Career
Siegfried and Roy cited him as an inspiration, and Bess Houdini said that he was second only to Harry Houdini in "play(ing) the part of a magician." He was also a film actor who appeared in numerous movies and was the subject of a biographical documentary entitled John Calvert – His Magic and Adventures. The Society of Young Magicians (SYM) Assembly #29 of the Boston area was solely named after John Calvert until 2012 when David Oliver was also added to the name. Calvert was born in New Trenton, Indiana and became fascinated with magic at age eight when his father took him to see the magician Howard Thurston perform in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Shortly afterward, he performed his first trick for his Sunday school class - he made an egg appear from under another boy’s coat.
He made his initial magic tour when he was eighteen, performing in town halls in Kentucky backroad towns. His small troupe consisted of one assistant and “Gyp the Wonder Dog”.
He returned home with a $2.65 profit. During the Great Depression and into the 1940s, he continually increased the size of his magic show, adding illusions and personnel.
He gained notoriety by performing daredevil stunts for publicity.
From the mid-1940s through the late 1950s, he performed in approximately forty films, including starring roles in three Film Classic releases, in which he portrayed a debonair detective known as “The Falcon”. He also played as himself in a Malaysian movie in 1960, Mat Magic. Calvert continued performing magic during his Hollywood days.
In the mid-1940s, he transported his show’s equipment and personnel worldwide in a Douglas District of Columbia-3 airliner, and in later years on yachts.