Tiki Central / General Tiki
Dark Side, St. Louis MO
Pages: 1 5 replies
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ManFromT.I.K.I.
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Thu, Jan 7, 2016 11:39 AM
A pictorial article came to my attention recently, and while looking through it I came upon some pictures that I thought would be of interest. A search turned up nothing, so I'll share these here. They are of a club called Dark Side. I assume the band are the Quartet Tres Bien featured on the banner in the exterior shot. Check out the interior decor...velvet painting, puffer fish and glass float lighting, netting, bamboo, and grass matting. I just thought it was a cool period glimpse into what must have been one of many such hole in wall places across the U.S. that while not exactly Tiki Temples, speak to the spirit and fashion of the time. Blurb from the article, with mention of thousands more pictures...attention St. Louis area Tiki archivists! "This week's feature looks at St. Louis nightlife and those who helped shape it. No discussion of St. Louis' social scene would be complete without mentioning Gaslight Square of the 1950s and '60s, centered on what's now Boyle and Olive streets in the Central West End. Artists, musicians and patrons flocked to the vibrant entertainment district, which was home to jazz clubs, cabarets, restaurants and more. The State Historical Society has literally thousands of Gaslight Square photos -- here are 27 we especially love. All photos courtesy of the State Historical Society of Missouri." http://photos.riverfronttimes.com/27-incredible-vintage-photos-of-artists-in-gaslight-square/#1
[ Edited by: ManFromT.I.K.I. 2016-01-07 12:41 ] |
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Cavemoai
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Thu, Jan 7, 2016 12:18 PM
WOW! Killer photos! |
JD
Johnny Dollar
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Thu, Jan 7, 2016 1:46 PM
Good stuff! Central West End is still a cool place, but certainly not as boho as that. I recall hearing from family that the communities that were condemned for the construction of the Gateway Arch were a vibrant arts scene, up until they started tearing the places down. |
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bigbrotiki
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Thu, Jan 7, 2016 6:38 PM
This could have been a Polynesian-style hideaway with another name once, and when it failed it became the "Dark Side". If someone could cross-check the address with local Poly pop places…? Because even as Tiki was at its height, older, out-dated Pre-Tiki "bamboo huts" closed down, as told about in this 1961 movie "The Right Approach": Synopsis: One of them has a brother, Leo Mack, who will stop at nothing in his desire to succeed as an actor. Leo cons the guys out of clothes and money. He also conspires with a carhop, Ursula, who hopes to seduce one of the roommates. The young man happens to be from a wealthy family, so Ursula and Leo intend to split whatever they can get. A magazine writer, Anne Perry, is romanced by Leo and persuaded to do an article about The Hut, which is mainly about him. Leo gets an agent and Hollywood offers, and seems on top of the world until a scorned Anne exposes him publicly for the cad he is, as does Ursula, who is pregnant with his child. More info: http://lecinemadreams.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-right-approach-1961.html [ Edited by: bigbrotiki 2016-01-07 18:39 ] |
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mokan-tiki
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Fri, Jan 27, 2017 10:43 AM
Kansas City tikiphile here who was born and raised in St Louis, so it's always neat to come across posts like this. Even if it is a year later. th Quartet Tres Bien was a St Louis based jazz quartet who ventured into afro/latin exotica occasionally and cut numerous jazz albums. The title track off their album Kilamanjaro being a prime example. Found this little write-up about The Dark Side club from owner Bob Anslyn in a story on Ancestry.com of all places. THE TRUE BEGINNING OF GASLIGHT SQUARE..................... "In the late In December 1959, I opened the first new lounge in the Olive Street/ Boyle In the early 1960's, the original four lounge owners named the area Gaslight The owners of the Crystal Palace [The Landsdemens] brought in off-Broadway By the early 1970's the Gaslight Square area was gone. Joe & Charles moved Remember me, BOB ANSLYN who built the Dark Side and his bartender friend Red As far as I can tell, Bob still lives here in KC with his wife Grace. |
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mokan-tiki
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Wed, May 10, 2017 7:54 PM
So I found some new info on the Dark Side and the photos of the band posted above. Turns out that those are not in fact photos of Quartet Tres Bien, but in fact the Don Cunningham Combo. In researching another tiki venue in Gaslight Square, The Islander, I discovered that Don Cunningham was a musician and band leader of the Don Cunningham Combo that played at the Dark Side since its opening, and then later moved to The Islander. When they left the Dark Side, Cunningham reccommended Quartet Tres Bien to the owner. (source: https://www.stlmag.com/arts/It-Takes-a-Quiet-Village-The-Journey-of-Don-Cunningham/). The true tell on the group in the pictures is the fact that Marion Miller was the piano player in the Don Cunningham Combo, and you can clearly see him seated at and playing the piano in those pictures. Reference photo of Marion from his album Marion at the Mainlander Two clear photos of Marion Miller at the piano playing with the Don Cunningham Combo I also read that the Dark Side and Quartet Tres Bien were featured in an episode of Route 66 with the bar being the backdrop for a scene and a speaking roll for percussionist Percy James. Now when watching this scene...The Dark Side interior really doesnt look anything like the pictures featuring the Don Cunningham Combo posted above. So it makes me wonder...are the contact sheets that the MO State Historical Society scanned from the negatives provided by the family of the original photographer Thelma Blumberg incorrect? Is that not the Dark Side, but instead really the interior of The Islander? Here's the outside of The Islander (which I intend to create a post about since I can't find any info on TC about it thus far). Just makes me wonder... |
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