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Stage hypnosis

Stage hypnosis is hypnosis performed in front of an audience for the purposes of entertainment, usually in a theater or club. A modern stage hypnosis performance typically delivers a comedic show rather than simply a demonstration to impress an audience with powers of persuasion. Apparent effects of amnesia, mood altering and hallucination may be demonstrated in a normal presentation. Stage hypnosis performances often encourage audience members to look further into the benefits of hypnotism.[1]

The causes of behavior exhibited by volunteers in stage hypnosis shows is an area of dispute. Some claim it illustrates altered states of consciousness (i.e., "hypnotic trance"). Others maintain that it can be explained by a combination of psychological factors observed in group settings such as disorientation, compliance, peer pressure, and ordinary suggestion. Some others allege that deception plays a part.

History

Stage hypnosis evolved out of much older shows conducted by mesmerists and other performers in the 18th and 19th centuries. Scottish surgeon James Braid developed his technique of hypnosis after witnessing a stage performance by the traveling Swiss magnetic demonstrator Charles Lafontaine (1803–1892) in November 1841.[2][3][4]

Braid was well aware of similar performances by "electro-biologists" in his day;[5] e.g., Braid published the contents of an advertising hand-bill for an "electro-biology" performance by a visiting American, George W. Stone,[6] on 12 March 1851, which, as well as clearly emphasizing that Stone was claiming to use volunteers from the audience, rather than his own stooges/assistants, details some of the phenomena that Stone's audience might have expected to have displayed to them.

Persons in a perfectly wakeful state, of well-known character and standing in society, who come forward voluntarily from among the audience, will be experimented upon. They will be deprived of the power of speech, hearing, sight. Their voluntary motions will be completely controlled, so that, they can neither rise up nor sit down, except at the will of the operator; their memory will be taken away, so that they will forget their own name and that of their most intimate friends; they will be made to stammer, and to feel pain in any part of their body at the option of the operator – a walking stick will be made to appear a snake, the taste of water will be changed to vinegar, honey, coffee, milk, brandy, wormwood, lemonade, etc., etc., etc. These extraordinary experiments are really and truly performed without the aid of trick, collusion, or deception, in the slightest possible degree.[7]

These are identical to many of the demonstrations which became central to subsequent "stage hypnosis", in fact it seems that little changes except the name and the introduction of the hypnotic induction, etc. Likewise, the novelist Mark Twain similarly recounts a mesmeric performance which clearly resembles 20th century stage hypnosis, in his autobiography.[citation needed]

The absence of any reference to "hypnotism" in these early performances, indeed before the term was coined, and the fact that they often lacked anything resembling a modern hypnotic induction is consistent with the skeptical view, that stage hypnosis is primarily the result of ordinary suggestion rather than hypnotic trance. Indeed, early performers often claimed that they were influencing their subjects by means of telepathy and other supernatural powers.[citation needed]

Others, however, were delivering performances that displayed the wide range of hypnotic manifestations to their audiences. In the United States, for example, in the 1890s, there was a small group of highly skilled stage hypnotists, all whom were managed by Thomas F. Adkin, who toured country-wide, playing to packed houses. Adkin's group included Sylvain A. Lee,[8] Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Flint,[9] and Professor Xenophon LaMotte Sage.[10]

20th century

Throughout the 20th century, despite adopting the term "hypnotism", stage hypnotists continued to explain their performances to audiences by reference to supernatural powers and animal magnetism. Ormond McGill, e.g., in his Encyclopedia of the subject wrote in 1996 that:

Some have called this powerful transmission of thought from one person to another "thought projection". The mental energy used appears to be of two types: magnetic energy ... generated within the body and telepathic energy generated within the mind. ... The two work together as a unit in applying Power Hypnosis. The operation of the two energies in combination is what Mesmer referred to as "animal magnetism".[11]

However, this is not what Braid meant by "hypnotism", a term coined in opposition to theories of mesmerism, to stress the fact that the results were due to ordinary psychological and physiological processes, such as suggestion and focused attention, rather than telepathy or animal magnetism. Indeed, after meeting with Mr. Stone, experimenting with his own subjects, and presenting his findings on such performances to the Royal Institution, Braid concludes,

There is, therefore, both positive and negative proof in favour of my mental and suggestive theory, and in opposition to the magnetic, occult, or electric theories of the Mesmerists and electro-biologists. My theory, moreover, has this additional recommendation, that it is level to our comprehension, and adequate to account for all which is demonstrably true, without offering any violence to reason and common sense, or being at variance with generally admitted physiological and psychological principles.[12]

Skepticism

 
Catalepsy: "the human bridge".

Mesmeric and other stage performances changed their names to "stage hypnotist" in the 19th century. They had originally claimed to produce the same effects by means of telepathy and animal magnetism, and only later began to explain their shows in terms of hypnotic trance and suggestion. Hence, many of the precursors of stage hypnosis did not employ hypnotic induction techniques. Moreover, several modern stage performers[who?] have themselves published criticisms which suggest that stage hypnosis is largely the result of sleight of hand, ordinary suggestion, and social compliance, etc., rather than hypnotic trance.[citation needed] Most notably, the well-known American magician and performer, Kreskin, has frequently carried out typical stage hypnosis demonstrations without using any hypnotic induction. After working as a stage hypnotist and magician for nearly two decades, Kreskin became a skeptic and a whistleblower from within the stage hypnosis field.

For nineteen years I had believed in ... the sleeplike "hypnotic trance," practicing it constantly. Though I had nagging doubts at times, I wanted to believe in it. There was an overpowering mystique about putting someone to sleep, something that set me and all other "hypnotists" apart. We were marvellous Svengalis or Dr. Mesmers, engaged in a supernatural practice of sorts. Then it all collapsed. For me anyway.[13]

After experimenting with his own subjects for several years until he was satisfied he could perform "stage hypnosis" without any hypnotic induction or trance, he concluded, "The battle of semantics may be waged for years, but I firmly believe that what is termed 'hypnosis' is, again, a completely normal, not abnormal, response to simple suggestion."[citation needed] An outspoken skeptic regarding stage hypnosis, Kreskin not only actively debunked stage hypnotists' claims, but went so far as to offer a substantial monetary reward, $25,000, to anyone who could prove the existence of hypnotic trance. The reward has been unsuccessfully challenged three times.[14] While debunking the "sleep-trance" concept, Kreskin, like other skeptics adopting the nonstate position, was keen to emphasize that he felt the value of hypnotic suggestion had been frequently underestimated.

Role of deception

Due to stage hypnotists' showmanship, many people believe that hypnosis is a form of mind control. However, the effects of stage hypnosis are probably due to a combination of relatively ordinary social psychological factors such as peer pressure, social compliance, participant selection, ordinary suggestibility, and some amount of physical manipulation, stagecraft, and trickery.[15] The desire to be the center of attention, having an excuse to violate their own inner fear suppressors and the pressure to please are thought to convince subjects to "play along".[16][page needed] Books written by stage hypnotists sometimes explicitly describe the use of deception in their acts. For example, Ormond McGill's New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnosis describes an entire "fake hypnosis" act which depends upon the use of private whispers throughout:

[The hypnotist whispers off-microphone:] "We are going to have some good laughs on the audience and fool them ... so when I tell you to do some funny things, do exactly as I secretly tell you. Okay? Swell." (Then deliberately wink at the spectator in a friendly fashion.)[17]

According to experts such as Theodore X. Barber and André Muller Weitzenhoffer, stage hypnosis traditionally employs three fundamental strategies:

  1. Participant compliance. Participants on stage tend to be compliant because of the social pressure felt in the situation constructed on stage, before an expectant audience.
  2. Participant selection. Preliminary suggestion tests, such as asking the audience to clasp their hands and suggesting they cannot be separated, are usually used to select out the most suggestible and socially compliant subjects from the audience. By asking for volunteers to mount the stage, the performer also tends to select the most extroverted members of the audience.
  3. Deception of the audience. Stage hypnotists are performers who traditionally, but not always, employ a variety of "sleight of hand" strategies to mislead their audience for dramatic effect.[citation needed]

The strategies of deception employed in traditional stage hypnosis can be categorized as follows:

  1. Off-microphone whispers. The hypnotist lowers their microphone and whispers secret instructions to the participant on stage, outside the audience's hearing. These may involve requests to "play along" or fake hypnotic responses.[18]
  2. Failure to challenge. The stage hypnotist pretends to challenge subjects to defy a suggestion, for example, "You cannot stand up out of your chair because your backside is stuck down with glue." However, no specific cue is given to the participants to begin their effort ("Start trying now!"). This creates the illusion that a specific challenge has been issued and effort made to defy it.[18]
  3. Fake hypnosis tricks. Stage hypnosis literature contains a large repertoire of sleight of hand tricks, of the kind used by professional illusionists. None of these tricks requires any hypnosis or suggestion, but depend purely on physical manipulation and audience deception. The most famous example of this type is the "human plank" trick, which involves making a subject's body become rigid (cataleptic) and suspending them horizontally between two chairs, at which point the hypnotist will often stand upon their chest for dramatic effect. This has nothing to do with hypnosis, but simply depends on the fact that when subjects are positioned in the correct way they can support more weight than the audience tends to assume.[18]
  4. Stooges. Several experts, including Kreskin, have stated that stage hypnotists have been known to make use of stooges (also called horses) who travel from show to show. A stage hypnotist may only require a single stooge because by using them first for each demonstration real subjects from the audience will tend to follow their lead and imitate their responses. Moreover, for the climax of the show, the hypnotist will often focus on one or two subjects to demonstrate more difficult and dramatic responses involving apparent hallucinatory experiences. A single stooge can be used for this purpose.[19][20]

Weitzenhoffer writes:

Having not only had a chance to watch famous stage hypnotists of the 1940s and 50s such as [Ralph] Slater[21] and Polgar at work but having also had a chance to have fairly extensive personal contact with other stage hypnotists, I believe I can throw some light upon the situation. To begin with, one should be aware that many stage hypnotists use stooges or plants.[20]

On the other hand, those who argue for a substantial "state" of hypnosis cite clinical claims (not actually evidenced in any case of stage performance, one hopes) such as the following:

"... editorial implying most subjects have no will or interest in not following the suggestion of the hypnotist, conveniently omit the primary interest in hypnotism came in the early 1800s before ether and morphine were widely available. Thousands of extremely painful operations were performed through the use of hypnosis. Patients awoke without memory of the surgery and even healed much faster than those who endured the extreme pain without hypnosis. Sigmund Freud was directly responsible for removing hypnosis from psychotherapy because of so many reports that patients also had intuitions about conditions of patients they had never met while in the trance state."[citation needed]

Such arguments originate in the work of James Esdaile at a medical mission in India, recounted in his book of 1847. This was before the concept of "hypnotism" (only recently promoted by Braid in 1843) had spread and Esdailes's work was still referred to as "Mesmerism". Whilst Esdaile claimed his patients felt no pain observers on behalf of an independent commission of inquiry for the Bengal government reported scenes of those undergoing such operations writhing in agony. Regarding more recent claims of painless surgery, Barber, among others, has pointed out that detail in accounts of such surgery admit that patients are, even though not unconscious, rendered stuporous by cocktails of anxiolytics. Moreover, the proportion of patients capable of undergoing such procedures (attaining sufficiently "deep" "hypnosis") is as small as the percentage of the population who are capable of undergoing surgery with neither chemical nor hypnotic assistance, inviting the suspicion that these groups of "special" patients overlap. Moreover, Barber also points out that invariably, cases of hypnotic surgery do use local anaesthetic at the area of incision, whilst internal organs are not capable of registering pain in response to a skilled cut rendering many such operations feasible without general anaesthetic, the role of hypnotic influence being essentially at an emotional or anxiolytic level. Furthermore, far from there being "thousands" of such cases of hypno-anaesthesia in surgery it remains sufficiently rare as to warrant the attention of news reports when it occurs. As rare, indeed, as the exceptional individuals able to undergo such surgery.[citation needed]

However, none of the foregoing debate about hypnotic procedures in a clinical setting has any bearing upon stage hypnosis.[citation needed]

Role of hypnotist and subject

Hypnotist

 
A stage hypnotist and his subjects

Due to stage hypnotists' showmanship and their perpetuating the illusion of possessing mysterious abilities, the appearance of a trance state is often interpreted as an "effect" of the hypnotist's "power". The real power of stage hypnosis comes from the trust the "hypnotist" can instill in their subjects. Subjects have to cooperate and be willing to follow instructions and the hypnotist will employ several tests to choose the best subjects. Some people are very trusting, or even looking for an excuse to abdicate their responsibilities and are apparently able to be "hypnotized" within seconds, while others take more time to counter their fears.[citation needed]

Suggestion is very powerful and a good hypnotist will know how to deliver suggestions that can create better entertainment for the audience. In his book Deeper and Deeper by Jonathan Chase,[22] he talks about delivering suggestion, more importantly, The Super Suggestion a phrase he coined in his first published book in 1999:

"From this moment everything I say to you. Every single thing I say, no matter how silly or stupid it seems will instantly become your reality. Everything I say will instantly become your reality."[citation needed]

He emphasizes the use of repetition but warns that when they have accepted the suggestion then everything that the hypnotist says to them after this point will become an irresistible suggestion.[citation needed]

Historically, stage hypnotists often made claims for hypnotically induced enhancements to volunteer abilities beyond normal limits. One instance is "The Human Bridge," in which a hypnotized subject is supposedly put in a state of catalepsy and placed as a "bridge" between two chairs. The stunt looks impressive: however, as hypnotist Andrew Newton puts it: "Any reasonably strong adult can do this stunt without being hypnotized at all."[23]

Subjects

In a stage hypnosis situation the "hypnotist" chooses their participants carefully. First they give the entire audience a few exercises to perform and plant ideas in their minds, such as

  • only intelligent people can be hypnotized
  • only those who are open-minded to being hypnotized and willing to participate.[citation needed]

It has been alleged[by whom?] that these suggestions are designed to overcome the natural fear of trusting a stranger with the greater fear of becoming an object of ridicule as one who is unintelligent, unsociable, and joyless.

Out of the crowd the hypnotist will spot people who appear trusting, extroverted and willing to put on a show. The hypnotist starts them off by having them imagine ordinary situations that they have likely encountered, like being cold or hot, hungry or thirsty then gradually builds to giving them a suggestion to do something that is totally out of character, such as tap dancing, singing like Elvis, clucking like a chicken or forgetting a number.[citation needed]

The desire to be the center of attention, having an excuse to violate their own inner fear suppressors and the pressure to please, plus the expectation of the audience wanting them to provide some entertainment is usually enough to persuade some people to do almost anything. In other words, the participants are persuaded to 'play along'. Yet, whilst this accounts for some situations, it does not accord with those where hecklers, uncooperative audiences and those who wish to "disprove" the hypnotist create a set of negative expectations, uncooperative atmosphere and opposition which the performer must use skill to overcome.[citation needed]

Law

In some countries, there are laws and guidelines regarding stage hypnosis.

In the UK, the Hypnotism Act 1952 governs the use of hypnosis in public. The original Act was amended in 1976 and again in 2003.[24] In 1996 the government released "model conditions" which were refined and revised after consultation with FESH and with medical and academic psychologists. Note that these have no legal force: they are suggested conditions which local authorities may or may not feel appropriate to impose or modify when regulating hypnosis.[25] If stage hypnosis is performed at a public venue a permit (permission) must be acquired from the local authority and the local authority is advised to monitor the performance to ensure that all guidelines are followed. It is illegal to hold any form of stage hypnosis in a public venue (amongst other venues) unless the local authority has issued their consent for this.[citation needed]

In the accompanying circular announcing the revised model conditions in 1996[26] it was conceded that, as asserted by skeptical stage hypnotist Alex Tsander[citation needed] during the consultation process:

"In practice volunteers do not react as if they truly believe that there is, for example, a giant spider behind them or a bomb under their chair."[27]

This was a critical point of distinction and represents a formal recognition of the "as if" nature of behavior in stage hypnotism in contradistinction to claims for its supposed subjective reality.

In the past, stage hypnosis has been banned in several countries in the world including Denmark and some states in the United States. Most of these countries have revoked these laws or do not enforce them.[citation needed] In Israel, it remains illegal to perform any kind of hypnosis without a license given to doctors, dentists and psychologists.[citation needed] In Belgium, stage hypnosis has been forbidden since 1892;[28] the law was mentioned in 2017 to force the cancellation of a spectacle by messmer.[29]

References

  1. ^ Lennis G. Echterling & Jonathon Whalen (1995). "Stage hypnosis and public lecture effects on attitudes and beliefs regarding hypnosis". American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis. 38 (1): 13–21. doi:10.1080/00029157.1995.10403173. PMID 8533735.
  2. ^ "Magnetic demonstrator" – Gauld's term (Gauld, 1992, p. 204) – accurately describes Lafontaine; because whilst he was in the UK, he only demonstrated "magnetic" phenomena; he never used it to treat anyone at any time (in public or private).
  3. ^ Braid always maintained that he had gone to Lafontaine's demonstration as an open-minded sceptic, eager to examine the evidence and, then, form a considered opinion of Lafontaine's work. He was neither a closed-minded cynic intent on destroying Lafontaine, nor a deluded and naïvely credulous believer seeking authorisation of his already formed belief (Neurypnology (1843), p. 2.
  4. ^ For an extended account of the interactions between Braid and Lafontaine, see Yeates (2013), pp. 103–308 passim.
  5. ^ "Electrobiology: A mode of inducing hypnotism by having the subject look steadily at metallic disks. The process originated about the middle of the nineteenth century, and its fame was spread by numerous lecturers in England and the United States.", Melton, J.G. [2001] (ed), Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology (Fifth Edition), in Two Volumes, Volume 1 (A–L), Thomson Gale, (Farmington Hills), 2001, p. 489.
  6. ^ Stone was the compiler and editor of The Philosophy of Electro-Biology, or Electrical Psychology, in a Course of Nine Lectures, Delivered by J. B. Dods, before the United States Senate, at Washington, in 1850, etc. Stone was also involved, for a time, in the active promotion the medium, Maria Basheba Hayden (1826–1883), the wife of his close friend, William Richardson Hayden, M.D. (1820–1903), journalist, and editor of The Boston Atlas, and a monthly newsletter called The Star Spangled Banner. Maria Hayden, who graduated M.D. in 1865, also assisted Augustus De Morgan in his paranormal investigations.
  7. ^ Braid's quote is at p. 512 of Braid, J., "Electro-Biological Phenomena Physiologically and Psychologically Considered, by James Braid, M.R.C.S. Edinburgh, &c. &c. (Lecture delivered at the Royal Institution, Manchester, March 26, 1851)", The Monthly Journal of Medical Science, Vol. 12, (June 1851), pp. 511–530.
  8. ^ Author of The Practice of Hypnotic Suggestion (1901). One of his specialties was hypnotising per medium of the telephone; poster at [1] [2]
  9. ^ Herbert L. Flint was the author of Flint's lessons in hypnotism; a comprehensive work on scientific suggestion as applied in hypnotism, mesmerism, personal magnetism, magnetic healing, psycho-therapeutics, suggestive therapeutics and similar manefestations of mental development and control (1915); poster at [3]
  10. ^ Author of Hypnotism as It Is: a Book for Everybody (1897). Xenophon LaMotte Sage was the stage name of E. Virgil Neal; see Conroy, (2009), passim, especially pp. 27–40.
  11. ^ Ormond McGill, The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnosis, 1996: 24
  12. ^ Braid, J. (1851). Electro-Biological Phenomena, etc., p. 530.
  13. ^ Kreskin, The Amazing World of Kreskin, 1973: 143.
  14. ^ Kreskin, The Amazing World of Kreskin, 1973: 152
  15. ^ Yapko, Michael (1990). Trancework: An introduction to the practice of Clinical Hypnosis. New York, New York: Brunner/Mazel. p. 28.
  16. ^ Wagstaff, Graham F. (1981) Hypnosis, Compliance and Belief, St. Martin's Press, New York. ISBN 0-312-40157-4
  17. ^ McGill, Ormond. (1996) The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnosis, p. 506.
  18. ^ a b c Barber, Spanos & Chaves. Hypnotism: Imagination & Human Potentialities (1974), p. 105.
  19. ^ Kreskin. The Amazing World of Kreskin (1973), p. 149.
  20. ^ a b Weitznehoffer, Andre. The Practice of Hypnotism (2000), p. 400.
  21. ^ Real name Joseph Bolsky (see [4] ("Dr. Wilbur" is Cornelia B. Wilbur), and [5]).
  22. ^ Chase, Jonathan (2005) Deeper and Deeper the secrets of stage hypnosis, p. 101
  23. ^ . www.newtonhypnosis.com. Archived from the original on 2014-08-25.
  24. ^ "Changes to Legislation".
  25. ^ "Hypnosis & the Law".
  26. ^ Dipple, D. 1996. UK Home Office circular No39/1996
  27. ^ Dipple, 1996, p. 6, sub-section "Previous Section 3(I)(Vi).
  28. ^ Loi sur l'hypnotisme, 30 mai 1892, article 1.
  29. ^ Agence Belga, Le spectacle de Messmer annulé à Colfontaine car l’hypnose en spectacle est illégal selon la loi, La Libre Belgique (14 novembre 2017)

Further reading

  • Braid, J., Neurypnology or the Rationale of Nervous Sleep Considered in Relation with Animal Magnetism Illustrated by Numerous Cases of its Successful Application in the Relief and Cure of Disease, John Churchill, (London), 1843.
    • N.B. Braid's Errata, detailing a number of important corrections that need to be made to the foregoing text, is on the un-numbered page following p. 265.
  • Brandon, Joan, "Successful Hypnotism" Stravon Publishers (1956) ASIN B000JD0XS2
  • Brandon, Joan,"The Art of Hypnotism" Fawcett How-To Book. Publisher: Fawcett Publications, Inc., 1956
  • Brandon, Joan, "Science Of Self-Hypnosis" Publisher: Joan Brandon, Brandon Enterprises, 1959
  • Emery, Carla (1998). "Secret, Don't Tell: The Encyclopedia of Hypnotism". Acorn Hill Publishing. ISBN 978-0965993036
  • Conroy, M.S., The Cosmetics Baron You've Never Heard Of: E. Virgil Neal and Tokalon (Second, Revised Edition), Altus History LLC, (Englewood), 2012. ISBN 0-9826314-7-2 [6]
  • Edwards, K.E., www.hypnosiscomedyshow.com, "hiring professional hypnotists"
  • Crawford, H.J., Kitner-Triolo, M., Clarke, S.W. & Olesko, B., "Transient Positive and Negative Experiences Accompanying Stage Hypnosis", Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Vol.101, No.4, (November 1992), pp. 663–667.
  • Echterling, L.G. & Emmerling, D.A., "Impact of Stage Hypnosis", American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, Vol. 29, No. 3, (January 1987), pp. 149–154. [plus editorial comment, see Mott, T., pp. 147–148.]
  • Gauld, A., A History of Hypnotism, Cambridge University Press, 1992.[7]
  • Harling I.G., Nyrup M.A., "Mischief – Radical Hypnosis & Mind-Control", Spellbound Books, 2010 ISBN 978-87-990481-2-0 – 'Mischief' is the author's previous books, 'Sleight of Mind' & 'Geist' in one title.
  • Heap, M., "The Alleged Dangers of Stage Hypnosis", Contemporary Hypnosis, Vol.17, No.3, (September 2000), pp. 117–126.
  • McGill, O., Professional Stage Hypnotism, Westwood Publishing Co., (Los Angeles), 1977.
  • McGill, O., The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism, Anglo American Book Company, (St. Clears), 1996.
  • Meeker, W.B. & Barber, T.X., "Toward An Explanation Of Stage Hypnosis", Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Vol. 77, No. 1, (1971), pp. 61–70.
  • Nadis, F., "Of Horses, Planks, and Window Sleepers: Stage Hypnotism Meets Reform, 1836–1920", Journal of Medical Humanities, Vol. 22, No. 3, (Fall 2001), pp. 223–245.
  • Yeates, L.B., James Braid: Surgeon, Gentleman Scientist, and Hypnotist, Ph.D. Dissertation, School of History and Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, January 2013.
  • Christopher Caress "Sleep Easy", An inside look into the world of Stage Hypnosis with a modern approach No. 1, 2011
  • Christopher Caress "Hypno Tricks", No. 1, 2010

stage, hypnosis, hypnosis, performed, front, audience, purposes, entertainment, usually, theater, club, modern, stage, hypnosis, performance, typically, delivers, comedic, show, rather, than, simply, demonstration, impress, audience, with, powers, persuasion, . Stage hypnosis is hypnosis performed in front of an audience for the purposes of entertainment usually in a theater or club A modern stage hypnosis performance typically delivers a comedic show rather than simply a demonstration to impress an audience with powers of persuasion Apparent effects of amnesia mood altering and hallucination may be demonstrated in a normal presentation Stage hypnosis performances often encourage audience members to look further into the benefits of hypnotism 1 The causes of behavior exhibited by volunteers in stage hypnosis shows is an area of dispute Some claim it illustrates altered states of consciousness i e hypnotic trance Others maintain that it can be explained by a combination of psychological factors observed in group settings such as disorientation compliance peer pressure and ordinary suggestion Some others allege that deception plays a part Contents 1 History 1 1 20th century 2 Skepticism 3 Role of deception 4 Role of hypnotist and subject 4 1 Hypnotist 4 2 Subjects 5 Law 6 References 7 Further readingHistory EditStage hypnosis evolved out of much older shows conducted by mesmerists and other performers in the 18th and 19th centuries Scottish surgeon James Braid developed his technique of hypnosis after witnessing a stage performance by the traveling Swiss magnetic demonstrator Charles Lafontaine 1803 1892 in November 1841 2 3 4 Braid was well aware of similar performances by electro biologists in his day 5 e g Braid published the contents of an advertising hand bill for an electro biology performance by a visiting American George W Stone 6 on 12 March 1851 which as well as clearly emphasizing that Stone was claiming to use volunteers from the audience rather than his own stooges assistants details some of the phenomena that Stone s audience might have expected to have displayed to them Persons in a perfectly wakeful state of well known character and standing in society who come forward voluntarily from among the audience will be experimented upon They will be deprived of the power of speech hearing sight Their voluntary motions will be completely controlled so that they can neither rise up nor sit down except at the will of the operator their memory will be taken away so that they will forget their own name and that of their most intimate friends they will be made to stammer and to feel pain in any part of their body at the option of the operator a walking stick will be made to appear a snake the taste of water will be changed to vinegar honey coffee milk brandy wormwood lemonade etc etc etc These extraordinary experiments are really and truly performed without the aid of trick collusion or deception in the slightest possible degree 7 These are identical to many of the demonstrations which became central to subsequent stage hypnosis in fact it seems that little changes except the name and the introduction of the hypnotic induction etc Likewise the novelist Mark Twain similarly recounts a mesmeric performance which clearly resembles 20th century stage hypnosis in his autobiography citation needed The absence of any reference to hypnotism in these early performances indeed before the term was coined and the fact that they often lacked anything resembling a modern hypnotic induction is consistent with the skeptical view that stage hypnosis is primarily the result of ordinary suggestion rather than hypnotic trance Indeed early performers often claimed that they were influencing their subjects by means of telepathy and other supernatural powers citation needed Others however were delivering performances that displayed the wide range of hypnotic manifestations to their audiences In the United States for example in the 1890s there was a small group of highly skilled stage hypnotists all whom were managed by Thomas F Adkin who toured country wide playing to packed houses Adkin s group included Sylvain A Lee 8 Mr and Mrs Herbert L Flint 9 and Professor Xenophon LaMotte Sage 10 20th century Edit Throughout the 20th century despite adopting the term hypnotism stage hypnotists continued to explain their performances to audiences by reference to supernatural powers and animal magnetism Ormond McGill e g in his Encyclopedia of the subject wrote in 1996 that Some have called this powerful transmission of thought from one person to another thought projection The mental energy used appears to be of two types magnetic energy generated within the body and telepathic energy generated within the mind The two work together as a unit in applying Power Hypnosis The operation of the two energies in combination is what Mesmer referred to as animal magnetism 11 However this is not what Braid meant by hypnotism a term coined in opposition to theories of mesmerism to stress the fact that the results were due to ordinary psychological and physiological processes such as suggestion and focused attention rather than telepathy or animal magnetism Indeed after meeting with Mr Stone experimenting with his own subjects and presenting his findings on such performances to the Royal Institution Braid concludes There is therefore both positive and negative proof in favour of my mental and suggestive theory and in opposition to the magnetic occult or electric theories of the Mesmerists and electro biologists My theory moreover has this additional recommendation that it is level to our comprehension and adequate to account for all which is demonstrably true without offering any violence to reason and common sense or being at variance with generally admitted physiological and psychological principles 12 Skepticism Edit Catalepsy the human bridge Mesmeric and other stage performances changed their names to stage hypnotist in the 19th century They had originally claimed to produce the same effects by means of telepathy and animal magnetism and only later began to explain their shows in terms of hypnotic trance and suggestion Hence many of the precursors of stage hypnosis did not employ hypnotic induction techniques Moreover several modern stage performers who have themselves published criticisms which suggest that stage hypnosis is largely the result of sleight of hand ordinary suggestion and social compliance etc rather than hypnotic trance citation needed Most notably the well known American magician and performer Kreskin has frequently carried out typical stage hypnosis demonstrations without using any hypnotic induction After working as a stage hypnotist and magician for nearly two decades Kreskin became a skeptic and a whistleblower from within the stage hypnosis field For nineteen years I had believed in the sleeplike hypnotic trance practicing it constantly Though I had nagging doubts at times I wanted to believe in it There was an overpowering mystique about putting someone to sleep something that set me and all other hypnotists apart We were marvellous Svengalis or Dr Mesmers engaged in a supernatural practice of sorts Then it all collapsed For me anyway 13 After experimenting with his own subjects for several years until he was satisfied he could perform stage hypnosis without any hypnotic induction or trance he concluded The battle of semantics may be waged for years but I firmly believe that what is termed hypnosis is again a completely normal not abnormal response to simple suggestion citation needed An outspoken skeptic regarding stage hypnosis Kreskin not only actively debunked stage hypnotists claims but went so far as to offer a substantial monetary reward 25 000 to anyone who could prove the existence of hypnotic trance The reward has been unsuccessfully challenged three times 14 While debunking the sleep trance concept Kreskin like other skeptics adopting the nonstate position was keen to emphasize that he felt the value of hypnotic suggestion had been frequently underestimated Role of deception EditDue to stage hypnotists showmanship many people believe that hypnosis is a form of mind control However the effects of stage hypnosis are probably due to a combination of relatively ordinary social psychological factors such as peer pressure social compliance participant selection ordinary suggestibility and some amount of physical manipulation stagecraft and trickery 15 The desire to be the center of attention having an excuse to violate their own inner fear suppressors and the pressure to please are thought to convince subjects to play along 16 page needed Books written by stage hypnotists sometimes explicitly describe the use of deception in their acts For example Ormond McGill s New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnosis describes an entire fake hypnosis act which depends upon the use of private whispers throughout The hypnotist whispers off microphone We are going to have some good laughs on the audience and fool them so when I tell you to do some funny things do exactly as I secretly tell you Okay Swell Then deliberately wink at the spectator in a friendly fashion 17 According to experts such as Theodore X Barber and Andre Muller Weitzenhoffer stage hypnosis traditionally employs three fundamental strategies Participant compliance Participants on stage tend to be compliant because of the social pressure felt in the situation constructed on stage before an expectant audience Participant selection Preliminary suggestion tests such as asking the audience to clasp their hands and suggesting they cannot be separated are usually used to select out the most suggestible and socially compliant subjects from the audience By asking for volunteers to mount the stage the performer also tends to select the most extroverted members of the audience Deception of the audience Stage hypnotists are performers who traditionally but not always employ a variety of sleight of hand strategies to mislead their audience for dramatic effect citation needed The strategies of deception employed in traditional stage hypnosis can be categorized as follows Off microphone whispers The hypnotist lowers their microphone and whispers secret instructions to the participant on stage outside the audience s hearing These may involve requests to play along or fake hypnotic responses 18 Failure to challenge The stage hypnotist pretends to challenge subjects to defy a suggestion for example You cannot stand up out of your chair because your backside is stuck down with glue However no specific cue is given to the participants to begin their effort Start trying now This creates the illusion that a specific challenge has been issued and effort made to defy it 18 Fake hypnosis tricks Stage hypnosis literature contains a large repertoire of sleight of hand tricks of the kind used by professional illusionists None of these tricks requires any hypnosis or suggestion but depend purely on physical manipulation and audience deception The most famous example of this type is the human plank trick which involves making a subject s body become rigid cataleptic and suspending them horizontally between two chairs at which point the hypnotist will often stand upon their chest for dramatic effect This has nothing to do with hypnosis but simply depends on the fact that when subjects are positioned in the correct way they can support more weight than the audience tends to assume 18 Stooges Several experts including Kreskin have stated that stage hypnotists have been known to make use of stooges also called horses who travel from show to show A stage hypnotist may only require a single stooge because by using them first for each demonstration real subjects from the audience will tend to follow their lead and imitate their responses Moreover for the climax of the show the hypnotist will often focus on one or two subjects to demonstrate more difficult and dramatic responses involving apparent hallucinatory experiences A single stooge can be used for this purpose 19 20 Weitzenhoffer writes Having not only had a chance to watch famous stage hypnotists of the 1940s and 50s such as Ralph Slater 21 and Polgar at work but having also had a chance to have fairly extensive personal contact with other stage hypnotists I believe I can throw some light upon the situation To begin with one should be aware that many stage hypnotists use stooges or plants 20 On the other hand those who argue for a substantial state of hypnosis cite clinical claims not actually evidenced in any case of stage performance one hopes such as the following editorial implying most subjects have no will or interest in not following the suggestion of the hypnotist conveniently omit the primary interest in hypnotism came in the early 1800s before ether and morphine were widely available Thousands of extremely painful operations were performed through the use of hypnosis Patients awoke without memory of the surgery and even healed much faster than those who endured the extreme pain without hypnosis Sigmund Freud was directly responsible for removing hypnosis from psychotherapy because of so many reports that patients also had intuitions about conditions of patients they had never met while in the trance state citation needed Such arguments originate in the work of James Esdaile at a medical mission in India recounted in his book of 1847 This was before the concept of hypnotism only recently promoted by Braid in 1843 had spread and Esdailes s work was still referred to as Mesmerism Whilst Esdaile claimed his patients felt no pain observers on behalf of an independent commission of inquiry for the Bengal government reported scenes of those undergoing such operations writhing in agony Regarding more recent claims of painless surgery Barber among others has pointed out that detail in accounts of such surgery admit that patients are even though not unconscious rendered stuporous by cocktails of anxiolytics Moreover the proportion of patients capable of undergoing such procedures attaining sufficiently deep hypnosis is as small as the percentage of the population who are capable of undergoing surgery with neither chemical nor hypnotic assistance inviting the suspicion that these groups of special patients overlap Moreover Barber also points out that invariably cases of hypnotic surgery do use local anaesthetic at the area of incision whilst internal organs are not capable of registering pain in response to a skilled cut rendering many such operations feasible without general anaesthetic the role of hypnotic influence being essentially at an emotional or anxiolytic level Furthermore far from there being thousands of such cases of hypno anaesthesia in surgery it remains sufficiently rare as to warrant the attention of news reports when it occurs As rare indeed as the exceptional individuals able to undergo such surgery citation needed However none of the foregoing debate about hypnotic procedures in a clinical setting has any bearing upon stage hypnosis citation needed Role of hypnotist and subject EditHypnotist Edit A stage hypnotist and his subjects Due to stage hypnotists showmanship and their perpetuating the illusion of possessing mysterious abilities the appearance of a trance state is often interpreted as an effect of the hypnotist s power The real power of stage hypnosis comes from the trust the hypnotist can instill in their subjects Subjects have to cooperate and be willing to follow instructions and the hypnotist will employ several tests to choose the best subjects Some people are very trusting or even looking for an excuse to abdicate their responsibilities and are apparently able to be hypnotized within seconds while others take more time to counter their fears citation needed Suggestion is very powerful and a good hypnotist will know how to deliver suggestions that can create better entertainment for the audience In his book Deeper and Deeper by Jonathan Chase 22 he talks about delivering suggestion more importantly The Super Suggestion a phrase he coined in his first published book in 1999 From this moment everything I say to you Every single thing I say no matter how silly or stupid it seems will instantly become your reality Everything I say will instantly become your reality citation needed He emphasizes the use of repetition but warns that when they have accepted the suggestion then everything that the hypnotist says to them after this point will become an irresistible suggestion citation needed Historically stage hypnotists often made claims for hypnotically induced enhancements to volunteer abilities beyond normal limits One instance is The Human Bridge in which a hypnotized subject is supposedly put in a state of catalepsy and placed as a bridge between two chairs The stunt looks impressive however as hypnotist Andrew Newton puts it Any reasonably strong adult can do this stunt without being hypnotized at all 23 Subjects Edit In a stage hypnosis situation the hypnotist chooses their participants carefully First they give the entire audience a few exercises to perform and plant ideas in their minds such as only intelligent people can be hypnotized only those who are open minded to being hypnotized and willing to participate citation needed It has been alleged by whom that these suggestions are designed to overcome the natural fear of trusting a stranger with the greater fear of becoming an object of ridicule as one who is unintelligent unsociable and joyless Out of the crowd the hypnotist will spot people who appear trusting extroverted and willing to put on a show The hypnotist starts them off by having them imagine ordinary situations that they have likely encountered like being cold or hot hungry or thirsty then gradually builds to giving them a suggestion to do something that is totally out of character such as tap dancing singing like Elvis clucking like a chicken or forgetting a number citation needed The desire to be the center of attention having an excuse to violate their own inner fear suppressors and the pressure to please plus the expectation of the audience wanting them to provide some entertainment is usually enough to persuade some people to do almost anything In other words the participants are persuaded to play along Yet whilst this accounts for some situations it does not accord with those where hecklers uncooperative audiences and those who wish to disprove the hypnotist create a set of negative expectations uncooperative atmosphere and opposition which the performer must use skill to overcome citation needed Law EditIn some countries there are laws and guidelines regarding stage hypnosis In the UK the Hypnotism Act 1952 governs the use of hypnosis in public The original Act was amended in 1976 and again in 2003 24 In 1996 the government released model conditions which were refined and revised after consultation with FESH and with medical and academic psychologists Note that these have no legal force they are suggested conditions which local authorities may or may not feel appropriate to impose or modify when regulating hypnosis 25 If stage hypnosis is performed at a public venue a permit permission must be acquired from the local authority and the local authority is advised to monitor the performance to ensure that all guidelines are followed It is illegal to hold any form of stage hypnosis in a public venue amongst other venues unless the local authority has issued their consent for this citation needed In the accompanying circular announcing the revised model conditions in 1996 26 it was conceded that as asserted by skeptical stage hypnotist Alex Tsander citation needed during the consultation process In practice volunteers do not react as if they truly believe that there is for example a giant spider behind them or a bomb under their chair 27 This was a critical point of distinction and represents a formal recognition of the as if nature of behavior in stage hypnotism in contradistinction to claims for its supposed subjective reality In the past stage hypnosis has been banned in several countries in the world including Denmark and some states in the United States Most of these countries have revoked these laws or do not enforce them citation needed In Israel it remains illegal to perform any kind of hypnosis without a license given to doctors dentists and psychologists citation needed In Belgium stage hypnosis has been forbidden since 1892 28 the law was mentioned in 2017 to force the cancellation of a spectacle by messmer 29 References Edit Lennis G Echterling amp Jonathon Whalen 1995 Stage hypnosis and public lecture effects on attitudes and beliefs regarding hypnosis American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis 38 1 13 21 doi 10 1080 00029157 1995 10403173 PMID 8533735 Magnetic demonstrator Gauld s term Gauld 1992 p 204 accurately describes Lafontaine because whilst he was in the UK he only demonstrated magnetic phenomena he never used it to treat anyone at any time in public or private Braid always maintained that he had gone to Lafontaine s demonstration as an open minded sceptic eager to examine the evidence and then form a considered opinion of Lafontaine s work He was neither a closed minded cynic intent on destroying Lafontaine nor a deluded and naively credulous believer seeking authorisation of his already formed belief Neurypnology 1843 p 2 For an extended account of the interactions between Braid and Lafontaine see Yeates 2013 pp 103 308 passim Electrobiology A mode of inducing hypnotism by having the subject look steadily at metallic disks The process originated about the middle of the nineteenth century and its fame was spread by numerous lecturers in England and the United States Melton J G 2001 ed Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology Fifth Edition in Two Volumes Volume 1 A L Thomson Gale Farmington Hills 2001 p 489 Stone was the compiler and editor of The Philosophy of Electro Biology or Electrical Psychology in a Course of Nine Lectures Delivered by J B Dods before the United States Senate at Washington in 1850 etc Stone was also involved for a time in the active promotion the medium Maria Basheba Hayden 1826 1883 the wife of his close friend William Richardson Hayden M D 1820 1903 journalist and editor of The Boston Atlas and a monthly newsletter called The Star Spangled Banner Maria Hayden who graduated M D in 1865 also assisted Augustus De Morgan in his paranormal investigations Braid s quote is at p 512 of Braid J Electro Biological Phenomena Physiologically and Psychologically Considered by James Braid M R C S Edinburgh amp c amp c Lecture delivered at the Royal Institution Manchester March 26 1851 The Monthly Journal of Medical Science Vol 12 June 1851 pp 511 530 Author of The Practice of Hypnotic Suggestion 1901 One of his specialties was hypnotising per medium of the telephone poster at 1 2 Herbert L Flint was the author of Flint s lessons in hypnotism a comprehensive work on scientific suggestion as applied in hypnotism mesmerism personal magnetism magnetic healing psycho therapeutics suggestive therapeutics and similar manefestations of mental development and control 1915 poster at 3 Author of Hypnotism as It Is a Book for Everybody 1897 Xenophon LaMotte Sage was the stage name of E Virgil Neal see Conroy 2009 passim especially pp 27 40 Ormond McGill The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnosis 1996 24 Braid J 1851 Electro Biological Phenomena etc p 530 Kreskin The Amazing World of Kreskin 1973 143 Kreskin The Amazing World of Kreskin 1973 152 Yapko Michael 1990 Trancework An introduction to the practice of Clinical Hypnosis New York New York Brunner Mazel p 28 Wagstaff Graham F 1981 Hypnosis Compliance and Belief St Martin s Press New York ISBN 0 312 40157 4 McGill Ormond 1996 The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnosis p 506 a b c Barber Spanos amp Chaves Hypnotism Imagination amp Human Potentialities 1974 p 105 Kreskin The Amazing World of Kreskin 1973 p 149 a b Weitznehoffer Andre The Practice of Hypnotism 2000 p 400 Real name Joseph Bolsky see 4 Dr Wilbur is Cornelia B Wilbur and 5 Chase Jonathan 2005 Deeper and Deeper the secrets of stage hypnosis p 101 A bridge too far Andrew Newton Hypnosis The Worlds Most Experienced Hypnotist www newtonhypnosis com Archived from the original on 2014 08 25 Changes to Legislation Hypnosis amp the Law Dipple D 1996 UK Home Office circular No39 1996 Dipple 1996 p 6 sub section Previous Section 3 I Vi Loi sur l hypnotisme 30 mai 1892 article 1 Agence Belga Le spectacle de Messmer annule a Colfontaine car l hypnose en spectacle est illegal selon la loi La Libre Belgique 14 novembre 2017 Further reading EditBraid J Neurypnology or the Rationale of Nervous Sleep Considered in Relation with Animal Magnetism Illustrated by Numerous Cases of its Successful Application in the Relief and Cure of Disease John Churchill London 1843 N B Braid s Errata detailing a number of important corrections that need to be made to the foregoing text is on the un numbered page following p 265 Brandon Joan Successful Hypnotism Stravon Publishers 1956 ASIN B000JD0XS2 Brandon Joan The Art of Hypnotism Fawcett How To Book Publisher Fawcett Publications Inc 1956 Brandon Joan Science Of Self Hypnosis Publisher Joan Brandon Brandon Enterprises 1959 Emery Carla 1998 Secret Don t Tell The Encyclopedia of Hypnotism Acorn Hill Publishing ISBN 978 0965993036 Conroy M S The Cosmetics Baron You ve Never Heard Of E Virgil Neal and Tokalon Second Revised Edition Altus History LLC Englewood 2012 ISBN 0 9826314 7 2 6 Edwards K E www hypnosiscomedyshow com hiring professional hypnotists Crawford H J Kitner Triolo M Clarke S W amp Olesko B Transient Positive and Negative Experiences Accompanying Stage Hypnosis Journal of Abnormal Psychology Vol 101 No 4 November 1992 pp 663 667 Echterling L G amp Emmerling D A Impact of Stage Hypnosis American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis Vol 29 No 3 January 1987 pp 149 154 plus editorial comment see Mott T pp 147 148 Gauld A A History of Hypnotism Cambridge University Press 1992 7 Harling I G Nyrup M A Mischief Radical Hypnosis amp Mind Control Spellbound Books 2010 ISBN 978 87 990481 2 0 Mischief is the author s previous books Sleight of Mind amp Geist in one title Heap M The Alleged Dangers of Stage Hypnosis Contemporary Hypnosis Vol 17 No 3 September 2000 pp 117 126 McGill O Professional Stage Hypnotism Westwood Publishing Co Los Angeles 1977 McGill O The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism Anglo American Book Company St Clears 1996 Meeker W B amp Barber T X Toward An Explanation Of Stage Hypnosis Journal of Abnormal Psychology Vol 77 No 1 1971 pp 61 70 Nadis F Of Horses Planks and Window Sleepers Stage Hypnotism Meets Reform 1836 1920 Journal of Medical Humanities Vol 22 No 3 Fall 2001 pp 223 245 Yeates L B James Braid Surgeon Gentleman Scientist and Hypnotist Ph D Dissertation School of History and Philosophy of Science Faculty of Arts amp Social Sciences University of New South Wales January 2013 Christopher Caress Sleep Easy An inside look into the world of Stage Hypnosis with a modern approach No 1 2011 Christopher Caress Hypno Tricks No 1 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stage hypnosis amp oldid 1138102500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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