Val Valentino, known as the Masked Magician, was a prominent American magician known for his role on the Fox television show Breaking the Magician’s Code: Magic’s Biggest Secrets Finally Revealed. Fox Network TV proposed a show called ‘Breaking The Magician’s Code’ for 18 years, but professional magicians refused. The network found one magician willing to sell out, Val Valentino. Valentino began his magic career at age five and performed with the “International Cultural Awareness Program.”
The Masked Magician gained fame in Brazil after his sketches were broadcast on Rede Globo’s Fantástico show from 1999 to 2000. Critics criticized Valentino for adversely affecting their acts and for sloppy, inaccurate explanations. Episodes of Breaking the Magician’s Code were later broadcast on MyNetworkTV, Netflix, and the Fox Reality Channel, with Valentino reprising the role.

Getting famous behind a mask

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&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp Val Valentino is the Las Vegas illusionist universally despised by magicians who recoil in disgust from the masked man.

Notable but nameless

He performed and explained all eight types of magic tricks on national TV. At the time, copyright law did not cover illusions and other magic secrets, and there was no reason to revise the law to include a magic trick as intellectual property. For many centuries, magicians have trusted other magicians to keep a secret with a handshake and a nod. Mute Magician Teller changed the law in 2012 when Teller sued a Belgian magician over his Shadows illusion. Sure, there are books on magic. However, many of the best books on magic still keep the secret from the merely curious by revealing the secret in coded text while showing photographs of an incorrect method. The illusion where the magician shoves a pencil or cigarette through a coin. An excellent illusion in the right hands.

david blaine cigarette quarter
david blaine cigarette quarter
The Masked Magician wanted to broadcast the secrets of famous TV magicians indiscreetly on national TV. Some tricks, including the ‘quarter bite trick’, should not be performed for children because kids try to do the trick themselves.
david blaine quarter bite coin magic
david blaine quarter bite coin magic
Other tricks aren’t harmful, like the floating dollar illusion, which takes practice to make look good but is probably the most spellbinding thing a magician can do. The secret should be guarded—not broadcast to the broad public on a national TV show.
levitation floating dollar bill
levitation floating dollar bill

For 18 years, Fox Network TV had extended a proposal for any magician to star in a show they called ‘Breaking The Magician’s Code’. Year after year, professional magicians repeatedly turned down the offer.

Anonymity as illusion

Hiding identity to reveal secrets

One day in March, an integrity-free hobbyist in Brazil contacted Fox. Haunted by his shadowed past, this magician left Brazil and became famous in America while wearing a mask. But I know what you’re thinking: Why does this failed magician wear a mask? Failed magician? But in the first 60 seconds of the first episode of ‘Breaking The Magicians’ Code,’ the narrator himself said,

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Val Valentino

“You’re about to see one of the world’s top magicians break his code of silence and reveal magic’s most closely guarded secrets. We’re not sure why a well-known magician would go on television and expose deep dark secrets.”

To “protect his identity that the fraternity will not banish him for his betrayal of the profession.” That’s the idea, anyway. How can you distrust a narrator with a deep, rich voice speaking with smoke and mirrors on the screen? Had you ever heard of this “well-known magician” and “one of the world’s top magicians”?

His real name was Leonard Montano, and on stage, he had billed himself as Valentino.

Montano was willing to sell out.

The man behind the mask

But had you heard of Valentino? No, you hadn’t. Not even pros had heard of him. It was a publicity stunt to make the premise of the show more sensational. The intrigue makes for great marketing. The Masked Magician has been claiming to reveal the magicians’ secrets of the trade for a long time now. Has he been revealing the secrets of the trade or convincing the uninitiated that these are the real secrets? He never revealed the real methods behind modern magic tricks. His explanations were decades old — even centuries old — and obsolete. Or he described a bit of a technique but not the real secrets to make it workable. The viewer would feel a sense of satisfaction but would not be able to perform the trick convincingly.

Who was the masked magician? Identity revealed

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Val Valentino was born Leonard Montano in 1956. Forty years later, he moved to Los Angeles and, in 1997, colluded with the Fox Network to appear as the masked character for a season of TV shows called ‘Breaking the Magician’s Code’.
The pilot was such a hit years ago that Valentino has been breaking the magic code repeatedly ever since. “The ratings for the shows went through the roof, with over 25 million viewers,” Valentino said. “Since 30 years ago, I never slowed down. I’ve been continually working, touring the world. “I touched a nerve, especially in Brazil. Nobody can report why. It must be something in the spirit of the Latin American people.” After the specials aired, I spent one and a half years in Brazil presenting my show in large arenas with over ten thousand seats—and we were fending off hundreds. After that, I went west for 24 months and I did many TV specials in Japan.”
The Masked Magician got back on the TV with the 14-episode series of ‘Breaking the Magician’s Code: Magic’s Biggest Secrets Finally Revealed’. Fox Network still broadcasts the hour-long episodes worldwide. In one of the final specials, when Val revealed the Masked Magician’s identity, Val Valentino gave a four-minute speech to the viewer, explaining the magician’s noble motives. He said he was wasn’t revealing his identity because of the controversy or pressure from fellow magicians. He claimed that Valentino’s love of magic was the reason he was telling all the secrets.
the masked magician breaking the magicians code

“I gallantly took the opportunity for the better good of the art of magic, when all other magicians backed away.”

He said he was afraid magic had taken a backseat to movies and video games and was in danger of being forgotten. He said he wanted to let the viewers in on the magic to increase their appreciation of the art and force magicians to reinvent, letting go of “old and tired tricks.” Far Val has given three different noble reasons for telling other magicians’ secrets.

  1. Inspire children to learn magic.
  2. Increase the spectator’s appreciation of magic.
  3. Force other magicians to reinvent.

None of those reasons seem valid, however. Children have always wanted to learn magic. When a group of spectators sees a magic show, some people in the group want to learn how it was done—even more if the tricks aren’t explained throughout. You don’t increase a spectator’s appreciation of magic by indulging them when they say, “How did you do that?” Often, even usually, the method is disappointing, leaving the spectator with less appreciation. Forcing other magicians to reinvent new methods? That’s probably the lamest excuse. There have always been innovative magicians, and there always will be. If “old magic” were a problem, then the noble magician wouldn’t sell out on national TV and then claim he was only trying to encourage other magicians to do new material. The right thing to do is to invent new magic. That would be like Miley Cyrus making 20 million of copies of a new Taylor Swift album and selling the 20 million copies. When the judge asks Miley, “Why have you done this?” She answers, “I did it to encourage Taylor Swift to come up with new music.”

That doesn’t fly.

‘Breaking the Magicians’ Code’ gave Leonard the chance to do an act he otherwise couldn’t do, complete with big, expensive illusions and lots of scantily clad female assistants. One thing to his credit, he never revealed the secrets behind any contemporary magic tricks. He made it all up! In our era, magicians do magic in new ways. His “explanations” were garbage, except for Sawing a Woman in Half. He did explain the way that one was done… back in the late 1800’s. We use different techniques these days. The explanations the magician did report were amusing and entertaining, but a clever method is not what a professional magician looks for when crafting a magic trick on the level. The true zoom magician couldn’t care less about the cleverness or intrigue of the method. He is concerned with the effect of the trick on an audience, who will never see the technique (it is hoped).

The Masked Magician has been revived in the graphic novel by the same name, Masked Magician, published in 2007 by Nash Entertainment.

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In 2012, the same publisher tried to make an action/adventure movie in which a masked magician fights crime using illusions, but that movie didn’t happen.

What happened to Val Valentino?

  • We’ve given Valentino one year to get his things in order.