"Let's go to Borneo," she said, "and work
with orangutans."
It turned out, alas, that volunteers there don't get to do
anything more riveting than build enclosures. Helping poor people in Calcutta
had roadblocks, too.
OK, she said. "I want to perform with you."
She joined Toastmasters and took an improv class, and he
wrote a children's show for the two of them.
Darned if it didn't work, and that led to the Magic Soiree,
where she's in sequins and he's the bumbler in a bowler hat who threatens to
play his ukulele.
It's funny enough that Joe Sclafani, of Sterling Heights.
has seen the show five times since it opened in earnest in January 2022, with
his brother and his kids and then a date, Cathy Kroll of Rochester.
Sharing a table, we laughed together and we each ate an
extra cookie, and one of the tableside magicians, Dennis Leung, let him keep a
fork he'd bent into improbable configurations with just the slightest pressure
from his fingertips.
"I'm still a little kid," said Sclafani, 59,
"with or without magic."
But magic helps take years off. Besides, Fields says,
"it's a perfect date night, because when close-up magicians are at your
table, you don't have to talk to each other."
That earns him the British equivalent of a
"Shush!" from Harfield.
Truth is, they say, they feel a responsibility to magic, and
to the state where Abbott's Magic Shop brings thousands of people every August
to an annual festival of astonishment in Colon.
They like keeping talented young performers like Poage and
Leung engaged and employed. They'd like to turn the show into something
year-round, and maybe put together a Houdini commemoration in three years for
the 100th anniversary of his demise.
They love the gasps and the laughs. And bless her, Harfield
likes to bake.