One House Plays Another...
Anne Rice's Mayfair Witches logo and title graphics courtesy AMC/AMC+
Since the premiere of Mayfair Witches in January 2023, there has been some confusion and uncertainty about the house
Anne Rice used in the Lives of the Mayfair Witches novels and the house used in the AMC series as the Mayfair house.
This page discusses the house used in the AMC series.
To be clear, the house that is used as the ancestral New Orleans home of the legacy Mayfair Witches in the AMC
series is NOT the same home Anne Rice owned and lived in when she wrote
The Witching Hour
. The house used in the AMC series is another house only blocks away on Prytania Street in the same neighborhood.
The house is known as the Soria-Creel house and is the subject of this page of the Parlor. This page is among those
that are devoted to discussing the AMC series.
In Character~Season 2
Since this page, one of the newest in the Parlor, went up, many have visited it. I can certainly see why, though. The
Soria-Creel house is a beautiful house!
Since Season 1, I have periodically tried to find more information about the actual history of the Soria-Creel house.
Homes like this are not only historic; they are a part of the history of New Orleans and of the United States in
general. There isn't quite as much online about the house as there is the Brevard-Rice house. But what I have managed
to find, I've tried to make available by adding them to this page of the Parlor.
Below, the enormous images of the house from Season 1 filming by RisingCrescent on Instagram really show the details
of the house during filming. RisingCrescent has added some new images of the Soria-Creel house from filming Season 2.
To see the additional images by RisingCrescent, look her up on Instagram...
Historical Sign at the Soria-Creel House
Photo Courtesy: risingcrescent on Instagram
In Character~Season 1
Come Into My Parlor...
Southern Gothic Perfection Gallery by risingcrescent on Instagram
Very Large--Get a closer look...
The image above can be opened to full size, 3024x4032. It is the Soria-Creel house made into the Mayfair house. I wanted to provide the image at full size so you can get a closer look at details.
The House
The Soria-Creel house on Prytania Street was built in 1875. It is mere blocks away from 1239 First Street. Although
the Mayfair Witches' home of the novels is built with Greek Revival architecture, it also features Italianate
architecture, which the Soria-Creel house also features.
This is the house that was used as the Mayfair house in Anne Rice's Mayfair Witches on AMC. If I understand correctly,
it was the exterior of the house, and its garden, that were used. It does look like the front hall of the house was
also used. If not, it was reproduced well on a soundstage.
Because it's a lot of fun to see these beautiful homes with so much history, I decided to go into more detail on those
properties. This is one of the reasons the house used as Mona Mayfair's house on Amelia Street has a page on the site.
You will find a link to that page of the Parlor at the bottom of this one.
Now, I am devoting a page on this site to the Soria-Creel house. Images are the easy part; I'm hoping to find more
documentation of its history, architectural details, and other details to help distinguish it from 1239 First Street.
I hope to add more information as I find it.
This page is no doubt going to remain in a constant state of construction, so please keep checking back!
Was 'Mayfair Witches' Filmed in Anne Rice's Hometown of New Orleans? Let's Investigate
Gallery Of the Soria-Creel House
As I begin to research the history of the Soria Creel house, I typically see photos of its interior taken in the
present day. The ones you will see in the slideshow gallery below come from an online article about the house on
NOLA.com that is linked below.
What I hope to find are photos of the house taken over time, very much like the historic photos of 1239 First Street.
In addition to that, it would be great to be able to find more historical records that can tell us more about this
beautiful home.
NOLA - Kitchen Is the Heart of a Garden District House
In the first image, a larger version of the image of the home as it looks when it is NOT a filming location, I noticed
something. The siding is actually painted a pale lemon yellow. 1239 First Street was given a paint job with a similar
color at one point as well.
Looking at these images, things begin to jump out that we no doubt recognize from images of other houses like this
one. One is the use of mirrors in double parlors. The mirrors positioned between the front windows and between the
windows on the opposite end of the room have to be the most enormous "full length mirrors" I've ever seen. The mirrors
over the fireplace mantles, same! The double parlor, which is clearly the largest room in the entire house, was likely
the room also used for entertaining. So, like the ballroom at Nottoway Plantation, these mirrors no doubt came in
handy for discreetly checking oneself for anything out of place before someone else pointed it out.
A word or two about Nottoway Plantation:
The Mayfair Witches Parlor recognizes that many people have opinions and feelings about the destruction of Nottoway
Plantation by fire on May 15, 2025. The Parlor understands this and understands the reasons why. The purpose of
Nottoway's presence on The Mayfair Witches Parlor is in the context of history and architecture. It is important to
remember, however, that with history comes things that happened that people have tended to be uncomfortable with the
idea of confronting. One of those is indeed the issue of slavery and who did the physical work of bringing these
architectural marvels to life.
The Mayfair Witches Parlor has added an advisory to the page of the Parlor that discusses another long-gone plantation
that served as an inspiration for Fontevrault Plantation in the
Lives of the Mayfair Witches
novels. Nottoway's former neighbor in Iberville Parish, Belle Grove. To learn a little more about this plantation and
read the advisory, you may go to this page of the Parlor:
The Queen of the South: Belle Grove Plantation
One thing I believe Nottoway Plantation can show even now is an excellent example of what Italianate architecture
combined with Greek Revival architecture looks like. If you look at the many columns of Nottoway as shown in the image
below, you can see how similar they are to the Soria-Creel house.
Like many other structures with Greek Revival architecture, Nottoway also featured enormous entablature. This
entablature (cornice, frieze, architrave) is seen on many Greek Revival structures like Nottoway. Often, this
entablature was part of parapet walls surrounding the structure's roof. This is a feature that also appears on the
Brevard-Rice house and was described in
The Witching Hour
.
Though you cannot see them in the photo of the white ballroom below, the ornate white arch of the room featured fluted
columns with the recognizable ornate and detailed capitals.
Below is a photo of Nottoway Plantation estimated to have been taken in or about the 1930s. The photo comes from
Nottoway Resort's website. I've placed it here so it is easier to compare Nottoway's exterior architecture to that of
the Soria-Creel house.
Nottoway Plantation ca. 1930s
Image from Nottoway Resort
Slideshow Gallery
1 / 6The Soria Creel House, New Orleans
You will notice that some of the pictures on the walls are blurred. This is something I do for purposes of privacy.
The Haunted Garden
Linked below is a December 2017 article about the history of the Soria Creel House on the Holiday Home Tour. Shown below the link are a few images of the house's front door, gate and fence that are from this article.
Holiday Home Tour - 3102 Prytania Street
The Garden
I'm trying out different ways of presenting images on the Parlor, which is why you see two different types of image
galleries above.
These are of the Soria Creel house as it appears when it's not playing the home of the Mayfair Witches.
Scaling the Garden District
The White Ballroom, Nottoway Plantation
One thing about these houses that completely astonishes me is their scale. In the image of the double parlor that
gives a closer, more direct view of the windows, we start to get a much better idea of their true size. Most of us are
used to homes where doors are doors, windows are windows, and only one of them is used for entering or leaving the
room.
Like this:
Rowan Enters the Parlor, AMC Mayfair Witches Season 1, 2023
If the windows are so big that one can lift the lower sash and walk right into a room as if the window were a door,
then how big are the doors? There are interior doors, but then, there is the front door.
Seeing Stella/Rowan (Alexandra Daddario) standing at the front door, we begin to get a better idea of the enormous
scale of these Garden District houses.
Stella-I Mean Rowan-At the Door, AMC Mayfair Witches Season 1, 2023
When reading
The Witching Hour
, one finds a description of the scale of the second floor of the Mayfair house (1239 First Street). Ceilings are a
little lower on the second floor than they are on the first floor. I understand interiors of the Mayfair house for the
AMC series were filmed on a soundstage, we can still get an idea of the scale of the second floor from it.
We can see this when Carlotta goes to knock on Deirdre's bedroom door:
Carlotta at Deirdre's Bedroom Door, AMC Mayfair Witches Season 1, 2023
*Parlor Note: I make some GIF images go in reverse as well because one direction makes them too jumpy to really look at details in them. Other times, it can make for a nicer flow of animation.*
Just why were these houses built with ceilings soaring that high over everyone's heads? And what is the purpose of
transom windows above doors on the second floor? The answer is "air flow".
This is another reason why these older houses in New Orleans are so unique. Not only is the history and culture part
of what makes New Orleans stand out as unique among American cities, but so is its climate. In a time long before air
conditioning or even a nice swamp cooler, people needed a way to cool the air inside their houses. Since heat moves
UP, the higher the ceiling, the further away from the occupants the heat is.
Of course, there needs to be somewhere the heat can go besides being contained in the rooms. Transom windows on the
second floor serve that purpose. This might also explain why these houses had such massive sash windows that could be
used to enter and exit the house. Interior doors are still pretty enormous in scale, which you can get a good idea of
here:
Butterfly In the Parlor, AMC Mayfair Witches Season 1, 2023
Welcome To the Dollhouse
The Dollhouse, Mayfair Witches S02E05 (AMC)
Is this...?
Yes, it is!
The dollhouse made of the Soria-Creel house for AMC's Mayfair Witches. This dollhouse appeared in Episode 5, "Julien's
Victrola".
When Rowan tried to return from her visit to Julien Mayfair's "hidey-hole", his afterlife in the Victrola, only a part
of her returned. Julien held onto the intellectual part of Rowan while the part of her governed by her heart returned
to her living world in the Mayfair house. Julien clearly used the dollhouse model of the Mayfair house as a means by
which he watched his living descendants. When Lark appeared at the Mayfair house to look for Rowan, Julien's ability
to interact with the living is demonstrated in what might seem like a harmless prank.
I said
seem
.
When Julien blew at the front doors as Lark approached them, Lark experienced this the way many who experience odd
things with doors. The front doors just swung open. To Lark, they appeared to do this on their own. Rowan, on the
other hand, was not amused. When she demanded to know why Julien had done that, he seemed amused as well as pleased
with himself when he answered, "Because I can!"
Naturally, this dollhouse fascinated me. Not just because I love miniatures, but because it was fascinating to see
this after having built my own 3D model of the Brevard-Rice house as the Mayfair house of the novels. There is a
behind-the-scenes featurette for Episode 5 on the YouTube channel for amc+. A longer behind-the-scenes video is also
available on amc+ and provides even more details about the dollhouse.
The dollhouse itself appears to be something of a "shell", meaning the house model does not have an interior (kinda).
Some of the rooms appear to have had something like what could be called half of a "cyclorama", a curved panoramic
image of the interior meant to make the house appear to have an interior when looking at the windows. Many who build
3D models of buildings sometimes use a cyclorama to give the appearance of a realistic outdoor environment from the
inside of the model. A sky, a treeline, perhaps even buildings or hillsides in the distance.
The most fascinating aspect of the dollhouse was how the scenes were filmed to appear to be taking place within it.
The short explanation is camera angles and greenscreen. If you watch the behind-the-scenes featurettes, it will give a
more detailed explanation of how this incredible effect was achieved.
It really is as if Julien Mayfair's ghost kept watch over the house and everyone and everything in it. Clearly, he
could interact with living Mayfairs by manipulating the dollhouse in ways that echoed in the real house. He is like a
puppet master, or perhaps he would prefer to be thought of as "God-like"? One can certainly see that Julien Mayfair
saw the living Mayfairs as his dolls to manipulate at will, making such a dollhouse an excellent means of showing how
he saw himself in relation to his family. It also shows, with the help of the world inside Julien's Victrola, that
this view of himself did not stop at death.
I don't know what has become of this dollhouse, but maybe, if it still exists, it can be given an interior? It can
even be given working lights! Around my house somewhere are actual miniature kiln-fired bricks, and even wallpaper in
miniature patterns, plaster crown moldings, baseboards, wood floor sheets... Yes, if one is so inclined, this can be
made into a real miniature showcase...
NOT the Soria-Creel House
The Soria-Creel house is a beautiful house with its own history and is located in the same historic neighborhood as
the Brevard-Rice house. As discussed, it is the house used in the AMC series as the home of the Mayfair Witches.
To help further clear up confusion and uncertainty as to which house is the witch house, you will find below links to
the pages of the Parlor that discuss the house Anne Rice used in the
Lives of the Mayfair Witches
as Rowan's ancestral home. You will also find a link to a page of the Parlor that discusses the home Anne Rice used as
the home of Mona Mayfair, the home identified as being located on Amelia Street in New Orleans in
Lasher
and
Taltos
(start reading, y'all, now that the word "taltos" has been said in the show). Anne Rice also owned this home at one
point, but it is NOT the home Rowan inherited in the novels.
For more about Anne Rice's New Orleans home that she used as the home of the legacy Mayfair Witches in her novels:
The Witching Hour - Inside First Street
For more about the home Anne Rice used as the home of Mona Mayfair in Lasher and Taltos :
Amelia Street: The Fontevrault Outpost
House Rule
This is a PRIVATE residence.
The Parlor understands this particular house is an historic property in an equally historic neighborhood. If your
visit to New Orleans includes a tour of the Garden District, please be respectful of property lines and the privacy of
the home's occupants. Thank you! ~The Parlor