Emil JarrowBorn: Emil Javorzynski on April 8, 1876 in Pleschen Stadt, Prussia
Died: March 4, 1959 (aged 82) in Islip, New York
Occupation: magician, strongman
Emil Jarrow (April 8, 1876 - March 4, 1959) was a celebrated sleight of hand magician. He sometimes referred to himself humorously as a "prestidigitator." Jarrow (also spelled Jaro & Jarow) was perhaps best known for creating the "lemon trick", in which he would procure paper money from an apparently fresh lemon.
Jarrow was born Emil Javorzynski in Pleschen Stadt, in Prussia (now Pleszew, Poland.) In 1891, as a young man of 15, he began his professional career as a strongman for the Buffalo Bill's Wild West show in Germany. He traveled with the show when it moved to England and then the United States the following year. Later, he began working independently by performing acts of strength in local venues, in Chicago and New York.
Some years later, after a stage accident left a leg permanently damaged, he reinvented himself as a sleight of hand artist with a flair for humor and a thick Low Dutch-accented patter, with which he accompanied his performances. Jarrow became quite adept with closely observed sleight-of-hand tricks. For instance, while seated at a dining table, he would unwind the salt shaker lid and empty it into his fist, and with a flourish, "vanish" the salt only to have it later reappear. The props he used for his illusions were simple, household items, rather than elaborate devices. Friendly with his peers, including Harry Houdini, he had a particularly fond relationship with Harry Blackstone, Sr., who would remain his friend until his death at the posh Percy Williams Home for Retired Actors and Actresses on Long Island.


