As the show concludes with Brown asking the audience to keep its secrets, little is known about it, except that it includes hypnotism.
The magician prefers performing on stage to TV, he says.
“When touring I get to travel around with my best friends, do a show I love and I’m confident people will enjoy, and have all the adrenaline that comes with performing,” he explains.
“With TV there are constant enforced changes, restraints, and frustrations that sap much of the joy out of it.
“With the tour, once it’s rehearsed, I only have to go out and have the pleasure of doing it, changing it as I like at my own pace.”
He is, however, currently working on a series of television documentaries.
“I’ve been spending some time with people making paranormal claims, and I’m going in with a genuine hope for the evidence to hold up,” he reveals.
“I spend my life fabricating supernatural power, so I’d love it all to be true.
“Of course, extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence, so at the same time I know what to look out for and not get fooled.
“It’s been a fascinating project, and more complex that I imagined.”
ENIGMA is at the Empire, March 2-3 and May 2.





