Rob Zabrecky
Rob Zabrecky (born June 2, 1968) is an American actor, musician, magician, mentalist, author, and songwriter renowned for his multifaceted career that blends performance arts, storytelling, and eccentricity.[1][2] Zabrecky's professional journey began in the music scene as the frontman, singer-songwriter, and bassist for the Los Angeles-based alternative rock band Possum Dixon, which released three albums on Interscope Records during the 1990s, establishing him as an original entertainer in the indie rock landscape.[3] Transitioning into acting, he has portrayed aberrant and memorable characters in film and television, including roles such as the Pioneer Man in A Ghost Story (2017), MC in Lost River (2014), Jonathan in Decay (2015), the Motel Manager in A Desert (2024), and appearances in series like Criminal Minds, GLOW, Strange Angel, and Fallout.[1][4][5][6][7] In magic and mentalism, Zabrecky has garnered significant acclaim, earning six awards from the Academy of Magical Arts at the Magic Castle, including two Stage Magician of the Year honors (2011 and 2012), two Lecturer of the Year titles (2017 and 2018), and the Close-Up Magician of the Year in 2025; his signature show, The Zabrecky Hour, features a unique blend of comedy, mystery, and theatrical effects performed worldwide from Tokyo to New York City.[2][8][9][10] As an author, he published the memoir Strange Cures in 2019 through Rothco Press, a turbulent account of self-discovery, addiction, recovery, and reinvention in 1980s and 1990s Los Angeles, which received praise from the Los Angeles Times for evoking a vivid, alien portrait of the city's underbelly.[11][12]Personal life
Early life
Rob Zabrecky was born on June 2, 1968, in Burbank, California.[13] He is the son of Ralph Zabrecky, a construction worker, and Renee Zabrecky (née McGinley), a Scottish immigrant who moved to Burbank in 1962 and later coordinated weddings at a local Polynesian restaurant; the couple married in 1967.[11][14][15] Raised in a lower-middle-class family in the suburban San Fernando Valley during the 1980s, Zabrecky grew up in an environment where teenagers often roamed freely in the sprawling Los Angeles area.[16][11] As a shy and awkward child, Zabrecky struggled with personal insecurities, including dozens of warts on his hands that made him feel like a pariah during elementary school.[11][16] He idolized his uncle, whom he initially believed to be a secretive government agent, though this perception later shifted upon learning of the man's unemployed and troubled nature.[16] Simple pleasures like video games and junk food provided some escape during his youth in Burbank, a community just minutes from Hollywood.[16][17] Zabrecky's early exposure to performance came through music, sparked during a summer visit to a Scottish village—his mother's birthplace—where he was introduced to punk rock influences.[16] Back in Los Angeles, he became drawn to the underground arts scene, including punk venues like the Lhasa Club on Santa Monica Boulevard, where figures such as Exene Cervenka performed.[11] These experiences in his late teens fueled his initial artistic pursuits as he transitioned into young adulthood in the late 1980s.Family and relationships
Rob Zabrecky married Tommi Zabrecky on August 8, 1998.[1] The couple resides in the Los Angeles area, where they have maintained a low-profile personal life focused on mutual support amid Zabrecky's multifaceted career.[2] Zabrecky has publicly acknowledged his wife's role as a vital personal support system, crediting her with inspiring and co-creating elements of his work, which has helped sustain his artistic pursuits over the years.[18][19][20] Zabrecky has an older brother, Gordon, and a sister, Laura.[14] As of November 2025, the Zabreckys continue to live in Los Angeles, balancing private family life with occasional collaborative endeavors in entertainment.[21]Professional career
Musical career
Rob Zabrecky formed the alternative rock band Possum Dixon in 1989 with guitarist Celso Chavez and drummer Bryan Kovacs, serving as the group's singer-songwriter and bassist. The band drew from neo-new wave and post-punk influences, gaining attention in the Los Angeles independent music scene through club performances.[22] Possum Dixon signed with Interscope Records and released their self-titled debut album in 1993, featuring tracks like "Watch the Girl Destroy Me" that showcased Zabrecky's literate, witty lyrics over driving pop-rock arrangements.[23] Critics praised the album's edgy energy and eclectic style, comparing it to late-1970s new wave acts while noting its fresh take on slacker-era themes.[24] The band followed with Star Maps in 1996 and New Sheets in 1998, both on Interscope, evolving their sound with more polished production while maintaining propulsive hooks and keyboard accents from pianist Robert O'Sullivan.[25] Star Maps received acclaim for refining the debut's raw mayhem into focused, excellent pop-rock, though commercial success remained elusive.[26] New Sheets was similarly lauded as a strong, overlooked effort in the genre, highlighting Zabrecky's frustration-tinged vocals against tight instrumentation.[27] Possum Dixon disbanded in 1999 after three albums.[28] Following the breakup, Zabrecky contributed to side projects, including performances with the art-punk band The Centimeters, an earlier Los Angeles group he had been involved with during the 1990s.[29] In 2025, The Centimeters reunited for a performance at The Regent Theater in Los Angeles on November 29 as part of Spaceland's 30th anniversary celebration.[30] That year also saw Zabrecky's solo release of the single "Our Magic is His" on February 7 via In the Red Records, issued as a 7-inch vinyl with a dreamlike video exploring themes of illusion.[31] By the late 1990s, Zabrecky began transitioning from music to other creative pursuits, including acting and magic, while occasionally returning to musical endeavors.[32]Magical career
Rob Zabrecky began his magical career in the early 2000s, with his first performances at the Magic Castle in Hollywood starting in 2002, where he quickly became a regular act known for his distinctive close-up magic routines.[33] His style drew from a blend of sleight-of-hand techniques and theatrical flair, often incorporating elements of absurdity and unease that set him apart in the competitive Los Angeles magic scene.[34] In 2003, Zabrecky co-founded the magic cabaret trio The Unholy Three at the Magic Castle's basement venue, alongside David Lovering of the Pixies and magician Fitzgerald, presenting signature acts that fused séances, provocative Dada-esque wizardry, and intimate close-up illusions to create an atmosphere of existential intrigue.[19] The group's performances emphasized bizarre themes, with Zabrecky often serving as the enigmatic host guiding audiences through simulated spiritual encounters and mind-bending manipulations.[35] Zabrecky's profile rose further with a notable television appearance on the CW's Penn & Teller: Fool Us in 2016, where he performed a creepy mentalism routine involving a haunted doll and audience interaction, successfully fooling the hosts with his dark, narrative-driven presentation.[36] This exposure highlighted his evolution toward more theatrical and macabre elements, influencing his shift from traditional close-up magic to spook-oriented shows that bordered on performance art. By the 2020s, Zabrecky had fully embraced spook shows, reviving vintage horror-themed magic traditions with acts like SEANCE! With Zabrecky in 2022, a live performance captured on glow-in-the-dark vinyl that simulated a participatory séance complete with eerie soundscapes and ghostly invocations.[37] His one-man variety show, The Zabrecky Hour, blending magic, comedy, and macabre storytelling, was filmed as a concert special in 2024 at Dynasty Typewriter in Los Angeles and performed on October 31, 2025, at Rhapsody Theater in Chicago for Halloween.[38] These productions underscored his dark, bizarre persona, often drawing subtle rhythmic influences from his musical background to enhance the hypnotic pacing of his illusions.[3] In 2025, Zabrecky continued this trajectory with a revival of the vintage spook show on October 12 at the Dynasty Typewriter in Los Angeles, featuring magic, mischievous ghosts, and a screening of the classic horror film House on Haunted Hill.[39] Later that year, he hosted Night of Zabrecky, an ethereal evening of spirits and illusions extended into Halloween season at the Steve Allen Theater.[40] Upcoming performances included the close-up magic spectacle ZABRECKY: STRANGE WONDERS on December 20, 2025, at the Philosophical Research Society, showcasing intimate bizarre effects in an occult-inspired setting,[41] and Séance: The Board Awakens, an original immersive theatrical piece written and starring Zabrecky, set for January 29 to February 15, 2025, at Constellation Stage & Screen's Waldron Auditorium, exploring Ouija board terrors through interactive magic.[42]Acting career
Zabrecky entered the acting field in the mid-2000s, transitioning from his music background to portray aberrant and quirky characters in film and television, often drawing on his eccentric persona influenced by his magical background.[1] His early roles included guest appearances in series such as CSI: NY (2007), where he played The Professor, and Brothers & Sisters (2008), marking a shift from music-adjacent cameos to more defined character work.[1] By the 2010s, he had established himself in supporting parts that highlighted his ability to embody unconventional figures, contributing to a career arc of increasing prominence in indie projects.[38] In film, Zabrecky gained recognition for supporting roles in notable indie productions. He portrayed the Master of Ceremonies in Ryan Gosling's directorial debut Lost River (2014), a dark fantasy set in a decaying urban landscape.[5] His first leading role came in Decay (2015), where he played Jonathan, a middle-aged groundskeeper who develops an obsessive attachment to a corpse, showcasing his talent for psychologically intense, offbeat characters.[6] This was followed by a cameo as Pioneer Man in David Lowery's meditative supernatural drama A Ghost Story (2017), further cementing his presence in atmospheric indie cinema.[4] On television, Zabrecky has made recurring guest appearances in popular series, often in eccentric supporting capacities. In GLOW (2017), he appeared as Rob the Satanist, adding a layer of oddball humor to the wrestling ensemble drama. He also featured as John Henry Henson in the Criminal Minds episode "Elliott's Pond" (2017), portraying a suspect in a chilling procedural storyline. Other credits include roles in Strange Angel (2018).[38] Post-2017, Zabrecky expanded into additional indie and short films, maintaining his focus on versatile, genre-blending portrayals. Notable examples include Z'ev Feist in the horror-comedy Hanukkah (2019), the Magician in the satirical Mainstream (2020), and Officer 2 in the experimental Free LSD (2023).[1] He also took on the role of The Director in the short film A Desert (2024), alongside appearances in projects like Boo! (2018), underscoring his ongoing commitment to indie cinema's boundary-pushing narratives.[1]Writing career
Rob Zabrecky debuted as an author in 2019 with the memoir Strange Cures, published by Rothco Press, which chronicles his bizarre personal experiences, including health anomalies and reflections on life in Los Angeles' underground arts scene from the 1970s to 1990s.[12][11] The book details his journey through self-discovery, addiction, recovery, and reinvention as a performer, blending vivid autobiographical narratives with cultural history.[38][11] That same year, Zabrecky released The A,B,Z's of Magic through Vanishing Inc., a companion instructional work offering essays on magic techniques, philosophy, character development, and the creative process behind effective performances.[43][44] Drawing from his award-winning lectures, the book serves as a masterclass in presenting magic as theatrical art, emphasizing intent, practice, and entertainment.[43] Zabrecky's writing style across these works is autobiographical and instructional, fusing humor with macabre elements to explore personal oddities and professional insights in magic.[11][38] The memoir, in particular, has influenced public perception of his "strange" persona, reinforcing his reputation as an enigmatic figure in performance arts through its unflinching portrayal of reinvention.[12][11] Prior to these publications, Zabrecky contributed articles to magic journals, including a 2013 cover feature in Genii – The Conjuror's Magazine titled "Robbie's Strange Cure," which previewed themes later expanded in his memoir.[45][12] No major book-length writings by Zabrecky have been published since 2019, though he has continued to share insights on performance arts through lectures and occasional contributions to industry publications.[12]Auctioneering
Zabrecky trained as an auctioneer in the early 2000s, shortly after transitioning away from his music career, and began working at an auction house in Los Angeles.[46] His skills quickly found application in fundraising efforts, where he has conducted live auctions for charitable causes tied to the arts. For instance, in 2007, he led the live auction at the Silverlake Conservatory of Music's third annual Hullabaloo benefit concert, an event headlined by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Eddie Vedder, and other performers, which raised funds for the organization's music education programs through silent and live bidding on donated items.[47][48] Zabrecky's auctioneering style draws on his entertainment background, incorporating a charismatic and theatrical delivery that echoes the showmanship from his music and magic performances. This flair enhances the energy of charity events, particularly those involving artistic items like donated artwork or memorabilia. He has regularly called bids at art auctions and similar gatherings in the Los Angeles area, supporting community initiatives over more than a decade.[46] In addition to live events, Zabrecky has portrayed auctioneers in television roles, including appearances on The Mentalist, Brothers & Sisters, and Keeping Up with the Kardashians, further blending his professional skills with acting. As of 2025, he maintains involvement in charity auctions within Los Angeles arts circles, continuing to leverage his expertise for philanthropic causes.[46]Awards and recognition
Magical arts awards
Rob Zabrecky has been honored multiple times by the Academy of Magical Arts (AMA) at the Magic Castle in Hollywood, California, for his distinctive bizarre magic style that blends dark humor, storytelling, and innovative illusions in both close-up and stage formats. These awards underscore his significant contributions to the magical arts community, particularly during his long tenure performing and lecturing at the Magic Castle. From 2011 to 2018, Zabrecky received six awards from the AMA, highlighting his versatility across performance categories.[3][38] The following table summarizes his key AMA awards from this period:| Year | Award Category | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Stage Magician of the Year | Recognized for exceptional stage performances combining magic with narrative elements.[33][49] |
| 2012 | Stage Magician of the Year | Second consecutive win, affirming his mastery of large-scale bizarre magic routines.[33][49] |
| 2014 | Parlour Magician of the Year | Honored for intimate, interactive magic in smaller venues, emphasizing psychological and atmospheric effects.[33][50] |
| 2015 | Parlour Magician of the Year | Repeat award, celebrating continued innovation in close-quarters performances.[33][50] |