Help us get to over 8,769 articles in 2026.
If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com
Witchdoctors Club: Difference between revisions
m (moved Witchdoctor's Club to Witchdoctors Club) |
(Moving to "discussion" page) |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
''' | '''Witchdoctors Club''' was an informal exclusive magic organization in New York City founded by [[Clayton Rawson]] in the late 1950s, as a | ||
successor to [[Bruce Elliott]]'s Friday Night Sodality meetings.<ref>The Pheonix, No. 346</ref> | successor to [[Bruce Elliott]]'s Friday Night Sodality meetings.<ref>The Pheonix, No. 346</ref> | ||
Membership was by invitation only and the sole purpose was lunch. Clayton would call around and tell everyone which New York City restaurant to gather, typically on a Thursday at a Spanish restaurant in back of the Palace Theatre on 49th Street. | Membership was by invitation only and the sole purpose was lunch. Clayton would call around and tell everyone which New York City restaurant to gather, typically on a Thursday at a Spanish restaurant in back of the Palace Theatre on 49th Street. | ||
| Line 12: | Line 11: | ||
{{References}} | {{References}} | ||
[[Category:Magic Organizations]] | [[Category:Magic Organizations]] | ||
Revision as of 08:11, 28 July 2013
Witchdoctors Club was an informal exclusive magic organization in New York City founded by Clayton Rawson in the late 1950s, as a successor to Bruce Elliott's Friday Night Sodality meetings.[1]
Membership was by invitation only and the sole purpose was lunch. Clayton would call around and tell everyone which New York City restaurant to gather, typically on a Thursday at a Spanish restaurant in back of the Palace Theatre on 49th Street.
Members included: Howie Schwarzman, L. Vosburgh Lyons, Bruce Elliott, Del Cartier, John Scarne, Oscar Weigle, Felix Greenfield, Walter Gibson, Ben Braude, Paul Curry, William Lindsay Gresham, Dai Vernon, John Mulholland, Martin Gardner, Bill Simon, Ira Zweifach, Bill Severn, Richard Himber, Sam Schwartz, and Francis Carlyle.
A genuine Witchdoctors membership card, now considered a collector's item, was printed on a blank-faced playing card containing a cryptic image with "WD"s in the corners.[2]