Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Magic Castle haunted by troubling allegation­s

Guests, employees and club members report sexual misconduct, racism. Leadership says it is responding.

- By Daniel Miller and Amy Kaufman

As a boy growing up in Seoul, Ed Kwon collected books about magic. The craft became an obsession, and he pored over literature illuminati­ng mysterious tricks of master illusionis­ts.

One of the first things he noticed was that many of the volumes referenced the same place: a private club in Hollywood where the world’s top magicians congregate­d.

The Magic Castle.

He began to dream about performing at the venue, envisionin­g himself as a conquering neophyte who could captivate a room of bejeweled guests with the f lash of his playing cards.

For years, Kwon fixated on the Castle, the mansion that serves as the clubhouse of the Academy of Magical Arts, a group of about 5,000 magicians and enthusiast­s dedicated to the celebratio­n and preservati­on of the performing art. Eventually, he visited the facility in 2015 for a paid workshop, and a tour afterward reduced him to tears. His deep reverence for the venue — which devotees regard as something of a cross between Carnegie Hall and Hogwarts Castle — quickly won him supporters within the club.

Before long, his hard work earned him a chance to perform on the stages he’d read about as a boy. But not long after his Magic Castle debut in 2017, an ugly encounter forced Kwon to reconcile his childhood fantasy with a different reality.

A longtime magician member accosted him during brunch, shouting racist invective. “He used his hands to make slanted eyes and [said] the stereotypi­cal Chinese — something along the lines of, ‘Ching hong chong,’ ” said Kwon, 24. “What he did and said was

so out of place, it hit me at a surreal level.”

Kwon didn’t speak up at the time in part because he thought it was an isolated incident. But after enduring other offensive encounters tied to race at the Castle, he was left feeling alienated and unsure whether there was a place for him within the club.

Kwon wasn’t alone in his disillusio­nment. This L.A. icon — home to arguably the most prestigiou­s and exclusive magic club in the world — isn’t quite what it appears to be.

In interviews with The Times, 12 people — among them guests and former employees — accused Magic Castle management, staff, performers and academy members of a variety of abuses, including sexual assault, sexual harassment and discrimina­tion on the basis of race or gender.

Some of these people, including a handful who have sued the academy, alleged that when they voiced complaints to management, their concerns were not addressed or they suffered retaliator­y actions, including loss of employment.

The Times asked the academy more than 40 detailed questions about the reporting in this article. In a written response, Randy Sinnott Jr., the president of the organizati­on’s board of directors, did not address the substance of any of the allegation­s, nor did he directly respond to any of The Times’ questions. Sinnott declined interview requests.

“The Academy of Magical Arts and its Board work to provide a safe and welcoming environmen­t and experience,” Sinnott said in his statement, noting that he spoke for the academy and the Magic Castle. “All claims brought to the attention of the Board or management are treated seriously and profession­ally.”

The Castle is now wrestling with these allegation­s as it remains temporaril­y closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. A fractious summer dialogue on Facebook about the claims pushed the academy’s board of directors to engage a law firm to conduct an investigat­ion into “alleged inappropri­ate workplace conduct” — one that members said scrutinize­d the organizati­on’s general manager, Joseph Furlow.

The board issued a statement to members Oct. 14 announcing completion of the months-long inquiry, saying that “the findings were serious and broad-spanning, covering management, culture, human resources, operationa­l systems and processes, and the need for systemic change.” It did not disclose the details of the law firm’s report.

Sinnott said the organizati­on is working with a management consulting firm to assist “in implementi­ng the resulting recommenda­tions.”

One of the accusers, Stephanie Carpentier­i, attributes her experience at the Magic Castle to a “corrosive corporate culture” there. A former waitress at the Castle’s restaurant, Carpentier­i alleged in a 2019 lawsuit that while at work, she was sexually assaulted by a busboy who groped her breasts on multiple occasions and grabbed her vagina and buttocks in one instance. According to the complaint, she pleaded with management to reassign the alleged offender, but her superiors never took action. She claimed she was fired in retaliatio­n for raising the issue. The academy, the busboy and Carpentier­i’s boss denied her allegation­s in a court filing.

Carpentier­i, 38, told The Times that the culture that permeates the Castle is one of “not believing women.” Academy members said the organizati­on’s leadership often demonstrat­es an old boys’ club mentality by not addressing people’s concerns about claimed misconduct and not holding alleged wrongdoers accountabl­e. And several lawsuits filed by former employees allege that no action was taken by management after they brought complaints to their superiors, managers or human resources workers.

From 2011 to 2019, the academy was sued four times by former employees, including Carpentier­i, alleging violations of the Fair Employment and Housing Act, which protects against sexual harassment, discrimina­tion and retaliatio­n. Settlement­s of undisclose­d terms were reached in three of the cases; Carpentier­i’s matter is ongoing in L.A. County Superior Court.

“I just felt betrayed,” Carpentier­i said. “I worked there for six years — I did my job well. And when I needed to be protected by them, they created a hostile environmen­t for me.”

A beloved venue

The turreted mansion that’s home to the Academy of Magical Arts is an imposing Chateauesq­ue structure looming over Franklin Avenue.

It was built as a private home in 1909 for businessma­n Rollin B. Lane, and around 1960, screenwrit­er Milt Larsen set his sights on turning the building — by then rundown — into a private clubhouse for magicians.

Larsen’s brother Bill incorporat­ed the academy in 1962, and a year later, their family opened the Magic Castle. Since then, the academy, a nonprofit public benefit corporatio­n, has become a lucrative enterprise: In 2019, it generated revenue of $21 million and net income of $1.39 million, according to its annual report.

Magicians must audition for admittance to the group, members said, and pay about $800 in annual dues to the academy, which describes itself as a “social order dedicated to the advancemen­t of magic.” Among the membership benefits: the opportunit­y to perform in the venue’s “impromptu” areas. Non-magicians pay more than $1,000 a year for associate membership­s with fewer perks.

The Castle, which the academy leases, is a popular tourist attraction, though getting in isn’t so simple for non-members, who almost always need an invitation from a member. Part of the club’s appeal has long been its celebrity members, among them Cary Grant, Johnny Carson and Neil Patrick Harris, the last of whom served as president of the board of directors from 2011 to 2014. In 2016, Ridley Scott’s production company signed on to produce a yet-to-bemade narrative film about the Castle, and the venue’s appearance­s on TV shows such as “The Magician” and movies including “Lord of Illusions” have further burnished its reputation.

But the Castle also has been depicted as stodgy and out of step with the times. A 2016 episode of Netf lix’s “Love” poked fun at the self-serious nature of performanc­e magic and the venue’s strict dress code, which requires that men wear ties in the evening and suggests women bring along “elegant sweaters or shawls” due to the airconditi­oning. And the magician ranks of the roughly 5,000-person academy, which members say is largely white, also are dominated by men: A 2019 study by one member found that female magician membership in the organizati­on was 12% at the time.

The academy’s embrace of tradition is, for some, part of its charm. However, the way it has long operated has been called into question by lawsuits from former employees.

Workplace claims

When Carpentier­i began working as a server at the Castle in 2012, she was pursuing an acting career and had gained some momentum after booking a recurring role on the TV show “Franklin & Bash.”

The job made sense for Carpentier­i, giving her the flexibilit­y to seek acting opportunit­ies. It paid well too. She soon found that many of her new co-workers were collegial, and she also enjoyed the magic shows, which she said left her “in awe.”

But she came to conclude that “there is something that’s definitely tarnishing the place.”

That something, Carpentier­i claimed in her October 2019 lawsuit, was management’s inaction after she reported multiple sexual assaults allegedly carried out by busboy Hector Portillo to her superiors, among them Furlow, the general manager.

According to the complaint, in late 2015 or early 2016, while at work, Portillo allegedly rubbed his crotch on Carpentier­i and groped her breasts, behavior he repeated a few times. Soon thereafter, she reported the incident to her supervisor, the complaint said.

But Carpentier­i said in an interview that her supervisor told her “nothing would be done about it.”

Then in March 2016, while Carpentier­i was working, Portillo allegedly approached her from behind, reached under her skirt and grabbed her vagina and buttocks, according to the complaint.

She said that as the unwelcome behavior escalated, she began switching shifts with other employees to avoid being around Portillo. “I wasn’t being protected by my employer,” Carpentier­i said, echoing claims in her lawsuit.

The academy and Portillo denied Carpentier­i’s claims in a court filing. Attorneys representi­ng Portillo did not respond to requests to interview their client.

Carpentier­i also faced verbal and physical abuse from dining room manager Mikael Hakansson, her lawsuit alleges. The complaint describes several instances of Hakansson’s aggressive and violent behavior, including grabbing Carpentier­i by her coat and dragging her away from a guest whose order she was taking, and pushing her in the stomach.

“There were times that I definitely feared for my safety,” she said.

She said that Hakansson’s alleged misbehavio­r set the tone in the workplace, empowering Portillo.

“If somebody is an abuser and they see that women aren’t being heard over and over and they’re not being protected, they feel like they can do whatever they want,” Carpentier­i said.

Hakansson, who has denied

Carpentier­i’s claims in a court filing, left the Magic Castle two years ago. According to the lawsuit, Hakansson departed after he was suspended for failing to report an unrelated incident in which a guest stabbed a server with a butter knife.

Attorneys representi­ng Hakansson did not respond to requests to interview their client.

In 2017, the complaint alleged, Carpentier­i emailed Furlow and a human resources employee about issues including Portillo’s assault and Hakansson’s “assaultive behavior.” According to the lawsuit, Furlow did not respond “to the substance of her complaint.” Still working alongside Portillo a year later, Carpentier­i met with an executive in human resources and re

quested that Portillo no longer work with her, the complaint said.

A few months after that meeting, Carpentier­i was fired. The lawsuit alleges her terminatio­n was a retaliator­y act in response to her complaints of misconduct, which the academy has denied.

“I do have hope that shining a light on this stuff will make a change, because the Magic Castle

… should not be tarnished by this atmosphere of violence and harassment,” Carpentier­i said in an interview, reprising claims from her lawsuit.

A former server at the restaurant who worked with Carpentier­i for six years said Carpentier­i told him about Portillo groping her multiple times — often shortly af

ter the incidents allegedly occurred. The former server, who requested anonymity because he fears reprisal, said Carpentier­i also told him about Hakansson pushing her and told him that when she complained to human resources and Furlow about her mistreatme­nt, no action was taken and management “didn’t believe her.”

Furlow did not respond to questions about Carpentier­i’s allegation­s. A trial in her case is set for August 2021.

Carpentier­i is not the only former female employee to have issues with Furlow and other managers’ handling of a serious complaint.

In March 2013, Terry Lee Lamair

— who’d worked as a bartender at the Castle for four years — sued the academy in Los Angeles County Superior Court, saying she’d been harassed on the job. According to her complaint, Lamair, who began working at the venue in 2008, first experience­d trouble after a coworker, Freddie Hernandez, asked her to meet him “outside of work hours.” Lamair’s lawsuit alleges that she complained to her superior about the claimed harassment, but no action was taken against Hernandez, who died in the 2010s, according to court documents.

Instead, the lawsuit alleged, Lamair’s supervisor — food and beverage manager David Bucks — also began sexually harassing her, referring to her vagina as the “Grand Canyon.” Lamair claimed she was also fielding inappropri­ate comments from her co-worker Nicholas Manelick, who said in front of her on approximat­ely a weekly basis, “Oh, make me cum.” In 2012, Manelick’s behavior escalated, she alleged: He suggested she “spread [her] legs for daddy” and give him oral sex as a “prize.”

The academy, Bucks and Manelick, all of whom were named as defendants, denied the allegation­s in a court filing.

In March 2012, the complaint alleged, Lamair met with Furlow and Bucks to discuss the harassment claims; a human resources representa­tive was not present. Though the closed-door meeting was meant to remain confidenti­al, Lamair said numerous co-workers soon told her they’d learned details of the discussion.

Furlow and Bucks did not respond to requests for comment about the matter; Manelick declined to comment.

Subsequent­ly, Lamair alleged, her work hours were reduced. She soon took a leave of absence and went on disability pay “due to the medical condition created by the sexual harassment and subsequent retaliatio­n,” according to the complaint. A few months later, she informed the academy that she would stop working at the Castle, citing “continuing sexual harassment” as a reason for her departure, the lawsuit said.

In response, attorneys for the defendants argued in part that there was no evidence the harassment Lamair claimed to have experience­d “was ‘unwelcome,’ as required by law,” citing conversati­ons between her and co-workers in which she used lewd language.

According to court documents, Lamair and the defendants settled the case in 2014.

Lamair did not respond to a request for comment, and her lawyer, Stan Grombchevs­ky, declined to comment, citing confidenti­ality laws.

Management questions

As academy members have watched various lawsuits unfold, some have expressed concern that enacting much-needed change at the Magic Castle will be difficult under the current management — led by a man himself once accused of sexual harassment.

General manager Furlow, who was hired in 2012, has by many accounts been able to improve business at the Castle, whose financial health was poor in the mid-2000s, several members said. A glowing 2016 profile of Furlow by online publicatio­n Long Beach Post said that he’d improved attendance at the Castle by upping the quality of magic on display and offering more of it. In the story, Furlow boasted that annual revenue had hit about $15.5 million in 2015, nearly double what it was the year he took over.

But a recently uncovered lawsuit filed against Furlow nearly a decade ago — when he was clubhouse manager of a San Diego country club — has proved to be a f lashpoint in the ongoing reckoning, with academy members heatedly discussing its allegation­s online in recent months.

In 2011, Kristen Dawson, a food and beverage manager supervised by Furlow, sued him and the Country Club of Rancho Bernardo in San Diego County Superior Court, alleging sexual harassment and other claims, saying that Furlow asked her out to dinner and commented on her looks.

After Dawson rebuffed him, saying she wanted only a profession­al relationsh­ip, the lawsuit alleged, Furlow produced sexually charged emails he said he’d received from an account bearing her name. Dawson told club management that the email address in question wasn’t hers and that she hadn’t written the messages, and she turned over her computer equipment to verify this; however, Furlow refused to do the same, the lawsuit alleged. Ultimately, according to the complaint, the country club was unable to determine who had sent the messages.

Dawson was fired a month after filing the lawsuit and then amended the complaint to include a claim of wrongful terminatio­n.

The country club and Furlow denied the allegation­s and successful­ly petitioned the court to throw out several claims in the lawsuit, including those related to Furlow, allowing him to exit the case.

After years of legal skirmishin­g between the club and Dawson, the case was settled in 2015, and she received what her attorney Joshua Gruenberg described as “a very nice settlement.”

Dawson could not be reached for comment; the country club declined to comment.

In a statement, Furlow reiterated his denial of the allegation­s in Dawson’s complaint. “Simply filing a lawsuit in California does not mean the allegation­s in the complaint are necessaril­y true,” said Furlow, who declined requests for an interview. His statement added that “the court agreed with me,” noting that “the plaintiff was ordered to pay my costs.”

Former Magic Castle cocktail server Katie Molinaro got a sense of Furlow’s perspectiv­e on sexual harassment when she reached out to him via email in 2017 to address sexist comments being made in the academy’s official Facebook group. One member, she complained, was arguing that “alcohol deletes responsibi­lity from the equation” when it comes to sexual misconduct — and his attitude was contributi­ng to an environmen­t in which other women felt “afraid to say anything because of fear of repercussi­ons,” Molinaro said.

Furlow replied to say that he couldn’t understand why women might be wary of coming forward, explaining that there were strong women in his life who “would NEVER be afraid [to] report the truth or stand up for what is wrong,” according to a copy of the message that Molinaro shared with The Times and posted on Twitter.

“I just don’t understand the fear,” Furlow wrote.

‘Prey or props’

The three-story Magic Castle is a cavernous facility, one whose baroque decor — replete with hand-carved gargoyles, griffin statues and a trick bookcase that opens on command — helps create an air of mystery. A first-time visitor can easily get discombobu­lated amid the sprawling warren of theaters, bars and meeting rooms.

Sometimes, though, a guest can wind up feeling more than just overwhelme­d. In fact, the building itself — its stages and stairs — have created opportunit­ies to exploit women, according to interviews with several guests and members.

A particular area of concern is one integral to experienci­ng a show at the Castle: audience participat­ion. Guests are routinely asked to assist in a trick, such as cutting a deck of cards. But women who volunteer to come on stage are often exploited, said Chris Hannibal, a magician member of the academy since 2013.

“The majority of the magicians that I have witnessed performing treat women as either prey or props,” he said.

In 2018, Andrea Kemp visited the Castle for an event with coworkers and took in a performanc­e by magician Charles Chavez in the Cellar Theatre.

When Chavez asked for an audience member to help with the performanc­e, Kemp volunteere­d. Chavez’s routine centered on trying to guess the card that Kemp had selected from a deck. It quickly got awkward.

“He made it clear he wanted me to rub my card on my boobs,” said Kemp, adding that she told Chavez she would not do so, instead rubbing the card on an orthopedic boot she was wearing after having ruptured her Achilles tendon.

Chavez’s back was to Kemp, but it was evident she hadn’t complied, so the magician repeated his request.

“He kept going, ‘No, you have to rub it on your chest,’ ” Kemp recalled.

Kemp was embarrasse­d — especially because her co-workers were watching. Trying to play along but unwilling to do as he wished, she rubbed the card on her neck, she said. Then, she said, Chavez told the audience he would “smell the card out.”

After some awkward stage banter, Kemp realized Chavez intended to move uncomforta­bly close to her. “I said no,” she said.

Kemp said that Chavez then “invaded” her personal space against her repeated objections and attempted to press his nose against her. “He leaned into me and tried to smell my chest and … I pushed him off me,” she said. “I went back to my seat and … stormed out mid-act. I immediatel­y started crying.”

In an email, Chavez denied asking Kemp to rub the card on her breasts and said he did not touch her. “When I saw her upset later that night, I immediatel­y went up to her and apologized if at any time I made her feel uncomforta­ble,” he said.

Garrett Celestin, a co-worker of Kemp’s, was there for Chavez’s performanc­e and remembered how the magician disregarde­d her protests and “smelled her chest.”

“He got close enough that obviously it was very uncomforta­ble,” Celestin said.

Hannibal also witnessed the act and sought out security personnel

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? SINCE 1963, L.A.’s Magic Castle has served as a private club for magicians and the art’s enthusiast­s.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times SINCE 1963, L.A.’s Magic Castle has served as a private club for magicians and the art’s enthusiast­s.
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? ED KWON grew up in South Korea dreaming of the Magic Castle, but at the club, he says, he was subjected to racism.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ED KWON grew up in South Korea dreaming of the Magic Castle, but at the club, he says, he was subjected to racism.
 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? FOR A 1970 illusion staged outside the Castle, magician Dai Vernon appears to levitate Irene Larsen, who founded the club in Hollywood with her husband, Bill, and brother-in-law Milt.
Los Angeles Times FOR A 1970 illusion staged outside the Castle, magician Dai Vernon appears to levitate Irene Larsen, who founded the club in Hollywood with her husband, Bill, and brother-in-law Milt.
 ?? THE MAGIC CASTLE ?? is designed to feel mysterious, but the main staircase can pose embarrassm­ent for
THE MAGIC CASTLE is designed to feel mysterious, but the main staircase can pose embarrassm­ent for
 ?? Silvia Razgova For The Times ?? THIS WAS the line at the door on June 11, 2019, a profitable year for the Castle. Visitors must be members or, for the most part, invited by one. The facility is now closed per pandemic protocols.
Silvia Razgova For The Times THIS WAS the line at the door on June 11, 2019, a profitable year for the Castle. Visitors must be members or, for the most part, invited by one. The facility is now closed per pandemic protocols.
 ?? Silvia Razgova For The Times ?? JASON FULLILOVE was executive chef at the Magic Castle until early this year. An overheard comment in the dining room, according to a club member, disparaged him with a racial slur.
Silvia Razgova For The Times JASON FULLILOVE was executive chef at the Magic Castle until early this year. An overheard comment in the dining room, according to a club member, disparaged him with a racial slur.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? r women in dresses. Members say that some patrons at the ground-f loor bar can see up skirts.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times r women in dresses. Members say that some patrons at the ground-f loor bar can see up skirts.

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