The Talk of the Town. The night your guests are still describing a month later.
The show starts with the whole audience. There's an exercise designed to find the people who are naturally most responsive to hypnosis. From there, volunteers are invited up and an induction is done. The people responding best stay. Anyone who isn't going as deep is sent back to their seat with genuine thanks. No pressure. No awkwardness.
Then the real show begins. The volunteers experience things they can't normally do and believe things that aren't real. Classic hypnosis show territory, but played for laughs and run with the room's energy rather than against it.
Hypnosis is genuinely different for different people. For some it's deep relaxation. For others it's a kind of willing belief. What it is not, ever, is mind control. Hypnosis cannot make you do something you wouldn't otherwise do. It cannot override your moral code. That's not how it works.
If someone in the room is sceptical, they simply don't go up. There's no moment where anyone is made to look foolish for not responding. The show is built around the people who want to take part, and everyone else gets to enjoy watching.
Hypnosis builds on momentum. Pairing it with close-up magic earlier in the evening means guests arrive at the show already warmed up, comfortable and ready. The two together give the event a real shape and energy from start to finish.
Hypnosis works best where people are already in a high-energy social situation and comfortable with each other. Weddings are ideal. College events are ideal. Any gathering where the crowd is made up of friends, family, or people who genuinely want to let loose.
Corporate events are worth thinking about carefully. When the audience is colleagues, people can feel self-conscious in front of workmates in a way they wouldn't around friends. It can absolutely work for corporate, but it's worth having a conversation about the crowd before booking.
This is worth knowing before you book. When the volunteers are brought back out of hypnosis, they come back feeling genuinely happy. More relaxed than they've been in a long time. Not disorientated or embarrassed. Just well. That's the feeling the show leaves, not just with the volunteers but across the whole room.
That's what makes it the thing people are still describing weeks later. It's an experience that actually feels good to have been part of.
Drop us your date, venue and guest count and we'll come right back to you. Happy to have a chat first if you'd like to talk it through before committing.