Dorian's Gray Room is a warlock's gentleman's club, formerly owned by Dorian Gray.
History[]
Dorian's Gray Room is an exclusive and luxurious club for wealthy warlocks run by the infamous Dorian Gray. The club has a strict dress code and, for some time, only allowed male guests. The misogynist restrictions were not extended to exotic dancers such as Salome, thus reinforcing the sexism of such rules.[1] The club also provided exclusive and private meeting with sex demons of both genders in BDSM guest rooms.[2] Nick Scratch used such services when suffering from PTSD following his infernal merging with the Dark Lord.[3]
For some time the club was also a base of operation of the Judas Society, an extremist faction of the Church of Night led by Faustus Blackwood.
After returning to his angelic form, Lucifer Morningstar visited the club and used it as his base of operations to manage his imminent extended rule over Earth, making Sabrina his Queen of Pandemonium. From here, he sent both Lilith and Blackwood to do his bidding. At Dorian's Gray Room, Lucifer was beaten and imprisoned by Sabrina with the help of her family and friends.[4]
Sabrina Spellman started shake things up, visiting the club first with Nick, and then also with the Weird Sisters Prudence, Agatha and Dorcas. Dorian became more comfortable with loosen up the original rules, to the point that the club became a hangout for the students of the Academy of Unseen Arts, and also the venue for Hilda and Dr. Cerberus' wedding reception.
Despite he started to admit women, Dorian was still formal on the dress-code. This proved fatal when he rejected the Uninvited, one of the Eldritch Terrors.[5]
Occupants[]
Current Employees[]
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Former Employees[]
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Guests[] |
Appearances[]
Part 2[] |
Part 3[] |
Part 4[]
- "Chapter Thirty: The Uninvited"
- "Chapter Thirty-Two: The Imp of the Perverse"
- "Chapter Thirty-Four: The Returned"
Trivia[]
- Despite not directly mentioned, Ambrose meets with Luke at Dorian Gray's Room in "Chapter Eleven: A Midwinter's Tale". In the same episode, Jedidiah Goodacre is credited but doesn't appear.
- Employees are disturbing erotic references:
- Salome is the biblical dancer of the seven veils who demanded the head of John the Baptist. She's also the protagonist of 1893 stage play by Oscar Wilde, also author of The Picture of Dorian Gray.
- De Sade refers to the Marquis De Sade, a French libertine from which sadism takes its name.
- Salo is the title of Pasolini's erotic horror adaptation of De Sade's The 120 Days of Sodom, which is also a criticism of the fascist Republic of Salò.
Gallery[]
Reference[]
- ↑ Aguirre-Sacasa, Roberto (writer) & Sullivan, Kevin (director) (April 5, 2019). "Chapter Twelve: The Epiphany". Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Part 2. Episode 1. Netflix.
- ↑ Ly, Oanh (writer) & Seidenglanz, Rob (director) (January 24, 2020). "Chapter Twenty-Three: Heavy is the Crown". Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Part 3. Episode 3. Netflix.
- ↑ Thorland, Donna (writer) & Nguyen, Viet (director) (January 24, 2020). "Chapter Twenty-Four: The Hare Moon". Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Part 3. Episode 4. Netflix.
- ↑ Aguirre-Sacasa, Roberto (writer) & Seidenglanz, Rob (director) (April 5, 2019). "Chapter Twenty: The Mephisto Waltz". Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Part 2. Episode 9. Netflix.
- ↑ Avery, Katie (writer) & Pillai, Alex (director) (December 31, 2020). "Chapter Thirty: The Uninvited". Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. Part 4. Episode 2. Netflix.