THE MERLIN AWARD

 

The Merlin Award to magic is what the Oscar is to the movies, what the Emmy is for television, and what the Tony is for theater.

 

Some of the winners of the Merlin Award are:

 

Harry Blackstone

Doug Henning

Channing Pollack

Siegfried & Roy

Penn & Teller

David Copperfield

Criss Angel

Shin Lim

Lu Chen

Luis de Matos

There are three ways a magician can receive the Merlin Award. One is to attend our Merlin Award banquet dinner; this is by invitation only, after the recipient was voted to receive the Merlin Award.

 

Two is to participate and win a Merlin Award competition in different countries, which is organized by IMS with the event and convention organizers.

 

And three is for us to travel to the magician’s country and present the Merlin Award to them in their own country.

 

The Merlin Award is presented to those magicians who have achieved the highest level in their craft, both on the national and international stage.

 

The criteria that the voting members consider are talent, showmanship, originality, skills, and above all the rare ability to entertain under any conditions.

 

The Merlin Award statue was commissioned to over 100 art students nationwide. The winning design was carved and created in 1968 by young New York University art student Carol Michaud.

 

The IMS reserves the right to change the award presentation dates at its discretion.

 

For more information on the Merlin Award, click here.

 

 

Merlin Award Recipients

 

The Merlin Award to magic is what the Oscar is for movies.

Merlin Award Recipients

David Copperfield

Harry Blackstone Jr.

Shimada

Sylvan

Johnny Thompson

Joe Labero

Juliana Chen
Sergey Tsymbalist

Don Wayne

Kevin James

Joseph Gabriel

Brett Daniels

Harry Lorayne

Darren Romeo

James Dimmare

Gary Darwin

Steve Wyrick

Rocco

Jeff McBride

Peter Reveen

Bernie Yuman

Harry Lorayne

Deddy Corbuzier

Gregory Gleason

Shin Lim

Chip Lowell

Steve Dacri

The Hamners

The Majestix

Nathan Burton

Gerry McCambridge

Keith Barry

Dixie Dooley

Nicholas Liotatis

Robin Channing

Antonio Casanova

Lee Alex

Bob Chua

Scarlett

Cahyo

Tora

Oli

Raymond Iong

Richard Yuh

Fukai

Mamada

Bone Ho

Jeff Lee

Jorinn Chee

Vincent Tan

Louis Yan

Sir Lawrence Khong

Lady Priscilla Khong

Neophytos Charalambides

Stephane Vanel

Wilson Lai

Robert Sode

Dr. Victor

Douglas Lefrovich

Niels Duinker

Mahdi Moammer "Moudini"

Cosentino

Sergey Savka

Dr. Chandran

Mrs. Chandran

Alvin Terrence

Uriy Monchak

Sasa Gerber

Veronique Ross

Michael Late

Tombeck

Magic Hunt

Victor Choi Kit Fai

Chaow

Michele D'Auria

Tiziano Cellai

Dato Steven Harold Day

Christian Ford

Steve Wheeler

Victor Voitko

Dmitry Mosin

George Zakris

Madiyar Almas

Yuryi Sergienko

Anatoly Katanski

Vasily Rudenko

Guojing Hou

Huijing Hou

Jeni Xiujing Hou

Siegfried & Roy

Doug Henning

Andre Kole

Tabary

Sorcar

Franz Harary

Peter Marvey

Luis de Matos

Marshall Brodien

Stan Allen

Max Maven

William MacIlhany

Joe Stevens

David Mendoza

Simon Lovell

Bill Malone

Kozak

Charles Reynolds

Stephen Zadrick

Gary Ouellet

Gay Blackstone

Lu Chen

Melinda Saxe

Asi Wind

Rene Lavand

Mahka Tendo

The Fercos Brothers

Timothy Trust

Joshua Jay

Xavier Giro

Murray

Sos & Victora

Joaquin Ayala

Florian Zimmer

Will Tsai

Ed Alonzo

Boris Wild

Jean Pierre Kraft

Paul Osborne

Jason Byrne

Sonny Fontana

Kirby VanBurch

Lyn Dillies

Ernesto Planas

Fairy Star

Antonio Restivo

Cris Castro

Brad Ross

Aref Ghafouri

Gino, The Magic Pharoah

Peter Valance

Rizuki

Eddy Au

Ilkay Ozdemir

Khan Showkat

Alexander One

Gelvinn Chee

Melkinn Chee

Raykinn Chee

Samala Venue

Samraj

Akshaya

Jen Kramer

John Caluwaert

Wail Al Hunaidi

Josh Knotts

Joseph Sheik

Peter Eggink

Tom Thomson

Palmas Nguyen

Nguyen Ngoc Minh Quang

Abdullateef Hamad Alsaleh

Magus

Raymond Iong Tat Chi

Will Tsai

Walter Di Francesco

Martin Brock

Paul Fidler

Rudy Christl

Enigma

Alexandra Carolina Ledezma Bastidas

Kyle Marlett

Alexx Alexxander

Marco Miele

Belinsky Alexey Alekseevich
Khan Showkat

Chi-Ling Liu

Yun Yun Liu

NX Theater

Yan Zhuang

Penn & Teller

Criss Angel

Channing Pollock

Paul Daniels

Jeff McBride

Kirby VanBurch

Jorgos

Nathan Burton

Jay Marshall

Kenneth Feld

Juan Mayoral

Ha Sung Chung

Tony Clark

Jonathan David Bass

Devlin

Tom Mullica

Tony Spina

Michael V. Lewis

Brett Leonard

Jimmy Kikuchi

Dirk Losander

David & Dania

Jade

Eric Buss

Terry Evanswood

Jim Barber

Jan Rouven

Christian Farla

Ken Klosterman

John Taylor

Rob Lake

Arian Black

Fielding West

Pat Fallon

Stoil & Ekaterina

Selim Basarir

Kubilay Tuncer

Sos Petrosyan Jr.

J.C. Sum

Magic Babe Ning

Kevin & Cindy Spencer

Allen Ravine

Throwdini

David Koenig

Tony Laffan

Tse Tow Joon Yeen

Liong Ket Foei

Leow Fee Loong

Ali Raj

Afzaal Afridi

David Gonzalez Flores

Hernan Gonzalez Flores

Doug Edwards

Torkova

Paul Draper

Ji Hye Jun

Hugo

Imagine

Fusion

Vlad Kryvonogov

Astor

Moustapha Berjaoui

J.C. Sum

Magic Babe Ning

Tommy Wind

Christian Diamond

Jack Monshouwer

Rheza Elfuego

Alexx Alexander

Matt Hollywood

Subhash Bhaskar Dagadkhair

Pambudi Sunarsihanto

Nguyen Phuong

Vikneswaran Allagu

Huy Nguyen

Brian Role & Lola Palmer

David Gatti

Luca Volpe

Stefano Cavanna

Renato Cotini

Ben Blaque

Dato Seri Dr. Liew Lee

Ali Baba - Ngo Duc Duy

Vladimir Rundnev

Louis von Eckstein

Kai Udo Hildenbrand

Garry Carson

Janine Carson

Daniel Craven

Up until 2010, the Merlin Award has been a recognition award. In 2010, we presented the Merlin Award both as a recognition award and as a competition award. And we also presented the decade Merlin Awards. 2010 has been the most challenging year for IMS, as well as the most exciting.

 

For the complete list of 2010 Merlin Awards, click here.

 

For the complete list of 2011 Merlin Awards, click here.

 

Back To Main Site

 

Click here to learn about the Merlin Award.

 

 

MERLIN AWARD FAQ

 

Hi. I’m Tony Hassini, Chairman/CEO of the International Magicians Society.

 

I got into magic when I was 16 years old. I founded the International Magicians Society in 1968 with the purpose of promoting and preserving the art of magic. In the same year, we created the Merlin Award to reward the magicians for their hard work and dedication to the art of magic.

 

I have devoted my entire life to promote IMS and the Merlin Award.

 

The Merlin Award was designed to promote the magic and the magician to the general public. A good example of this is Siegfried & Roy using their Merlin Award win on their billboards all over Las Vegas, as well as the marquee billboard on The Mirage Hotel & Casino. David Copperfield uses his Merlin Award in his live shows; before his shows begin, a large projection shows his awards and in large letters, “Magician of The Century, by the International Magicians Society“ is shown over and over again. And Criss Angel uses it quite often in his TV shows, his live show at The Luxor, and his magic set.

 

Also, the Merlin Award is designed to help magicians to negotiate for their next contract, which quite often becomes a good negotiation tool.

 

Recently, we presented the Merlin Award to Tse Tow Joon Yeen for Best Close-Up Magician In Brunei. The event was covered by radio, television, and all of the newspapers in Brunei. In fact, the Merlin Award made the front page of Brunei’s leading newspaper with the Sultan of Brunei.

 

When the Chairman/CEO of IMS travels the distance to go to a country to present the Merlin Award to a magician of that country, their media takes interest. This creates good PR for the recipient magician, as well as magicians in general.

 

Sometimes, I am asked why don’t we publish the year and category for each magician’s Merlin Award on our website. The fact is that when the magician receives his award during that year, we publish the category and announce it at our press conferences. Thereafter, it did not serve a purpose to publish the category or the year on our website. Because some categories might sound more glorious than others, there’s no point of hyping or diminishing anyone’s award or the year they received it. And there’s no point in dating their awards either. The bottom line is everyone who received the Merlin Award is a Merlin Award Recipient and is entitled to enjoy the glory for the rest of their life without dating or categorizing it.

 

I’m also asked how many Merlin Awards do we present per year. Since we are an international organization and have IMS Presidents in different countries, we try to consider as many countries and their magicians.

 

There are over 200 countries in the world. It will be humanly impossible to present 200 awards a year. Therefore, we try to narrow it down to approximately 30 countries and their magicians per year. Sometimes, there might be two or three magicians from each country.

 

We also presented duplicate categories in different countries. For example, there might be a Best Close-Up Magician In India, Best Close-Up Magician In China, and Best Close-Up Magician In Thailand. However, there is only one Magician of The Year, Illusionist of The Year, Mentalist of The Year, and Most Original Magician of The Year within any given year throughout the world.

 

I’m also asked how do we consider a nominee for the Merlin Award? A magician must send to the IMS World Headquarters a videotape or DVD of his complete act for our Board of Directors to consider. (No promo DVD’s or online videos are accepted.)

 

The other question I am asked is “Are there any costs to receive the Merlin Award?” First, I must say that the Merlin Award is not for sale at any cost.

 

Regarding the actual out-of-pocket cost, this varies from situation to situation.

 

There are three ways a magician can receive the Merlin Award. One is to attend our Merlin Award banquet dinner; this is by invitation only, after the recipient was voted to receive the Merlin Award.

 

Two is to participate and win a Merlin Award competition in different countries, which is organized by IMS with the event and convention organizers.

 

And three is for us to travel to the magician’s country and present the Merlin Award to them in their own country.

 

So let’s look at the cost of the first scenario, which is where the magician must obtain a visa from the American embassy to travel to the USA. He must purchase airline tickets, other travel related costs and fees, hotels, meals, and $500 US dollars per plate at the Merlin Award banquet dinner.

 

In the second scenario, again the magician must travel to the event where the Merlin Award competition is taking place. He pays all of the same travel expenses as mentioned in the first scenario and pays for the entrance fee to the convention or to the competition, whichever applies.

 

In the third scenario, where we have to travel from the USA to the magician’s country, either the magician or the magician’s producer pays for all of the travel expenses, hotels, meals, airlines, and other related expenses.

 

Within any of these three scenarios, it’s always a trade when it comes to the cost.

 

Within any of the three scenarios, our main focus is to generate as much PR as possible with the general public. A good example of this is when we were going to present the Merlin Award to Louis Yan in Hong Kong, we could have presented the award to him in our Hong Kong IMS office. Or we could have had our IMS members meet at a nice Chinese restaurant and present the award to him there. Then we came up with an idea. We approached one of the largest shopping malls in Hong Kong. Not only did they build a custom stage and provided enough seating for the audience, they also provided guards for crowd control. The mall management, with their media contacts, were able to invite newspapers, radio, and television to cover the event. Both the mall and Louis Yan received tremendous PR and public awareness.

 

My father used to say "If you want to sell lemonade, go where the crowds are." If the crowds are at the mall, by all means, we're going to the mall. If the crowds are at the ball game, then let's go to the ball game. As a matter of fact, in 1976, I created the Marvelous Magical Burger King character for Burger King Corporation. The following years, we took the Burger King character to the largest sporting events across the USA. He performed a baseball bat levitation in Yankee Stadium to 55,000 people in attendance, surrounded 360 degrees. We repeated this with other ball parks, as well as basketball games, where the Marvelous Magical Burger King will stake basketballs and levitate a girl on top of them to very large surrounded gatherings.

 

Here are pictures of the Marvelous Magical Burger King's performances at ball games during half time, click here.

 

Anyhow, getting back to the Merlin Award, I am toying with an idea to present the Merlin Award to a very prestigious magician during the Super Bowl at half time and build Merlin Award statues as big as trojan horses to get he message across.

 

The Merlin Award is not only presented to the magicians, we presented the award to other individuals who helped create and shape magic and magicians. This includes illusion designers and builders, magic producers/directors, magic convention organizers, and performers who create a magical experience for their audience.

 

For the current 2010 Merlin Award recipients’ photos, CLICK HERE.

 

Until next time!

 

Magically yours,

 

Tony Hassini