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Tom Mullica's
love affair with show business began in 1953 in Waupun, Wisconsin
when, as a five-year-old child, he decided to be a clown. Two years
later he discovered magic and not long after combined the two.
In addition to magic and clowning, he is a highly skilled ventriloquist
and pantomimist. Tom is now CEO of Van Blaine Productions.
Tom enlisted in the
Army at age 18 and after 3 years in Korea and Germany, moved
to the magic capitol of the world, Colon, Michigan, where
he built illusions and demonstrated magic for the famous
Abbott's Magic Company. Tom then moved to Atlanta, Georgia
where he attended bartending school and opened his own nightclub
called The Tom-foolery Magic Bar Theatre. His popularity
in Atlanta led to an appearance on Late Night with David
Letterman, World's Greatest Magic, Penn & Teller,
Viva Variety and hundreds of television appearances throughout
the world. With countless hotel and casino performances in
Atlantic City and Las Vegas, Tom Mullica remains one of the
greatest variety acts of our time. Between 1976 and 1987,the
Tom-foolery was visited by countless notables -including alongtime
favorite of Tom's... Red Skelton.
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Red
visited the Tom-foolery in 1980 and liked the show so much he spent
two hours with Tom afterwards. Tom occasionally included some suggestive
material in his comedy routines at the time and Red proclaimed, "I'll
tell you what Tom, if you clean up your act, you can use my material." He
told Tom that his humor was too suggestive and that it shocked
people into laughing. He instructed Tom to do every show as if
his mother, a priest, and a nun were in the audience. Tom's approach
to comedy changed that very night. One of the dominant factors
in Tom's life has been the quiet, sincere friendship he developed
with Red Skelton over the years that followed. Never a night went
by at the Tom-foolery that Tom didn't mention Red. This friendship
took on an even more significant, poignant turn for Tom when Skelton
sent him W.C. fields' famous twisted pool cue. Fields used the
twisted pool cue in a classic vaudeville routine with Ed Wynn eliciting
laughs under the pool table. Finally, Fields "discovered" Wynn
under the table and walloped him with the cue. Fields had taken
a liking to Red Skelton and had given him the cue about a year
before he died. Tom feels he can never achieve a higher tribute
than that in Red's note which accompanied the pool cue. . ."I
don't know of anyone I would rather pass it on to for safekeeping
than you!"
After 11 years performing at the Tom-foolery,
Tom wanted to move on. He asked Red for his advice and he suggested, "Take
10-15 minutes of your best material and perform it pantomime to
music and you'll be able to work any place in the world - you'll
have no language barrier." Tom tookRed's advice and after
six months of rehearsal moved to Paris, France where he was one
of the featured acts at the world famous Crazy Horse Saloon. Tom
returned to America in 1991 and continued his comedy magic career
until 1996 when he began writing RED SKELTON (A Performance Tribute)
which is now featured in theaters throughout America and Canada. |