Fool Us' Talk? Why He Remains Silent

Can Teller from The CW's 'Penn & Teller: Fool Us' talk? Here's the true reason why the magician took a vow of silence while appearing.

Gabrielle Bernardini - Author

Legendary magicians Penn and Teller were acting in combination since the 1980s, entertaining audiences with their illusions and comedic shows. In the CW series Penn & Teller: Fool Us the duo flip the script and ask aspiring magicians to try and trick them. 

If the illusionists are not able to determine how the magician carried out their trick, the individual wins a travel to Las Vegas to perform as their opening act at their reside show on the Rio Hotel & Casino.

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While Penn and Teller's sequence unmasks the magic in these tips, one thing fanatics keep wondering is if Teller is in fact in a position to talk. The illusionist does now not talk and remains silent whilst Penn is gabbing away. 

So, can Teller talk? Keep reading to find out what we know.

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Can Teller from 'Penn & Teller: Fool Us' if truth be told talk?

In an interview with the Huffington Post, Teller's spouse Penn opened up about why the illusionist does no longer speak all over shows. 

"I get no credit or blame for Teller not speaking," he said. "Teller speaks very well, but he decided to work silently in magic because he was working rough environments where he was apt to be heckled. And Teller just thought if he was quiet, they'd grow weary of heckling him."

Teller unfolded about his determination to not speak while operating in a 2015 interview with NPR. The mythical magician printed that the idea to remain silent while performing tips in school. 

"I was playing fraternity parties at Amherst College, where I went. And I am a small man of not particularly imposing proportions or voice. And if I had tried to assert myself over a room full of drunken kids groping their dates and drinking beer, they would not have paid any attention to me," he told the hole. 

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Teller persevered, "I found that if I turned off all the lights except for a few lawn spotlights that I carried with me and put them on me, and then did creepy things like swallowing razorblades ... I found that when I did that sort of thing, they paid attention to me in a way that if I had tried to assert myself over them, they wouldn't have. It sort of undercut any kind of heckling."

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The CW big name defined that the loss of noise additionally supplies a deep level of intimacy, adding, "A lot of people who don't speak onstage in magic blast the audience with music that is loaded with all sorts of emotions. I think that's cheating. And by stripping away music, by stripping away speech, there is a level of intimacy that I feel with the audience that is deep. It's very deep."

Therefore, don't be expecting Teller to ever discuss while acting on-stage. 

Watch new episodes of Penn & Teller: Fool Us on Mondays at 9 p.m. ET on The CW.

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