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- SONNING, England -- The spoon is bending. Slowly....Upwardly...Inexplicably.
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- Uri Geller, his right thumb and forefinger clamped on
the utensil's bowl, stops rubbing his left forefinger across the narrow
neck.
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- ''It won't bend past 90 degrees,'' Geller says.
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- And it doesn't.
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- The spoon has frozen into a metal L.
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- The Israeli paratrooper and model who became known worldwide
for his paranormal displays smiles, pleased that on command he has managed
a feat that famously eluded him in 1973 during a tense 22-minute live appearance
on The Tonight Show.
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- ''Johnny Carson set me up to fail,'' says Geller, insisting
the talk-show host bombarded him with negative vibes.
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- Now a youthful 53 with only flecks of gray in a thicket
of black hair, health nut Geller hopes to course back into the mainstream
with a positivist message for the new millennium.
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- His new book, Mind Medicine: The Secret of Powerful Healing
(Element, $24.95), is a surprisingly sensible compilation of self-help
hints rooted in holistic healing. A chapter titled ''What Are We All Worrying
About?'' looks at the causes of stress that can range from indoor pollution
to cell phone microwaves. The only spoons involved here go with the teacups
laid next to this colorful coffee-table book.
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- ''People are searching out there for new approaches to
medicine,'' says Geller, who is an honorary vice president of two English
hospitals. ''Health is our most precious asset. If Bill Gates got cancer
but could be cured if he gave all his money away, I bet he would.''
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- The journey from that day on Carson's couch to Deepak
Chopra wannabe has been a long one. Success might have spelled a different
future for the '70s staple who rubbed spoons and shoulders with the likes
of Muhammad Ali, John Lennon and Rosalynn Carter.
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- Instead, he spiraled into a battle with bulimia, fled
Manhattan in 1985 and took up residence here on the muddy banks of the
Thames, where he lives in baronial splendor (Swimming pool? Check. Tennis
court? Check) with his wife, two teenagers, mother and manager.
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- The surreal résumé: mind reader, spoon
bender, watch ''repairman,'' scientific guinea pig. Pop culture took note,
with films such as Phenomenon and The Matrix proffering psychokinetic characters.
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- But apart from oblique Hollywood references, the world
largely forgot about Uri (pronounced OO-ree) Geller Freud, who claims family
ties to the Viennese master.
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- Gregarious, exuding passion and, well, energy, Geller
fixes his dark eyes on you, and the feeling is slightly disquieting. He
also possesses an unabashed flair for self-promotion, immediately signing
the aforementioned bent spoon with a special marker. And he confesses to
a long-standing attraction to money.
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- ''Sometimes,'' he says on his epic lawn, ''I can't believe
this is all mine.''
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- Geller maintains, however, that he is over materialism
and says he has put his $8 million mansion on the market. He hopes to live
in a French-made, solar-powered, wooden hut that looks like a spaceship.
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- But if the capitalist Geller is dying, the showman never
felt better.
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- His writings appear regularly in The (London) Times,
he is a monthly guest on a syndicated U.S. radio show called Doug Stephan's
Good Day, his Web site (www.uri-geller.com) draws thousands daily, and
while he pushes ''positive thinking,'' he still dabbles in the blatantly
weird.
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- He claims to have helped the English national soccer
team beat Scotland a few years back by buzzing the stadium in a helicopter
and concentrating until the ball moved just as a Scottish player shot,
and missed, a penalty kick.
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- Geller's real gift is for deception, contend the many
critics who have dogged the mentalist for decades.
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- ''In my opinion, he's a good magician, and it never goes
beyond that,'' says Jerry Schnepp, president of the St. Louis-based International
Brotherhood of Magicians. ''Many people do spoon bending, and it's done
with misdirection. There is no so-called force there other than Uri Geller.''
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- Geller is blunt about skeptics.
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- ''Look, I'm brash and outspoken, so some people are frightened,
and some maybe even anti-Semitic. I don't understand the resentment,''
he says. ''I am not a healer, prophet or guru. I am simply a trigger, a
catalyst, an enabler to your powers.''
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- Whatever he is, the world once was on board big time,
providing Geller with a life that would out-twist the most serpentine screenplay.
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- After dazzling audiences in Tel Aviv at the start of
the '70s, Geller became entangled in a series of experiments at Stanford
University designed to validate or repudiate his powers. Although nothing
conclusive was produced, Geller was enough of a mystery to attract the
attention of government officials from the United States, Mexico and Israel.
And he maintains that the CIA used him to bombard the minds of KGB agents.
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- ''George Bush (then head of the CIA) was very open-minded
to the field of the paranormal,'' Geller says with a smile. ''I'm sure
you didn't know that.''
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- The CIA declined to comment on queries about Geller.
Agency officials kept their public distance in the '70s as well. Not so
the glitterati.
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- Geller says he helped Ali psyche out boxing opponents.
He and Lennon would meet for tea at a New York hotel to discuss UFOs. He
bent a spoon for President Carter's wife and read a nervous Henry Kissinger's
mind. Life was a party, and Geller was drunk on the Studio 54 Zeitgeist.
He commanded racks of Gucci suits, drawers of Rolex watches and fleets
of limousines.
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- But soon people tired of an act that could not change
because, Geller maintains, it was real. Abruptly, he vanished from the
cultural radar screen. ''I tasted all that money, the fame, the groupies,
and suddenly no one wanted me,'' he says. ''I thought it was the end of
Uri Geller.''
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- So he started killing himself.
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- In the late '70s, impresario Robert Stigwood raised the
possibility of doing a film on Geller's life, but he wanted his star, who
would play himself, to slim down. Ever the obsessive, Geller took the request
to extremes. Bulimia hooked him for a year. The film idea fizzled.
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- ''My friends started saying I looked like a Holocaust
survivor,'' he says. ''That was it. I stopped.''
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- Geller rebounded. He fathered a son and daughter (Natalie,
18, and Daniel, 19, neither of whom displays the father's abilities) with
his longtime companion and now wife, Hanna Shtrang. Her brother, Shipi,
has been Geller's manager almost since the two met in their teens. Worried
about crime in New York, the entire crew, including Geller's mother, Margaret,
moved to an estate in the English countryside.
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- Whatever the source of Geller's ability -- otherworldly
or sheer practice -- Geller's greatest ''effect'' remains Uri Geller.
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- ''I go back and forth,'' says Jonathan Margolis, author
of a recently published biography, Uri Geller: Magician or Mystic?
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- ''Some days I'm pro-Uri, and others I think it's just
about possible he's a magician. But if he is, it's unchallenged that no
one knows how he does what he does.''
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- The L-shaped sugar spoon rests on a table near Geller.
Its bending continues to elicit puzzled stares from two guests. Geller
is asked for an explanation.
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- ''I have none,'' he says. ''And I would like to leave
it a mystery. If I'm ever truly validated, I will cease to be interesting.''
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- Shazam. Geller has nailed the essence of his appeal:
Mysteries command our gaze.
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- But he is not through with revelations. A few minutes
go by. Silence fills the room. His five dogs, which include a blind fox
terrier and an injured greyhound, lie quietly nearby.
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- ''I must tell you something,'' Geller sighs. ''I am sick
and tired of bending spoons.''
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