Avadon gained national attention in 1977 when he began working with a rabbi at a synagogue in the
San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles. The rabbi saw Avadon performing for children outside the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art and was impressed. Avadon, who was Jewish, and the rabbi teamed up to jointly present Sabbath services which were called "illusion-and-illumination service." While the rabbi told a Biblical story "from the shadows of the temple's altar turned-stage," Avadon contributed visual aids and illusions from center stage. Avadon illustrated the burning bush with "a fire that seemed to be burning from his hand." Attendance at the Sabbath services rose from the usual 150 or 200 worshipers to crowds of 750, including many children, when Avadon began participating. ==America's "premier exhibition pickpocket"==