Marshall Brodien was a professional magician who played Wizzo the Wizard, a wizard clown character which appeared on WGN-TV's Bozo's Circus and The Bozo Show from 1968-1994.
Early life
Brodien was born and raised in Chicago. At age 8, he took an interest in magic after a magician came to perform at his school. He never graduated high school and began working at age 14 selling and demonstrating magic tricks and novelties at the Magic Center in downtown Chicago. At age 16, Brodien worked at Chicago's Riverview Park, performing magic tricks. Brodien served in the Army during the 1950s at Fort Carson in Colorado and performed more than 700 shows while in the Army at hospitals, non-commissioned officers clubs and private parties.
Career
Brodien, who had been making semi-regular guest appearances performing magic tricks as himself on Bozo’s Circus since 1962, began appearing as a wizard character in an Arabian Nights-inspired costume in 1968 and evolved into Wizzo the Wizard by the early 1970s. He was billed as being from "Arobia" and possessed the magical Stone of Zanzabar. According to Brodien, the first time he touched Bozo with the stone, Bozo quipped: "I remember when you got stoned at the Zanzabar." Oliver O. Oliver left Bozo's Circus in 1971 and was briefly replaced by Pat Tobin as Oliver's cousin Elrod T. Potter, and then by magician John Thompson as Clod Hopper. By 1973, WGN gave up on Thompson and increased Brodien's appearances as Wizzo. Brodien left the program in 1994. In 1970, Brodien was the spokesperson and creator of a trick magiccard deck known as TV Magic Cards, which was a renamed Svengali deck. The deck resembled a regular playing card deck, except that the cards could be shown as all the same card. Many other card tricks could be performed with the deck. Over 17 million decks of the cards were sold. Brodien sold his company in 1992. Brodien had a car with vanity license plates reading "WIZ" and custom pin-striping which contained a tiny "WIZ" within the striping.
Personal life
Brodien designed magic trick sets for children through a company called Cadaco Toys. He occasionally made public appearances in the Chicago area, and a biography, The Magical Life Of Marshall Brodien, was published in 2007. One of his Wizzo costumes is in the WGN-TVBozo's Circus exhibit at the Museum of Broadcast Communications. Brodien was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2007. In 2018, the mayor of Geneva, Illinois announced that July 10 would be known as “Marshall Brodien Day” in the city of Geneva. Brodien and his wife Mary had six children and stepchildren. Brodien died on March 8, 2019 from Alzheimer's disease in Geneva, Illinois at the age of 84.