Robert James Albo (May 8, 1932 – February 21, 2011) was an American physician, surgeon and amateur illusionist.[2][3] He was for 40 years team physician for the Golden State Warriors as well as the Oakland Raiders.[4] At one point he held the largest private magic collection in the world.[2]
Albo received his medical education at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), graduating in 1959. He remained at UCSF for his internship and residency,[5] and later became a professor of surgery there.[4] His first professional job in sports medicine was with the Oakland Seals hockey team.[6] He became team physician for the Golden State Warriors in the early 1970s, and in 1999 became the Warriors' Director of Medicine.[6] He was also the head team physician for the Oakland Raiders and Oakland Oaks (ABA).[1] He specialised in general, vascular, and oncological surgery.[7]
Albo was an amateur illusionist, and held a collection of magic apparatus that grew to be the world's largest, with over 4000 items. Albo used it to write his well regarded series of books, Classic Magic With Apparatus. Originally intended as a trilogy, it eventually grew to 11 volumes. It was followed by further books focused on the magic of Okito and Thayer. In 1992, selected items from the collection were displayed over three of the terminals of San Francisco International Airport. In 1994, Albo agreed to sell the entire collection to David Copperfield, though some items were not transferred to Copperfield until 2010.[3] Albo was a partner in the Palace of Magic shop in San Francisco and Magic Island in Newport Beach, California.[7]
^ abConant, Jane Eshelman (June 1982). "Sports Medicine". The UCSF Magazine. Vol. 5, no. 2. University of California, San Francisco. pp. 29–31. Archived from the original on 2018-01-12.
^ abField, Matthew (April 2011). "Obituaries". The Magic Circular. Vol. 105. p. 101.
^ ab"Hall of Fame". The Academy of Magical Arts. 2 July 2014. Archived from the original on 2016-11-20.