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Revision as of 19:43, 22 December 2009 edit190.103.67.75 (talk) Teller speaks: I'd say they are different bullets.← Previous edit Revision as of 20:14, 28 December 2009 edit undoJBsupreme (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers30,453 edits we need a better source than a web archived version of an internet FAQ hosted by a primary source to support the claim that any of this is even true (ie not BULLSHIT)Next edit →
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'''Teller''' (born February 14, 1948) is an ] ], ], ], ], and the silent half of the ] magic duo known as ], along with ]. He is known for his advocacy of ], ], ] economics, and ]. He legally ] from '''Raymond Joseph Teller''' to just "Teller". He possesses one of the few ] issued in a single name.<ref></ref> '''Teller''' (born February 14, 1948) is an ] ], ], ], ], and the silent half of the ] magic duo known as ], along with ]. He is known for his advocacy of ], ], ] economics, and ]. He legally ] from '''Raymond Joseph Teller''' to just "Teller". He possesses one of the few ] issued in a single name.<ref></ref>{{dubious}}


==Biography== ==Biography==

Revision as of 20:14, 28 December 2009

Teller
Teller - after the Penn & Teller show at the Rio in Las Vegas, Nevada, August 5, 2007.
BornRaymond Joseph Teller
(1948-02-14) February 14, 1948 (age 76)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Magician, Illusionist, Writer, Actor, Painter
Known forHalf of the comedy magic duo known as Penn & Teller
Height5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Political partyLibertarian Party
WebsitePenn and Teller.com

Teller (born February 14, 1948) is an American magician, illusionist, comedian, writer, and the silent half of the comedy magic duo known as Penn & Teller, along with Penn Jillette. He is known for his advocacy of atheism, libertarianism, free-market economics, and scientific skepticism. He legally changed his name from Raymond Joseph Teller to just "Teller". He possesses one of the few United States passports issued in a single name.

Biography

Raymond Joseph Teller was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents were of Russian Jewish and Cuban descent. Teller only learned of his Jewish ancestry when he was 50 years old. He attended Central High School and Amherst College and taught English and Latin at Lawrence High School in Lawrenceville, New Jersey. He was selected to be a member of the Central High School Hall of Fame in 2001.

Teller is an accomplished sleight of hand artist and is considered an expert on the history of magic. He is also a gifted painter. He is an atheist, debunker, skeptic, and Fellow of the Cato Institute (a libertarian think-tank organization which also lists his partner Penn Jillette as a Fellow). The Cato Institute association is featured prominently in the Penn and Teller Showtime TV series Bullshit!

He collaborated with Jillette on three magic books, and he is also the author of "When I'm Dead All This Will Be Yours!": Joe Teller - A Portrait by His Kid (2000), a biography/memoir of his father. The book features his father's paintings and cartoons which were strongly influenced by George Lichty's Grin and Bear It. The book was favorably reviewed by Publishers Weekly:

When Teller, the quiet half of the Penn and Teller showbiz team, made one of his monthly Philadelphia visits to see his parents, Joe and Irene ("Pad" and "Mam"), he was shown 100 unpublished cartoons his father drew in 1939. These "wryly observed scenes of Philadelphia street life," as Teller describes them, are in a loose, sketchy style imitative of the great George Lichty (1905-1983), famed for his long-run syndicated "Grin and Bear It." Teller and his father's "memories began to pump and the stories flowed" after they opened boxes of old letters that Teller read out loud (learning for the first time about a period in his parents' lives that he knew nothing about, such as the fact that his father's name is really Israel Max Teller). Joe's Depression-era hobo adventures led to travels throughout the U.S., Canada and Alaska, and by 1933, he returned to Philadelphia for art study. After Joe and Irene met during evening art classes, they married, and Joe worked half-days as a Philadelphia Inquirer copy boy. When the Inquirer rejected his cartoons, he moved into advertising art just as World War II began. Employing excerpts from letters and postcards, Teller successfully re-creates the world of his parents in a relaxed writing style of light humor and easy (yet highly effective) transitions between the past and present.

Teller does not speak while performing although there are occasional exceptions, usually when the audience is not aware of it. For example, he did the voice of "Mofo the psychic gorilla" in their early Broadway show with the help of a radio mike cupped in his hand. Teller's trademark silence originated during his youth, when he earned a living performing magic at college fraternity parties. He found that if he maintained silence throughout his act, spectators refrained from throwing beer and heckling him and focused more on his performance.

Teller began performing with friend Weir Chrisemer as The Ottmar Scheckt Society for the Preservation of Weird and Disgusting Music. Teller met Penn Jillette in 1975, where they joined a three-person act called Asparagus Valley Cultural Society, which played in San Francisco. In 1981 they began performing exclusively together as "Penn & Teller", an act that continues to this day.

Teller is a coauthor of the Nature Reviews Neuroscience paper "Attention and awareness in stage magic: turning tricks into research" from the November 2008 issue.

Teller speaks

This section is in list format but may read better as prose. You can help by converting this section, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (December 2009)

Despite his trademark of pantomime on stage, Teller has spoken in a number of films and television shows, as well as in numerous radio, television interviews, and whispered to audience members during the show in Las Vegas.

  • Teller plays an anthropomorphic cat, Mr. Boots, on an episode of Dharma & Greg. He also plays Mortimer in the 2000 film adaptation of the musical The Fantasticks (nearly all his dialogue was cut from the finished film since the character is a mute). He also speaks in a guest starring role on the "Like a Hurricane" episode of Miami Vice in 1987.
  • In the 1987 movie Long Gone, Teller played the son of Henry Gibson (whom he strongly resembles) and deliberately imitated the strong Southern accent Gibson used in the film. Gibson and Teller are both originally from Philadelphia.
  • Teller also speaks several lines at the end of Penn & Teller Get Killed, after playing his usual silent role for nearly the entire movie. Only the last of these lines was spoken in his normal voice. He also appears (and speaks) in Mysteries of Magic, Volume 3, and speaks occasionally in the travelogue series Penn & Teller's Magic and Mystery Tour, but tends to let Penn speak on his behalf. In one exception, Teller describes an encounter with an Egyptian magician and how he was fooled by the cups and balls trick.
  • During Penn & Teller's 1991 "Refrigerator Tour", Penn quips on stage, "Teller never talks", to which Teller comments in a normal speaking voice, "That's right, Penn."
  • During an episode of The Unpleasant World of Penn and Teller, Teller screams and says "Oh God" while pretending to cut off his thumb. In the final episode Teller speaks while posing as a dummy of himself.
  • Penn & Teller guest-starred on Babylon 5 in the episode "Day of the Dead". They played Rebo and Zooty, a pair of visiting comedians, the shorter of whom speaks only through a machine. Rebo (Penn) says that, in all their years acting, Zooty has only ever said one word to him: "Why?" Teller's character is shown to whisper in Sheridan's ear during the denouement, pointing at the machine, saying "Because it tells me to".
  • Teller speaks extensively in the History Channel special Houdini: Unlocking the Mystery, though he is shot with a back light to hide his face in silhouette.
  • He also speaks off-camera in the Showtime television series Bullshit! (usually in the form of profanity).
  • In an episode of Celebrity Deathmatch, during a fight with Siegfried and Roy, Teller is fed up by Penn mistreating him and tells him off before killing him.
  • On a celebrity episode of Fear Factor, Teller briefly breaks his silence by quietly exclaiming "Yes!" During "Off the Deep End," Teller screams whilst going down a water slide.
  • When Penn & Teller were interviewed on The Daily Show, one of Craig Kilborn's "Five Questions" was "Teller! Say something!" In response, Teller covered his mouth, uttering "Fuck you, Craig", thus compelling the censors to bleep it or render it silent. A similar incident occurred on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
  • After most of their performances (including at their current showplace, the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada) the duo mingles with the crowd in the lobby for photos and autographs. Teller speaks to all comers, which was not always the case.
  • Teller also contributed an audio review of the book The Glorious Deception, by illusion designer Jim Steinmeyer, on National Public Radio in July 2005.
  • The January 31, 2007 episode of The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe has a six-minute interview with Teller.
  • In the special Penn and Teller's Invisible Thread, a scuffle with some military officers in an airport hangar after a conversation with an alien prompts Teller to shout his partner's name into a megaphone.
  • In an appearance on Late Night, Teller (portraying a dummy version of himself) speaks to David Letterman as a demonstration of how the dummy can talk, and later screams in pain.
  • In an episode of Penn & Teller: Bullshit! entitled "Anger Management", Teller sets himself on fire and screams a profanity. Similarly, in an episode on the 2012 hoax, Teller is costumed as Quetzalcoatl, and he emits hoarse, condor-like screams.
  • In the beginning of another episode of Penn & Teller: Bullshit! entitled "PETA", Penn stands in the foreground with Teller, heating up a cattle branding iron with the word "Bullshit!" on it while a live bull (whom Penn has named "Dave") stands in the background. Penn brands Teller with the iron, to which Teller exclaims "Mother Fucker! Ohh!" Penn laughs and says to the bull, "Hey cool, Dave, he can talk!".
  • In the August 20, 2007 episode of the New York Times' "Science Times" podcast, Teller is interviewed.
  • In the December 24, 2007 show All Things Considered Teller spoke at length about his stageplay version of Macbeth.
  • Teller did the voice of the character Octum in the English language version of the animated movie Light Years (1988).
  • Penn and Teller have a cameo as themselves on an episode of The Simpsons, titled Hello Gutter, Hello Fadder, where he accidentally breaks character and verbally berates Homer, who expresses surprise in his ability to speak. Teller then expresses great anxiety, saying "Oh no, now Penn's gonna beat me!"
  • "& Teller" (2008), a short film about Teller dealing with a zombie apocalypse won a contest and was included on the DVD of George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead.
  • "& Teller2" (2008), the sequel to "& Teller" where Teller records his encounters with the undead in a video diary.
  • Teller explains a coin trick in terms of human cognition at the Magic on Consciousness Symposium in Las Vegas, an event of the Mind Science Foundation.
  • During the Broadway Revival of "The Rocky Horror Show", when Penn and Teller jointly played the part of the narrator, Teller was known to shout the signature Rocky Horror audience callbacks, albeit with his hand over his mouth.

Bibliography

  • Jillette, Penn; and Teller (1989). Penn and Teller's Cruel Tricks for Dear Friends. New York: Villard. ISBN 0-394-75351-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Jillette, Penn; and Teller (1992). Penn and Teller's How to Play with Your Food. New York: Villard. ISBN 0-679-74311-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Jillette, Penn; and Teller (1997). Penn and Teller's How to Play in Traffic. New York: Berkley Trade. ISBN 1-57297-293-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Teller; and Joe Teller (2000). "When I'm Dead All This Will Be Yours!": Joe Teller -- A Portrait by His Kid. New York: Blast Books. p. 128. ISBN 0-922233-22-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Teller; Karr, Todd; and Abbott, David P. (2005). House of Mystery: The Magic Science of David P. Abbott. Marina del Rey, California: Miracle Factory.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

See also

References

  1. Penn & Teller FAQ (Internet Archive)
  2. "Reparations". Penn & Teller: Bullshit!. Season 4. Episode 7. 2006-05-15. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  3. Teller
  4. "Pulling The Wool Off Your Eyes; Penn & Teller Declare War On Magicians' Bull". Retrieved 2009-01-07.
  5. "Atheist Chic". Retrieved 2009-01-07.
  6. Lynn Elber (2007-04-25). "'Silent' Teller to magically make 'Macbeth' a 'horror thriller'". Retrieved 2007-05-21.
  7. Macknik SL, King M, Randi J; et al. (2008). "Attention and awareness in stage magic: turning tricks into research". Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 9 (11): 871–9. PMID 18949833. {{cite journal}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. The Mysterious Mr. Boots
  9. NPR: Magician and trickster Teller of Penn and Teller
  10. NPR: 'Glorious Deception' in Magic
  11. The Skeptics Guide - Skepticast #80: 1/31/2007
  12. http://podcasts.nytimes.com/podcasts/2007/08/20/21scienceupdate.mp3
  13. NPR: New Production Brings Magic to 'Macbeth'
  14. & Teller at IMDb
  15. & Teller 2 at IMDb

External links

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