Comic magician Justin Willman returns to Fox Tucson Theatre on Saturday, May 21, to do โ€œMagic for Humans.โ€

Comic-magician Justin Willman spent the pandemic performing magic for nearly a million people from all over the world.

Thatโ€™s how many people all told tuned into his Zoom shows โ€” โ€œMagic for Humans at Home,โ€ a takeoff on his 2018 Netflix series โ€œMagic for Humans.โ€

Now many of those folks, whose only familiarity with Willman was through his television appearances on celebrity chef Rachel Rayโ€™s talk show and hosting โ€œCupcake Warsโ€ on the Food Network and โ€œBaking Impossibleโ€ on Netflix, are seeing him live.

โ€œA lot of people who come to my shows now discovered me from watching me on TV ... and on Zoom but have never seen me live,โ€ said the 41-year-old Willman, who is bringing โ€œMagic for Humansโ€ to Fox Tucson Theatre on Saturday, May 21. โ€œWhatโ€™s great about the art of magic and the show Iโ€™ve put together is it is even more amazing in person. When you are there, youโ€™re in the audience and this show is happening in real time and you are a part of it. โ€ฆ Itโ€™s much easier to get swept away into the magic and the experience when you are there.โ€

The Zoom version of โ€œMagic for Humansโ€ was spawned, he said, out of the need to โ€œlet out the kink in my creative hose.โ€ It also helped him deal with the loss of his mother, who died early into the pandemic.

โ€œI think I took for granted how vital (performing) was to my personhood and to my emotional and human wellbeing to have an outlet,โ€ Willman said.

His show Saturday is his first Tucson show in a decade and will be the first time he performs outside of the Gaslight Theatre, where he was a regular going back as early as 2002.

He went by the stage name โ€œJustin Kredibleโ€ back then.

โ€œI used to come to visit my grandparents in SaddleBrooke and I would do shows at the Gaslight,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd that started this relationship that kind of ticked kind of a personal and professional box. It was great quality time with my grandparents where they got to see me perform and I would come spend time in Tucson anyway. And also being able to have this incredible venue and audience and fanbase to build. The Gaslight was special.โ€

Willman was in the middle of telling a story about the magic friends he met in Tucson including Tucson native Eric Buss when we got a Facebook messenger notification. It was, of all people, Buss.

โ€œWow, that is so weird,โ€ Willman said, recalling how he and Buss had known one another since they competed in the same magic contest in 1996. Buss won the adult prize and Willman won the teen category.

Willman, the father of a 4-year-old son named Jackson, said he hopes people in Tucson remember him.

He remembers us.

โ€œThere wasnโ€™t another city like that for me,โ€ he said. โ€œTucson was always kind of a like a second home.โ€


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Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com. On Twitter @Starburch