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America's oldest magic dealership, The
Flosso-Hornmann Magic Co., incorporating Martinka & Co., has been sold
by longtime proprietor Jack Flosso to Ted Bogusta of New Jersey. The sale
adds another page to the company's history and adds another name (to use a
phrase from one of their catalogs) to, "the cavalcade of
owners." The list includes Antonio and Francis Martinka, Carter the
Great, Harry Houdini, Frank Ducrot and Jack's dad, Al Flosso. Not to
mention the roster of other dealer enterprises absorbed during the firm's
125-plus years in the business of selling Hocus Pocus to generations of
wand wielders.
The shop closed its doors at its most
recent location of 45 West 34th Street in New York City on September 30,
2000 ending its long presence on Manhattan's West Side. The telephone
number, in use since the store's halcyon days at the storied 304 West 34th
Street address has been retained. The company will continue to do business
for the time being via the Internet and mail order. The legendary Martinka
"Palace Of Magic" location on 6th Avenue, in whose backroom the
Society Of American Magicians was founded in 1902 closed in the early
1920s when Martinka & Co. became consolidated with The Hornmann Magic
Co. under the proprietorship of Frank Ducrot (T. Francis Fritz). Al Flosso
"The Coney Island Fakir" acquired the business in 1939 from the
estate of Ducrot.
"The long established name
recognition still generates many calls each day," explained new owner
Ted Bogusta in a recent interview with MagicTimes, "Of course there
is the association with Houdini which adds to its mystique and that too
causes people to seek us out."
A businessman in the field of
development and design of computer marketing systems for industry, Bogusta
has been keen on abracadabra since his childhood in New Jersey. His
interest in magic history and collecting was especially piqued by his
acquisition at an early age of the collection of an elderly neighbor,
Dominic Fiorello. "He had a lot of things from the 1930s." In
time, Ted gravitated toward collectors events such as the MCA Weekends and
Yankee Gatherings.
"My purchase of the company came
about through my acquaintance with Jackie, whom I've known for seven or
eight years. His stories of the shop, his dad and the magical
personalities of yesteryear were enthralling. Some time ago when I was
visiting the store I asked him what was going to happen to the company.
What sort of plans he had for it to continue. The transaction grew from
that conversation."
"By October 1988 we had reached
an agreement for the transition of the company's assets and goodwill to be
transferred to me. In 1999 Jack and I moved out the mini-museum. The final
phase was planned for January 2001. However, due to certain health
concerns on Jack's part we accelerated the conclusion of the transaction
to June of this year (2000). We moved the stock and display cases out
during September and turned the key in the door for the last time on
September 30, 2000."
"Jack Flosso will continue to
advise and consult. He is a fund of knowledge and anecdote concerning the
shop and it's antecedents."
The transaction called for Bogusta's
acquisition of all merchandise stock and displays including the
Mini-Museum and the large cases; other ephemera in the shop; Jack's
personal collection, company records and documents; and all rights and
goodwill accrued by the enterprise over the course of it's long history.
Current plans call for the Martinka
& Co. trade-style to be associated with collectibles. The Flosso-Hornmann
identity will focus on marketing magic for beginners. Beside the current
website and planned e-auctions, consideration is being given to
manufacturing some of the old effects that are part of the legacy of the
combined concerns and perhaps opening a new retail operation. In any
event, the succession of this venerable magical "repository of
repositories" is assured as it begins a new chapter. The Martinka
& Co., Flosso-Hornmann Magic Shop, begun in the 19th century, passes from
the 20th and now continues into the 21st century.
You can visit the 21st century incarnation on the web at: www.martinka.com.--Richard Steven Cohn
...Go
back to MagicTimes
Richard Steven Cohn has written for Genii, Magicol,
M.U.M., The Yankee Collector, MAGIC, as well as magic themed
articles for Brooklyn Bridge Magazine and Stagebill. He is a magical
consultant for television and theater and performs both as a single
and with his wife Alexandra. |
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