Zhang Huichong's Shanghai-style magic originated in modern Shanghai, China. Shanghai-style magic is centered in Shanghai, mainly concentrated in Pudong South Wharf, Huangpu, Luwan and other districts. Because of its great influence, it was later spread to provinces in North China, Northwest China, Central South China, Southwest China, East China, and Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia) and other places. In the past hundred years, with the eastward spread of Western culture, foreign magic entered Shanghai, and magic began to enter the stage. Shanghai-style magic has gradually formed its main stage giant magic. The so-called giant means that the magic props are huge, the performance is magnificent, and the stage is changed up and down and left and right at the same time. Shanghai-style magic pursues excellence in magic skills and perfection in art. It is inclusive and eclectic. Its founder is Zhang Huichong. Zhang Huichong (1898-1962), the founder of Shanghai magic, defeated the German magician Niegler in 1933 and won glory for the country. He then performed large-scale stage magic in the form of large-scale special performances, led the troupe to Southeast Asia, and performed for a long time in Southeast Asia. After the founding of New China, under the care of the Party Central Committee, Zhang Huichong rebuilt the magic troupe in 1951 and performed for 18 consecutive months at the Longmen Grand Theater in Shanghai, changing three programs before and after. Each program had as many as 100 sets of giant magic, and every show was full. On September 19, 1958, Premier Zhou Enlai invited him to perform in the Huairen Hall of Zhongnanhai. After watching the whole performance, Premier Zhou hosted a banquet and had a cordial conversation in Ziguang Pavilion for as long as an hour. The large-scale magic programs created, transplanted, and reformed by Zhang Huichong can be said to be the culmination of modern magic, providing a complete blueprint for Shanghai magic for future generations. In his later years, Mr. Zhang Huichong recorded the main programs he had performed in "Magic" (Part 1 and Part 2), which was published by Tianxia Publishing House to introduce his large-scale programs. Shanghai School of Magic brought Chinese magic into the modern art stage. It had a great influence on the development of modern magic in Shanghai and even in China, and opened up a new era of magic.