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It’s no illusion: Ex-JC man makes it through to Britain’s Got Talent final

The illusionist pair topped last night's public vote to progress

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Andrew Murray, the former JC employee who is one half of illusionist act DNA, has been voted through to the Britain's Got Talent grand final by the public.

In the ITV talent show's live semi-final on Monday night, DNA performed an elaborate “mind-reading” trick to wow the judges and audience, and topped the public poll to advance, along with 15-year-old singer Kyle Tomlinson.

Mr Murray, a 43-year-old father-of-two from London, and Darren Sarsby, who is also Jewish, performed an illusion involving a deck of cards and a dictionary, to follow up their previous audition, in which they correctly predicted a contact in the phone of Amanda Holden, who is one of the judges.

After winning the semi-final the pair said: “The fact we’re the first act who got through via the public vote does give us a lot of confidence.

“We’ve worked really hard on the act and we hope people get behind us again. It’s really given us a boost.”

Hinting at their final performance, Mr Sarsby said one of them would have their “sense of sight removed”.

Dancing policeman PC Dan, street dancers Empire Dance Crew, knife-throwing act Tyrone and Mina, magician Niels Harder, girl band Miss Treat Vibe and the St Patrick’s Junior Choir failed to progress.

Impressionist Jess Robinson, who has been featured in the JC this series, will be hoping to join DNA in Sunday's final, when she appears in her semi-final later this week.

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