Penn & Teller: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
m (Mass update links)
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 4:
'''Penn & Teller''' are an American double-act, comedians and stage magicians, with a regular gig at the Rio Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.
 
Penn Jillette is the tall, talkative one with long dark hair. [[Only One Name|Teller]] is the short one who [[The Voiceless|never speaks on stage]] and makes [[Silent Snarker|amusing facial expressions]] on the frequent occasions when Penn exposes him to danger. They were introduced to one another by a mutual friend in 1975. Ever since then, they've done most of their work together, developing their own rather quirky style of magic.
 
The pair have a wide fraud-busting streak, which gets its widest exposure in their Showtime TV show, ''[[Penn and& Teller: Bullshit!]]''. A running theme in their work is truth, lies and deception, with many parts of their stage magic routine built around [[Lampshading]] the fact that magic is all about deceiving the audience. Many of their tricks also play on the audience's visceral reaction to tricks that ''appear'' dangerous but are in fact completely safe, celebrating the fantasy that two guys can [[Bullet Catch|shoot guns into each other's mouths]] and emerge from it completely unharmed.
 
=== Aside from their various stage shows, Penn & Teller's body of work includes: ===
 
=== {{examples|Aside from their various stage shows, Penn & Teller's body of work includes: ===}}
* ''Penn & Teller's Cruel Tricks for Dear Friends'', a 1987 straight-to-video release including punchlines for seven different tricks to play on one's friends and instructions for performing them.
* ''Penn & Teller's Invisible Thread'', a 1987 Showtime made-for-TV movie about how a stupid magic trick saves the human race from being [[Humanity on Trial|wiped out by aliens for being redundant]].
Line 16 ⟶ 15:
* ''Phobophilia'', a filmed 1995 stage show where Penn and Teller perform various tricks and skits exploring [[Primal Fear|Primal Fears]]. Noteworthy for including a full version of their famous double [[Bullet Catch]] trick.
* ''Penn & Teller's Magic and Mystery Tour'', a three-part 2003 documentary miniseries where they travel to China, Egypt and India to study the traditional culture of magic. [[The Voiceless|Notably]], Teller talks twice in the Egypt episode.
* ''[[Penn and& Teller: Bullshit!]]'', a highly successful Showtime series that ran from 2003-2010, where they call out various pseudoscience and political causes they [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|consider to be bullshit]].
* ''Penn & Teller: Fool Us'', a 2011 ITV series, hosted by [[Jonathan Ross]], where a variety of magicians attempt to fool Penn and Teller with tricks of their own. Those who succeed get to perform on their stage in [[Las Vegas]].
* ''[[Penn and Teller Tell a Lie]]'', a 2011 [[Discovery Channel]] show where each episode presents six or seven unbelievable stories, one of which is a lie.
Line 29 ⟶ 28:
** ''[[Fantasia 2000]]'', where they presented the Sorcerer's Apprentice segment
 
{{creatortropes}}
=== Tropes for ''[[Penn and Teller Get Killed]]'', ''[[Penn and Teller Bullshit]]'' and ''[[Penn and Teller Tell a Lie]]'' go on their respective pages. Otherwise, Penn & Teller and their work provide examples of: ===
'''Tropes for works linked above go on those pages.'''
 
* [[Alter Ego Acting]]: Penn & Teller each have a consistent on-stage persona which is not the same as what they're like in real life.
* [[Black Comedy]]: Used in several of their tricks. The "Water Tank" trick, where Penn attempts to do a card trick while Teller is supposedly holding his breath in a tank full of water, is a great example. In the fictional narrative of the trick, Penn botches the card trick and Teller drowns in the tank as a result, which is pretty horrifying. But the way the entire trick is put together around it, including Penn's various lines ("No, screw it, he's braindead"), the audience volunteers who just don't know ''what'' to make of the whole thing, Penn's mock eulogy for Teller (where he claims to be planning a solo tour to be entitled simply "Penn"), and especially the final punchline ( {{spoiler|Penn reaches into the tank to turn Teller's limp body around, revealing the audience member's signed card ''inside Teller's face mask'' - "AND IS ''THAT'' YOUR CARD?"}}), is priceless.
Line 74 ⟶ 73:
* [[Three-Way Sex]]: A trick in ''How to Play in Traffic'' revolves around playing a [[Knights and Knaves]]-esque game supposedly to choose which of two potential sex partners you have a better "connection" with. It ends with you supposedly reading both of their minds (courtesy of the trick, of course), concluding that you can't possibly choose, and [[Take a Third Option|inviting both of them to your hotel room together]]. (This is followed by a parenthetical note that you ''could'' in theory just pick the one you like better instead, but ''who in the world would do that''?)
* [[Unwinnable by Design]]: In ''Penn & Teller's Smoke and Mirrors'', hyperbole is not in any way involved in the naming of the "Impossible" difficulty level.
* [[The Voiceless]]: Teller's on-stage persona, although he has spoken in non-"Penn & Teller" contexts, such as the film version of ''[[The Fantasticks]]'' and has even been a voice actor.
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Double Acts and Groups]]
[[Category:Penn And& Teller]]
[[Category:Comedian]]
[[Category:Stage Magician]]
[[Category:Voice Actors]]
[[Category:Names to Know in Comedy]]