Trick Elephant Hagenbeck's Circus - 1903 was released on:
USA: January 1903
curcis is a latin word meaning ring or circle.
The first trick was that the the boy taught the mouse to creep up the sleeve of his jacket and come by his neck.
Slagar the Cruel did have his circus long before he came to Redwall. He used this trick for a long time.
Magicians do not reveal how it is EXACTLY they perform their art, but usually it is an illusion. This means it is a trick of the eye. Having the elephant on a drop platform, or turning vehicle of some sort. The magician then makes a flutterof his amrs then at the same time, as he distracts viewers, he turns the vehicle the elephant is on, making it look like the elephant has disappeared. Even the use of mirrors can create the illusion of something being there one minute then gone the next. Its all up to the magician, and they don't reveal their secrets as no-one will come back to watch them.
Trick Elephants - 1897 was released on: USA: May 1897
Gunsmoke - 1955 Circus Trick 10-20 was released on: USA: 6 February 1965
curcis is a latin word meaning ring or circle.
JoJo's Circus - 2003 The Watchamadoodle What's the Trick 1-13 was released on: USA: 2 December 2003
you trick the lion
he made an elephant disappear
The first trick was that the the boy taught the mouse to creep up the sleeve of his jacket and come by his neck.
I'm pretty sure it's at the childhood circus he used to visit
Slagar the Cruel did have his circus long before he came to Redwall. He used this trick for a long time.
If you separate magic tricks from escapology, then Houdini's most impressive trick was the disappearing elephant trick. Here an elephant was walked on to the stage and into a box; the box was rotated then opened. The elephant and keeper were gone. The trick is all the more impressive if you know that under the stage was a swimming pool so there were no trap doors. It's generally thought that Houdini did the trick with a slanted mirror inside the box. This method is still used today to make the Statue of Liberty (or the like) disappear.
If you separate magic tricks from escapology, then Houdini's most impressive trick was the disappearing elephant trick. Here an elephant was walked on to the stage and into a box; the box was rotated then opened. The elephant and keeper were gone. The trick is all the more impressive if you know that under the stage was a swimming pool so there were no trap doors. It's generally thought that Houdini did the trick with a slanted mirror inside the box. This method is still used today to make the Statue of Liberty (or the like) disappear.
no because elephants like fruit and vegitables and not much meat so the answer is no
Magicians do not reveal how it is EXACTLY they perform their art, but usually it is an illusion. This means it is a trick of the eye. Having the elephant on a drop platform, or turning vehicle of some sort. The magician then makes a flutterof his amrs then at the same time, as he distracts viewers, he turns the vehicle the elephant is on, making it look like the elephant has disappeared. Even the use of mirrors can create the illusion of something being there one minute then gone the next. Its all up to the magician, and they don't reveal their secrets as no-one will come back to watch them.