Published March 18, 2007 11:23 pm - Magician Jim Smithson still has a few tricks up his sleeve after year of performing
By Brianna Bailey
Tran...
The magic touch
The Norman Transcript
Magician Jim Smithson still has a few tricks up his sleeve after year of performing
By Brianna Bailey
Transcript Staff Writer
It's Friday night and magician Jim Smithson is making the rounds at the Vista Sports Grill, making quarters and golf balls disappear over plates of chips and salsa and pints of Shiner beer.
"People are feeling no pain this time of night," Smithson said over the din of clinking beer glasses and NCAA tournament basketball in the background. A career magician, Smithson has worked the Vista most Friday nights doing table-to-table magic tricks for the past 17 years.
Smithson doesn't wear a black cape or carry a magic wand. He's an unobtrusive type, wearing a blue denim shirt with the words "The magic of Jim Smithson" embroidered over his heart.
The room is smoky and most tables have a few empty pitchers of beer sitting nearby. You can tell what table Smithson is at by following the laughter.
The wait staff at the Vista have come to rely on Smithson to soothe irate customers on busy Friday nights. When a steak is overcooked or the wrong drink shows up at a table, Smithson usually jumps in with a few tricks up his sleeve. He can calm a rowdy group with slight of hand.
"I can usually tell everything I need to know about a person within three sentences," Smithson said.
You have to be able to read people to work the same bar every week for 17 years, Smithson said -- and the Vista regulars don't seem to mind seeing the same tricks over and over again. One man came in last week with a list of favorite tricks he wanted Smithson to perform in honor of a friend's birthday.
Smithson started his career in the towing business, and repossessing cars was one of his least favorite duties.
"In the towing business, no one you meet is in a good mood," Smithson said. "Now everyone I meet is in a good mood," Smithson said. "Or they are when I leave at least."
Smithson still performs the card trick that made him fall in love with magic when he was 24 years old.
Smithson takes out his trusty invisible deck of cards Friday at a Vista table full of single guys dressed in University of Oklahoma T-shirts. He asks one to cut the deck, another to shuffle.
"Pick a card, but don't pick something obvious," Smithson says. "Men always pick the ace of clubs, women always pick something romantic like the king or queen of hearts."