Robert Harbin



         


Robert Harbin (born Ned Williams in South Africa) (1908-1978) was a British magician and writer.

[Top]

Career

Harbin was the first British illusionist to move from stage performing to television, with his own show which began in 1940. He developed a number of new tricks, including the "Neon Light" and the now ubiquitous "Zig-Zag Girl" (1953) illusions.

In about 1952 Harbin appeared in a minor part as a magician in the film The Limping Man, produced by Cy Enfield. In 1953, Harbin and a friend of Enfield, Gershon Legman (1917-1999), discovered a common interest in the Japanese art of paper-folding. Harbin wrote many books on the subject, beginning with Paper Magic in 1965, and was the first President of the British Origami Society. He was the first Westerner to use the word origami for this art-form. He also presented a series of origami programmes for Independent Television in its "Look-In" shows for children in the 1970s.

His grave is in Golders Green Crematorium in London.

[Top]

Bibliography

[Top]

On origami

[Top]

On magic

[Top]

Other subjects






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License