Help us get to over 8,770 articles in 2026.
If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com
Tony Eng: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
| birth_day = May of | | birth_day = May of | ||
| birth_year = 1946 | | birth_year = 1946 | ||
| birth_place = Sidney,BC, Canada | | birth_place = Sidney, BC, Canada | ||
| death_day = May 4, | | death_day = May 4, | ||
| death_year = 2008 | | death_year = 2008 | ||
| death_place = Victoria,BC, Canada | | death_place = Victoria, BC, Canada | ||
| resting_place = | | resting_place = | ||
| resting_place_coordinates = | | resting_place_coordinates = | ||
Latest revision as of 22:18, 1 August 2024
| Tony Eng | |
| | |
| Born | Anthony Wayne Eng May of 1946 Sidney, BC, Canada |
|---|---|
| Died | May 4, 2008 (age 61) Victoria, BC, Canada |
| Nationality | Canadian |
Tony Eng (b.1946-d.2008), a self-taught conjurer, toured across the United States and Canada for over forty years.
Biography
His father, an emigrant from China, would start a family restaurant in Sidney, British Columbia. After getting a set of cups and balls on his eighteenth birthday, we would do tricks at his family's Beacon Cafe. He was a stage performer, a close-up magician and the proprietor of a magic emporium in downtown Victoria in Canada. Later, his work as a bartender allowed him to perfect his close-up magic.
In 1980, he started performing at the Japanese Village Restaurant on Broughton Street in Victoria during Sunday dinner service, a gig that lasted 20 years.
He purchased of a novelties store and renamed it "Tony's Trick and Joke Shop". He sold the shop in 2005, but continued to perform.[1]
Eng served as president of the Pacific Coast Association of Magicians in 2006 when the conferences was held in Victoria.
His daughter Julie Eng, a Toronto magician, carries on the magic tradition.
References