Anton Lavey became a local celebrity in San Francisco through his
paranormal research and live performances as an organist, including playing the
Wurlitzer at the Lost Weekend cocktail lounge. He was also a publicly noticeable figure; he drove a coroner's van around town, and he walked his pet black leopard, named Zoltan. He attracted many San Francisco notables to his parties. Guests included Carin de Plessin,
Michael Harner,
Chester A. Arthur III,
Forrest J Ackerman,
Fritz Leiber, Cecil E. Nixon, and
Kenneth Anger. LaVey formed a group called the Order of the Trapezoid, which later evolved into the governing body of the Church of Satan. According to Faxneld and Petersen, the Church of Satan represented "the first public, highly visible, and long-lasting organisation which propounded a coherent Satanic discourse". LaVey began presenting Friday night lectures on the occult and rituals. A member of this circle suggested that he had the basis for a new religion. According to LaVey himself, on
Walpurgisnacht, April 30, 1966, he ritualistically
shaved his head, allegedly "in the tradition of ancient executioners", declared the founding of the Church of Satan and proclaimed 1966 as "the Year One", Anno Satanas, the first year of the Age of
Satan. LaVey's image has been described as "
Mephistophelian", and may have been inspired by an occult-themed episode of the television show
The Wild Wild West titled "The Night of the Druid's Blood" which originally aired on March 25, 1966 and starred
Don Rickles as the evil magician and Satanic cult leader Asmodeus, whose Mephistophelean persona is virtually identical to that which LaVey adopted one month later. Media attention followed the subsequent Satanic wedding ceremony of journalist John Raymond to New York City socialite Judith Case on February 1, 1967. The
Los Angeles Times and
San Francisco Chronicle were among the newspapers that printed articles dubbing him "The Black Pope". LaVey performed Satanic baptisms (including the first Satanic baptism in history for his three-year-old daughter Zeena, dedicating her to Satan and the Left-Hand Path, which garnered worldwide publicity and was originally recorded on
The Satanic Mass LP). In the late 1960s and early 1970s, LaVey melded ideological influences from
Friedrich Nietzsche,
Ayn Rand,
H. L. Mencken, and
social Darwinism with the ideology and ritual practices of the Church of Satan. He wrote essays introduced with reworked excerpts from Ragnar Redbeard's
Might Is Right and concluded with "Satanized" versions of
John Dee's
Enochian Keys to create books such as
The Complete Witch (re-released in 1989 as
The Satanic Witch), and
The Satanic Rituals. The latter book also included rituals drawing on the work of
H. P. Lovecraft. Admitting his use of
Might is Right, LaVey stated that he did so in order to "immortalize a writer who had profoundly reached me". In 1972, the public work at LaVey's
Black House in San Francisco was curtailed and work was continued via sanctioned regional "grottoes". In early 1975, LaVey announced that higher degrees of initiation could be given in return for a financial contribution. In June 1975, editor of the Church's newsletter, Michael Aquino, left the Church of Satan and formed the theistic
Temple of Set, claiming to take an unknown number of dissenters with him. The Church maintains this policy announcement was designed to "clean house" of members who did not understand Satanic philosophy. ==Later life and death==