Not currently on display at the V&A

The World of Magic

Poster
ca. 1860
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

'Professor' John Henry Anderson (1814-1874), the Scottish magician and theatrical entrepreneur was better known as 'the Wizard of the North'. He settled in London in 1840 where he performed at the New Strand Theatre. In August 1845 he opened his own 5,000-seat theatre the City Theatre on Glasgow Green, where from 8th to 19th September 1845 he engaged an operatic company headed by the well-known tenor Sims Reeves. The theatre burned down in November 1845, only four months after its opening, but through the assistance of friends Anderson started a new London company at Covent Garden Theatre in 1846 and went on to perform around Europe, and in 1849 for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. In his later years Anderson's daughters Helen and Alice appeared onstage with their father, and they went on to become magicians themselves. Miss Anderson is billed here as 'The Second Sighted Sybil'.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe World of Magic (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Lithograph
Brief description
Tour poster advertising The World of Magic, the show presented by John Henry Anderson (1814-1874) The Wizard of the North, and his daughter. Lithographed and printed by C.J. Culliford, ca.1860
Physical description
Pictorial and typographic.
Dimensions
  • Poster height: 57.1cm
  • Poster width: 39.5cm
Object history
Associated Production: Professor Anderson, World of Magic. Performers: Professor Anderson (magician), Miss Anderson. Performance category: magic. Production type: tour.
Production
22 Southampton Street
Subjects depicted
Summary
'Professor' John Henry Anderson (1814-1874), the Scottish magician and theatrical entrepreneur was better known as 'the Wizard of the North'. He settled in London in 1840 where he performed at the New Strand Theatre. In August 1845 he opened his own 5,000-seat theatre the City Theatre on Glasgow Green, where from 8th to 19th September 1845 he engaged an operatic company headed by the well-known tenor Sims Reeves. The theatre burned down in November 1845, only four months after its opening, but through the assistance of friends Anderson started a new London company at Covent Garden Theatre in 1846 and went on to perform around Europe, and in 1849 for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. In his later years Anderson's daughters Helen and Alice appeared onstage with their father, and they went on to become magicians themselves. Miss Anderson is billed here as 'The Second Sighted Sybil'.
Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
S.5128-1995

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Record createdAugust 3, 2010
Record URL
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