Apollo Robbins: profile of a pickpocket

The New Yorker's profile of Apollo Robbins is one of the most interesting things I've read all year (ha). Robbins is a self-trained virtuoso pickpocket who once managed to lift a pen out of Penn Jillette's pocket, steal the ink cartridge, and return the pen, all while he was demurely insisting to Jillette that he wasn't really comfortable performing in front of magicians.

Josh grew increasingly befuddled, as Robbins continued to make the coin vanish and reappear—on his shoulder, in his pocket, under his watchband. In the middle of this, Robbins started stealing Josh's stuff. Josh's watch seemed to melt off his wrist, and Robbins held it up behind his back for everyone to see. Then he took Josh's wallet, his sunglasses, and his phone. Robbins dances around his victims, gently guiding them into place, floating in and out of their personal space. By the time they comprehend what has happened, Robbins is waiting with a look that says, "I understand what you must be feeling." Robbins's simplest improvisations have the dreamlike quality of a casual encounter gone subtly awry. He struck up a conversation with a young man, who told him, "We're going to Penn and Teller after this."

"Oh, then you'll probably want these," Robbins said, handing over a pair of tickets that had recently been in the young man's wallet.

When Robbins hits his stride, it starts to seem as if the only possible explanation is an ability to start and stop time. At the Rio, a man's cell phone disappeared from his jacket and was replaced by a piece of fried chicken; the cigarettes from a pack in one man's breast pocket materialized loose in the side pocket of another; a woman's engagement ring vanished and reappeared attached to a key ring in her husband's pants; a man's driver's license disappeared from his wallet and turned up inside a sealed bag of M&M's in his wife's purse.

After the performance, Robbins and I had dinner at the bar. "A lot of magic is designed to appeal to people visually, but what I'm trying to affect is their minds, their moods, their perceptions," he told me. "My goal isn't to hurt them or to bewilder them with a puzzle but to challenge their maps of reality."

My fascination with the profile doesn't just come from the recounting of Robbins's many impressive deeds (though they are impressive, and if I ever had cause to book a magician for a gig, he'd be it), but also the struggle that Robbins has had in coming up with ways to maximize his prodigious talent.

Reading further down, I noticed that Apollo Robbins collaborated with neuroscientists on a book called Sleights of Mind: What the Neuroscience of Magic Reveals About Our Everyday Deceptions, which I've ordered. I was also unsurprised to learn that Robbins had consulted on the late, lamented caper-show Leverage, which explains quite a lot about why that show was so good.


A Pickpocket's Tale [Adam Green/The New Yorker]

(via Making Light)