LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — After suspension from one of the most exclusive magic clubs in America, a Las Vegas-based magician says his membership will “disappear” come next week.
The frazzled blonde hair and comedic illusions of Murray SawChuck have enamored Las Vegas Strip audiences for decades, some 22 years. But, it was his online videos that have garnered no applause from the magic community as of late.
In January, he and his wife created videos in their living room with magic props purchased online. This included a disappearing bouquet of flowers, a swallowing sword that raveled up when placed in SawChuck’s mouth and a prosthetic thumb that a tissue was stuffed in to appear as if it vanished.
“I do the tricks cheesy, as I am. Then my wife just busts at me, not impressed, like a wife would be, very similar way that Lucille Ball would do to Desi (Arnaz),” SawChuck said inside his Vegas Valley home, surrounded by magic props of magicians’ past. “I bought some stuff on Amazon, just stuff you can buy literally for five or 10 bucks, and purposefully did it because that means it’s attainable to anybody in the world.”
Videos of SawChuck’s magic have reached viral status since 2015. It wasn’t until these 2024 videos, and nearly 70 million views on Facebook later, that he says the magic community took notice.
In February, the International Brotherhood of Magicians – the self-described “world’s largest organization dedicated to the art of magic” – filed grievances against his “exposure of magic secrets for profit,” per a letter SawChuck provided to 8 News Now. The petition to the organization’s grievance committee cited violations of its ethics statement and was signed by 27 members.
This triggered the Academy of Magical Arts – a Los Angeles-based nonprofit that a representative said “protects and enhances the art of magic” – to take notice. It’s located inside the Magic Castle in Hollywood, the invite-only clubhouse erected in 1963 that SawChuck has been a member of since the 90s.
“Basically, it’s the Carnegie Hall for magicians,” SawChuck said. “It’s one of those kind of Hollywood evenings you’d see about in the newspaper of the old days.
“You’re looking at being accepted as a professional, and anything that you can add to your resume that makes you look better, it’ll give you better jobs,” he added.
In March, the academy’s board of directors alerted him of his suspension “pending an investigation by the Committee of Member Conduct.” That committee then recommended in May to allow his membership to be unsuspended if he took the videos down within 30 days or face expulsion.
“A lot of people are arguing, going, ‘Well, you did it for money.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, I do magic for money.’ That’s how I live in this house. That’s how I pay the bills,” SawChuck said. “I didn’t do it vindictively. I did it for entertainment purposes only.”
In a response letter exclusively shared with 8 News Now, SawChuck alludes to other “famous performers” with membership to the Magic Castle that have not been reprimanded despite their acts “revealing key magical principals” as his videos do. It goes on to call the academy’s stance “inconsistent” and states “our values no longer align.”
“These companies do need, and clubs, need to look at the world in 2024, because these clubs were invented 50 to 100 years ago, and things have changed but a lot of the rules haven’t,” SawChuck said. “When you’re at my age now, whether I’m a member of the Magic Castle or not, that doesn’t really change my bookings at all. That doesn’t do much anymore. It’s my quality of work.”
Source Agencies