Magician

Chuck Jones (Magician) Wiki, Age, Height, Weight

Creator of the Mismade Girl illusion, a trick that was featured by Orson Welles on the Jackie Gleason Show. During the 1980’s, his firm Chuck Jones Magic Enterprises created magic productions for amusement parks.

As a child, he was inspired and taught by the female magician Dell O’Dell at her Hollywood magic shop. He performed on weekends at birthday parties during his high school days. 

The Famous Birthdays team visited the world famous Magic Castle in Los Angeles, California in May of 2019 and saw Jones perform. He earned the Performing Fellowship Award from the Magic Castle in addition to earning the Showmanship Award from the Society of American Magicians.

He and his wife Jan were presented with the Dragon Award from the International Brotherhood of Magicians.

He was asked to appear in a TV skit with Johnny Carson after performing at a party for the writer of Carson’s show. He also performed for the children of Judy Garland and Anthony Quinn.

Chuck Jones Age

How old is Chuck Jones? He was born in 1942, he is 81 years old.

Chuck Jones Height & Weight

No height data is available for the time being.

No weight data is available right now.

Chuck Jones Wiki

Chuck Jones Wiki/Bio
Famous asMagician
Age81 years old
BirthdaySeptember 18, 1942
BirthplaceTrenton, NJ
Zodiac SignVirgo
HeightN/A
WeightN/A
Net WorthN/A

Quotes by Chuck Jones

Mark Twain’s Roughing It is a book that many people don’t know about, but I highly recommend to anybody at any age.

— Chuck Jones

Jackie Gleason said that comedy is the most exacting form of dramatic art, because it has an instant critic: laughter.

— Chuck Jones

In 1918, when I was 6 or 7 years old, radio was just coming into use in the Great War.

— Chuck Jones

The whole essence of good drawing – and of good thinking, perhaps – is to work a subject down to the simplest form possible and still have it believable for what it is meant to be.

— Chuck Jones

The author O. Henry taught me about the value of the unexpected. He once wrote about the noise of flowers and the smell of birds – the birds were chickens and the flowers dried sunflowers rattling against a wall.

— Chuck Jones