Adding things as we find them . .
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
The Castaways, 4334 Main, KCMO
City Directories indicate that "The Castaways" may have opened in late 1959, and was certainly open for business in 1960. Owner/operator Frank Dunn and his wife Eve launched the very successful venue. Quoting a Kansas City STAR, STAR Magazine article from 12-17-99, ". . the motif of the Castaways was something like Disneyland's "Pirates of the Caribbean" ride, to the point where papier-mache palm trees decorated the interior, and beach sand was spread here and there."
"Every Saturday the club hosted a hootenanny that offered a stage for anyone who had the nerve to get out on it." This opportunity became a launching point for great performers like Gene Clark and the Surf Riders, later the Byrds.
Today, there's sadly nothing but a parking lot where this place once stood. There has to be photos somewhere both interior and exterior, but we've found nothing thus far. The search continues . .
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
The Tropics, Hotel Phillips, 106 West 12th, KCMO
The Tropics Lounge opened sometime during World War II and was located on the third floor (they counted the basement level as #1, so the third floor today is more like the second floor or mezzanine level). Here's a quote from the hotel's history flyer:
It was quite a place!
Here's the exterior of the hotel today, pretty much unchanged from when it opened in 1930.
And the vintage menu, courtesy of Mimi Payne and Arkiva Tropica.
The hotel has undergone several remodelings over the years and the location of the Tropics Lounge is difficult to determine. Today it exists only in postcards and memories.
- After dinner, the gentlemen would retire to the third floor to the popular lounge called the Tropics. The sound of thunder was piped in and the lights fluttered and went out. A mechanical hula girl would emerge from behind the bar and dance in a grass skirt while it rained behind the bar.
It was quite a place!
Here's the exterior of the hotel today, pretty much unchanged from when it opened in 1930.
And the vintage menu, courtesy of Mimi Payne and Arkiva Tropica.
The hotel has undergone several remodelings over the years and the location of the Tropics Lounge is difficult to determine. Today it exists only in postcards and memories.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Bretton's Bali Hai Room, 1215 Baltimore, KCMO
Bretton's opened in 1945 and, nine years later, added the Bali Hai room featuring Cantonese dishes. Special drinks were served in a tall ceramic mug with custom lettering by Otagiri Mercantile Company.
Max Bretton and his wife Mary’s place also featured a Main Dinning Room, the Cooper Lounge, the Baltimore Room and the Nasch Table.
Here's a photo taken in 1955 acquired from the Missouri Valley Special Collections, Kansas City Public Library, Kansas City, Missouri.
And here's what it looks like today.
Max Bretton and his wife Mary’s place also featured a Main Dinning Room, the Cooper Lounge, the Baltimore Room and the Nasch Table.
Here's a photo taken in 1955 acquired from the Missouri Valley Special Collections, Kansas City Public Library, Kansas City, Missouri.
And here's what it looks like today.
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Kon Tiki, 3257 Main KCMO
The Kon Tiki Cocktail Lounge was opened in late 1961 or early 1962 by Reuben J. Levine and Jimmy Scholtz.
The following menu images are from Mimi Payne's collection at Arkiva Tropica.
The following menu images are from Mimi Payne's collection at Arkiva Tropica.
Monday, December 7, 2009
What is Tiki?
To us, it is the mid-century-modern, polynesian popular movement that was born out of WWII veterans' desire to re-create the ideal of a South Seas paradise here at home. A time when themed restaurants and bars featured exotic and powerful rum concoctions served in beautiful and sometimes frightening drinking vessels, all in an environment filled with wondrous decor from primitive islands. And, if you were lucky, it was brought to you by beautiful Hula Girl waitresses.
Kansas City had more than a few such places, all gone now. But not forgotten.
Kansas City had more than a few such places, all gone now. But not forgotten.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)