywood Theatre come together
and how did you wind up collaborating with Pamela
Anderson?
Hans Klok: The show existed in Holland and in Europe. We
made it in Holland for a European tour, but the show became a
little bit too big. It was too expensive to travel with. And then
Robert Earl, the owner from Planet Hollywood, he came to Europe
to see the show and he loved it.
He said, You could be the new magician on the [Las Vegas]
strip." And then it all went very fast. And then we added Pamela
Anderson.
Allison Kugel: Was the show called The Beauty of Magic
beforehand, or was that title added afterwards?
Hans Klok: Afterwards. In Europe the show was called Faster
Than Magic, because I'm known for doing tricks very fast. Even my
colleagues don't get it. how fast I can disappear or change
places.
We call this [show] The Beauty of Magic because magic is beautiful, but of
course, also as a link to Pamela Anderson.
Allison Kugel: Weren't you working with Carmen Electra at
one point? Was that a different show?
Hans Klok: Yes. It was actually the same show but she never
made it on stage actually.
She signed her contract and she came to Vegas to rehearse, but it wasn't a success because, she's a sweetheart, but for
magician's assistant you shouldn't be afraid of the tricks and she was. She was also a little stage frightened.
So we broke up before we did any show.
Then she decided, "Ok I'm stepping out of this whole
project," and the same day Pamela signed up to do it.
Allison Kugel: I've watched many of the illusions and many
of them seem risky. Are they as dangerous as they look?
Hans Klok: Yeah, they are. You can very easily hurt
yourself. Once in Europe I hurt my feet and I couldn't perform
anymore.
It's a problem, you know? You can replace a dancer but not
the magician. It's hard to do the show when you're not totally
fit.
Allison Kugel: Was Pamela afraid to do any of the illusions
that she is required to do?
Hans Klok: No, she loved it immediately. She was really
into it.
She had some heights fright, she was afraid of heights, but
now she's over that and she loves it.
Allison Kugel: I've heard that Siegfried and Roy were big
inspirations for you. In what way do you try to model your career
after theirs?
Hans Klok: Well they're very famous for working with
animals and I'm not doing that. I think there's nobody who could
do that better then how they did it.
They had a whole zoo to protect the animals and keep them in
a kind of freedom. I decided not to work with animals. I did some
in the past, like I did disappearing elephants when I was young
but I'm not the guy with the wild tigers.
I've seen many copies of [them], but you always should go for
your own way, your own presentation. I still do a lot of
illusions which were invented, for example, by Harry Houdini.
[But] the nice thing is always to create your own illusions.
Allison Kugel: When you were a kid and learning to do
magic, wasn't it your dad who taught you?
Hans Klok: Yeah, my father was my big inspiration. Not that
he was a magician. My brother was crazy about football so my
father always supported him.
I was crazy about magic and I was reading all the magic books
and he was getting interested in helping me make my first tricks.
He also supported me through my first shows because I started
performing when I was eleven at small children's birthday
parties.
My father always brought me to all these places and we would
be together all around Europe visiting all the magic conventions.
In every country there are magic conventions with contests and
with dealers who show their latest tricks, so we'd been through
that together and my father was also a big supporter of getting
me my own company and he always thought big!
He was a great dad. If everybody had the father that I had,
then the world would look much better.
Allison Kugel: Does your dad still come to see you
perform?
Hans Klok: My father died six years ago, so this show is
also a tribute to my father. At the end of the show I tell that
this show is a tribute to the man that helped and supported me
the most, my dear father.
He deserves it because he did an unbelievable job. And he
died very unexpectedly. He was just sixty-one years old.
Allison Kugel: It sounds like you got quite a bit from
him.
Hans Klok: Oh yes. And in quality time, I had a father for
more then all those years.
Allison Kugel: When was your very first professional job?
Hans Klok: When I was seventeen years old they hired me for
a nightclub, which really I wasn't allowed to do because you had to be, in Europe, eighteen for that.
Then when I was eighteen I went to Japan. That was my first official contract outside of the country.
Allison Kugel: Which is the most challenging illusion that
you do in this show, The Beauty of Magic?
Hans Klok: In the show the speed is unbelievable. Some
American magicians, when they see the show, they say the speed is
so unbelievable that it makes you think, How is it possible?"
What's also challenging is that I'm doing an illusion with a
light bulb that floats over the stage and suddenly starts
floating over the audience.
It's a trick from Harry Blackstone. He died ten years ago.
He never wanted to sell the secret to Lance Burton or to
David Copperfield and I was asking him for five years and he sold
me the rights for me to do it. It's also a tribute to this great,
great magician Harry Blackstone.
It's a very difficult trick!
I'm always happy when that trick is over (laughs)! Then I
think, Thank God it went well!"
That's hard with magic because people want to see you making
mistakes.
Allison Kugel: I was going to ask you about that. When
you're on stage from night to night, are there ever times when
certain illusions don't go the way they're supposed
to?
Hans Klok: Of course it can happen, but we rehearse it so
much that it doesn't happen often, but sometimes it can happen
that something goes wrong.
We are just human beings and sometimes you're out of timing
or something. But the audience loves it because you have two
types of audiences.
You have the people who are enjoying and relaxing and just
want to be amazed, and you also have the people, the other 50% of
them, who only want to know how it's done.
Allison Kugel: The skeptics.
Hans Klok: The skeptics. And I can understand because I was
also skeptical, you know? I'm a big time skeptic when I go to a
magic show because you love to know how it's done.
But these people, many times they come up to you afterwards
and they say, Well, actually I'm a skeptic but I don't get it.
This is too complex and then I started to just enjoy the show."
And that's the best thing to do.
Just enjoy. Don't even think that you will go behind the
secrets.
Allison Kugel: Do the people who perform with you know how
it's all done because they have to know?
Hans Klok: They all sign a contract that for their whole
life that they will never talk about it. All the people around
me, the assistants and technicians, they only know a part of the
show.
They only know the part that they are being informed with.
There's nobody besides me who knows the whole show. It makes you
lonely (laughs).
I have a lot of magician friends and we talk often about it.
It's very strange because actually you have a very secret life.
You might have seen the movies The Illusionistor The Prestigelast year. These two big Hollywood movies that
were released were all about magic.
In The Prestige, it's very close to the truth, how magicians
invented their magic and how their competitors and they were
really famous at that time.
Pamela Anderson always says that magicians are the rock stars
of today. I think that's true. You see Criss Angel, David Blaine,
David Copperfield and a lot of new people like me who are coming
up. So I think that magic is quite hot.
Allison Kugel: I don't get David Blaine. It looks like what
he is doing are just things where he's putting himself in a
dangerous situation, but I don't really see where the magic is.
You know what I mean?
Hans Klok: Yeah, yeah. He was locked up in a glass box
somewhere for weeks without food. I also don't get it. What's the
magic? All the super top models today they are now dating you, if
you get locked up in a glass box.
Allison Kugel: (Laughs).
Hans Klok: David Blaine I don't get but it brought him a
lot of fame.
Allison Kugel: What is Pamela Anderson's role in the show?
Because I know there's a big cast and lots of dancers as well as
other magician's assistants.
Hans Klok: She's one of the assistants actually. That is
what she wanted to do. I have three main assistants.
I always call them the divas of magic, and then we have the
twenty dancers.
But she comes up in the middle of the show and steps out of a
poster. She comes to life. Then we do a mind reading exercise
with somebody from the audience which is quite fun.
After that, I saw her in half. Then I let her levitate pretty
high. Then she does a striptease act, actually, kind of a
striptease act.
Everyone thinks they are going to see her naked and then she
changes into me and I'm dressed. I'm sorry (laughs).
Allison Kugel: Oh (laughs)!
Hans Klok: It's a very funny part of the show. I'm very
happy with it. We have a good chemistry.
Allison Kugel: And who choreographs the dancers in the
show?
Hans Klok: Gail Davies and she did a great job on it.
I can say that it is the biggest production show on the
strip.
It's a magic show but we have a big production. We also have
a story. We have a story about a little boy who dreams about
becoming a magician.
So it's actually my life story and there is also a little
actor, and there's six children for that because children are not
allowed to perform more then twice a week.
Then we have an actor who plays the father. Sometimes there
are flashbacks and you see that the little kid is rehearsing in
front of the mirror. Then he changes into me and we continue the
show. Then we have the dancers.
Allison Kugel: What's it like performing in Las Vegas as
opposed to anywhere else in the world?
Hans Klok: For me Vegas was always a special place because
it's the town of Siegfried and Roy. They performed her for
thirty-five years.
They were the first performers where a hotel decided to first
contract an artist and then built a hotel around them.
The Mirage Hotel was built for Siegfried and Roy. David
Copperfield.everybody else has performed here, so it's the city
of magic and it has a big magic history.
Like Broadway is the place for an actor, Las Vegas is the
place for an illusionist.
Allison Kugel: How long will The Beauty of Magic run at The Planet Hollywood
Theatre?
Hans Klok: We extended to December. It's a very good sign
that they extended the show. We play Friday and Saturday two
shows in the evening, one at seven and one at ten o'clock. Then
we're adding another extra day on Sunday.
We're doing pretty well and we started the show in June.
It's very dangerous to start in the summer because the summer
is not the best period in Vegas. It's hot and there are no
conventions, so it was pretty brave of the producers to do that.
Allison Kugel: But you guys were still selling out even in
the summer. Are you going to be performing during the holidays
and on News Years Eve?
Hans Klok: We're supposed to end the eighth of December,
but if we continue, yeah.
Allison Kugel: That would be great if you guys do a New Years Show. I know that you're very famous in Europe and Asia and that's where you got your original groundswell of a fan base.
When did you first break through in the United
States?
Hans Klok: I hope it's right now. This is a very exciting
time because I hope to continue after December, my stay in Las Vegas, and I'm ready for it. And the whole world comes to Vegas.
Allison Kugel: Do you want to stay in Las Vegas
indefinitely, for years?
Hans Klok: I would love to.
Allison Kugel: Are you ever coming to New
York?
Hans Klok: We were just in New York for several days to do The Today Show.
Allison Kugel: You were doing a lot of press here,
right?
Hans Klok: Yeah, we did. We've been twice to New York. We're doing Ellen, we did Live with Regis & Kelly, we did
Craig Ferguson.
Allison Kugel: How come you and Pam are insinuating that
you're dating when you do press? Is it an ongoing gag between the two of you?
Hans Klok: Yeah, it's more a funny thing, because when that
happens it's always during a TV show when the host is always making Pamela Anderson jokes.
It's just a routine. We have a very good chemistry and that's
it. We're good friends and I'm not going to make it more then
what it is.
Allison Kugel: So you're just playing on the joke
basically.
Hans Klok: Yeah, we're playing on the joke, but I think we
played so much on the joke that everybody [believes it].
Allison Kugel: There are articles everywhere saying, Are
they dating?"
Hans Klok: We're not, but it's fun. We have a great time.
It's just a big joke.
Allison Kugel: I know. You have to have fun with the
media.
Hans Klok: Right! Well, they're picking it up and it's good
for us. And I don't have any tattoos.
Allison Kugel: Or piercings.
Hans Klok: (Laughs) I'll do that
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