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Magic Castle

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Magic Castle

The Magic Castle is a performance venue, restaurant, and clubhouse for the Academy of Magical Arts for magicians and magic enthusiasts in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles, California, United States. The Academy was started in 1952 by William Larsen Sr., who founded Genii magazine in 1936. The Castle was opened on January 2, 1963 by brothers Bill and Milt Larsen, sons of William Sr and Bill's wife Irene Larsen. Once a private residence, the Castle was declared a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1989.

The Castle was purchased in April 2022 by Randy Pitchford, a grandnephew of British magician Richard Valentine Pitchford. Erika Larsen, daughter of Bill Jr. runs the property with the academy as a tenant.

The Magic Castle is a châteauesque residence built in 1909 by real estate investor, lawyer, banker, newspaper editor, and philanthropist, Rollin B. Lane. The house was designed by architects Lyman Farwell and Oliver Perry Dennis and constructed as a near mirror duplicate of the 1897 Kimberly Crest House and Gardens in Redlands, California, that the architects had designed over a decade earlier. The Lanes called their home "Holly Chateau". Rollin's wife Katherine worked on various civic volunteer communities for the betterment of Hollywood. She was college educated and an author. Originally the house included "seventeen rooms including a roof garden and sun parlor".

Ownership of the building remained in the Lane family until 1955 when it was sold to Thomas O. Glover.

In September 1961, the building was leased to Milt Larsen, Bill Larsen, and Irene Larsen, who began converting it to its present state. The Magic Castle opened for business on January 2, 1963. Over the years, several additions have been made to the original structure, allowing for the inclusion of several theaters, bars, a library and other meeting spaces. In addition, "Street lamps along the driveway that once ran along Venice's Victoria Pier, cast iron frieze work from the Masonic temple on Wilshire, dining room paneling from Sunset's demolished Norma Talmadge Building, and chandeliers from the first Bullock's department store (in Downtown)" have also been added. The Magic Castle was declared a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1989.

One of the Castle's regulars was sleight of hand magician Dai Vernon (1894–1992), who moved to Los Angeles in 1963 and performed for decades at the Castle. In his retirement he would sit in the bar area entertaining and teaching, and after his death in 1992 at the age of 98, according to biographer Karl Johnson, he was cremated and a box with his ashes was brought back to the Castle.

Many celebrities have performed at the Castle, including Orson Welles, Johnny Carson, Steve Martin, Neil Patrick Harris and actor Jason Alexander.

On October 31, 2011, the Castle was damaged in a fire that originated in the attic. Interior refurbishing was necessary as a result of water damage and the Magic Castle reopened in February 2012.

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