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File:Alfred Leslie, chapeaugrapher.jpg
19th century performer Alfred Leslie demonstrating chapeaugraphy as Napoleon (left) and Wellington (right)

Chapeaugraphy, occasionally anglicised to chapography, is a novelty act and a busking trick in which a ring-shaped piece of felt is manipulated to look like various types of hats. It would often be performed as a quick-change act.<ref name="sobchack"/>

The act originated in 1618 with Parisian street performer Tabarin, the most famous of the charlatans who combined a French version of commedia dell'arte with a quack medicine show. He described his felt hat as "true raw material, indifferent to all forms".<ref name="sobchack"/>

In the 1870s another French comedian, Template:Ill, revived the act and managed 15 hat-twisting styles in his act. The act was first performed in England by the French magician Félicien Trewey,<ref name="ppm"/> who performed a tribute act titled "Tabarin, or Twenty-Five Heads under One Hat".<ref name="sobchack">Template:Cite book</ref> An 1899 magazine recounts "one or two smart English performers" of that time, including Alfred Leslie.<ref name="ppm">Template:Cite news</ref>

Although rarely seen today, it was featured in an episode of Saturday Night Live in 1985, as performed by magician Harry Anderson.

Types of hat that can be created include the following:

Notable chapeaugraphersEdit

File:Chapeaux à transformation.webm
Félicien Trewey in Louis Lumière's 1896 short film Chapeaux à transformation
  • Tabarin, a French comedian, the creator of Le Chapeau de Tabarin.
  • Template:Ill, another French comedian who revived the act.
  • Félicien Trewey, who brought the art form renewed interest and a new name, Treweyism, around the world in the 19th century after seeing Monsieur FusierTemplate:Cn

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit