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OGR
Or Got Rum?
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Sun, Nov 11, 2012 3:05 PM
Name:Royal Hawaiian Description: |
OGR
Or Got Rum?
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Sun, Nov 11, 2012 3:22 PM
I discovered this while searching for Northern Virginia history and amazingly this was close to my High School. I had heard of Louie's (my older brother hung out and played there) but nothing about the Royal Hawaiian. I found this Ad and then this shot from when it first became Louie's w/ the Witco (?) masks in front of the stage. "Louie's was once a Grand Union grocery store that eventually closed and was revamped in to the world's largest Tiki bar called "The Royal Hawaiian Supper Club"! The venue had a stage that could fit a whole orchestra or big band with giant carved wooden Tiki masks all over the place! But it too was unsuccessful and changed hands to new management who named it "The Place Where Louie Dwells"! They soon found out that their meager clientele couldn't generate enough money to pay their monstrous utility bills! The son of the owner of this establishment had the very hip idea of bringing rock and roll bands in the club and to it's unused massive stage! The name was now permanently changed to Louie's Rock City and it wasn't long until they had packed houses every night! They hired a staff of unusually beautiful waitresses that attracted even more people and soon the drinks were flowing and they were hiring national acts! In June 1975, Hawaiian restaurateur Johnny Kao rented the former site of Giant Food at at 3501 S. Jefferson St. in Bailey’s Crossroads and turned it into a Las Vegas styled lounge called the Royal Hawaiian Supper Club. The club opened to much anticipation and fanfare in December 1975 with Patti Page and a comedian named Freddie Roman headlining the first week. The club was beautiful by all accounts and appealed to the over-thirty suburbanites driven from the city by crime and racial tension. In short order the club featured The Platters, Phyllis Diller, Eddie Fisher, The Smothers Brothers, Billy Eckstine, The Supremes (post Diana Ross), and Bobby Rydell. However, the article on the club’s opening night sounded some ominous warnings such as the strange location of this glitzy club in the middle of a suburban shopping mall and, worst of all, on opening night it was only three-fourths full. Patti Page expressed surprise at the club’s location and Roman joked about performing in a shopping center. By June of 1976, the club ran into financial problems and was sold to new owner named Mike Munley. Mike Munley had been co-owner of the Bayou in the fifties with the Vincent and Tony Tramonte (in 1980 after selling the Bayou, Vincent Tramonte would start the Italian Store on Lee Highway). After he was bought out from the Bayou, Munley ran the Place Where Louie Dwells located originally at 1000 4th Street, SW in DC and later moved to 1011 Wesley Place, SW. It was a typical lounge in the Southwest waterfront area opening around 1966 featuring mediocre food and lounge jazz. Louie’s gained some brief notoriety when the local piano-man Samuel Marks collapsed at the piano and died. When Munley bought the Royal Hawaiian, he began to work to change the name of his new restaurant to the Place Where Louie Dwells. While Munley worked on the name change, he expanded the line up with his first act being the country singer Lynn Anderson of “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden” fame. In July 1976, one of the last acts to appear at the Royal Hawaiian Supper Club was the Mills Brothers during the week they would entertain the ever-square Gerald Ford at the White House. Munley also inherited a dire financial situation and checks sent to entertainers bounced, which led to a $15,000 lawsuit by singer Jack Albertson. The club featured artists such as the Amazing Kreskin, Brenda Lee, and Sarah Vaughn. Our Redneck Past |
ATP
Atomic Tiki Punk
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Sun, Nov 11, 2012 3:37 PM
Thanks OGR, |
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abstractiki
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Sun, Nov 11, 2012 5:12 PM
America's tiki temples often have mixed history's and you did a great job telling this one. If I was a young film producer I would love to unearth a trove of 8mm film of these shows, do some new interviews of some of these performers, and use them in a documentary to show at an area film festival. |
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bigbrotiki
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Sun, Nov 11, 2012 8:38 PM
Priceless story! Thank you.
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Dustycajun
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Mon, Dec 3, 2012 4:00 PM
I have seen a matchbook from this place, always wondered about it. Thanks for that nice bit of history OGR.
"The Showplace of the Nation's Capitol" - doesn't sound like a suburban strip mall! Funny thing about the Tiki Transmission Tradition, the Bamboo frame with a lei and flowers motif on the back of the matchbook was used decades earlier at the Kowloon in Los Angeles. I was talking to Bosko at the Don the Beachcomber Tiki Marketplace this weekend and we figured that the matchbook companies and artists sure spread a lot of Tiki imagery around over the years. DC |
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Dustycajun
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Wed, May 7, 2014 7:37 PM
Spotted this menu from the Royal Hawaiian Supper Club on ebay. They served up a pretty authentic looking Tiki bar/food experience for a 1970s joint. Lots of mugs and the standard pupus. DC |
OGR
Or Got Rum?
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posted
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Fri, May 9, 2014 1:33 PM
Very cool menu find DC...Thanks for posting. This is the postcard. Holy Witco Batman. Huge, but dining room very LOW on Tipsy side. Wish it was shot w/ it's more natural (I'm sure) darker feel. I also hope that the bar was more TIKI and intimate. OGR |
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kenbo-jitsu
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Fri, May 9, 2014 3:01 PM
Wow! That dining room can easily seat 400 people. Big place. |
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