Laurant The Man of Many Mysteries
Laurant The Man of Many Mysteries
In 1986, Eugene Laurant became a professional magician. 21 years earlier, as Eugene Greenleaf, he was born on the frontier, in the horse-and-buggy town that was Denver, Colorado.
Billed as the "Man of Many Mysteries," Laurant spent almost 50 seasons on tour. His stage-filling magic show brought wonder and delight to millions of spectators across North America.
The bulk of Laurant's career was spent not in major metropolitan centers, or hustling, bustling cities like New York. Unlike his contemporaries--Houdini among them--Laurant, for the most part, confined his routes to rural America. It was there that he made his mark. Eugene Laurent was, arguably, king of the small town showmen.
Laureant carried a full compliment of assistants, livestock, baggage and thousands of pounds of equipment--the tools of mystery making--over the rough-and-tumble back roads of America. He logged millions of miles on the road.
His greatest successes were made on the Lyceum and Chutauqua circuits, which enjoyed immense popularity between 1900 and 1920. during those years, Laurant headlined for the most prominent organization in the business, the Redpath Bureau.
Drawing on Laurant's own unpublished writings, scrapbooks, and new research, this book paints a revealing and complete portrait of this early American magician. From his earliest dime-museum days, to Wild West adventure, vaudeville shows and much more, Laurant Man of Many Mysteries tells the tale.