What
you don't know about your favourite bars
NIGHT LIFE / The drama,
the laws & the things found in toilets
Ted Flett / Xtra / Thursday,
November 10, 2005
MYSTERY WOMAN. Allison
Carson is one of the Slack's staff members who raises the question: Is
she or isn't she? (Tony Fong)
In his tight office at the back of the bar, owner Bill Hievegi watches
three monitors displaying images captured by the security cameras on each
floor of Remington's. On the main- and second-floor monitors, dancers
swagger through the bar, oozing machismo as they solicit onlookers for
a private dance where they make their money. One stripper demonstrates
cool, fluid movement as he disrobes onstage.
On the third monitor,
however, Hievegi sees a very different scene unfolding. The dancers' private
change room and showers in the basement are a flurry of paranoia and self-doubt
as the men adjust their hair, makeup, jewellery and costumes (namely underwear).
One helps another to master a dance move sure to elicit crowd attention.
The dancer disappears
from the change-room screen reappearing seconds later on the main-floor
camera, all self-assured and cocky.
Oh,
what bar patrons don't see going on behind the scenes at their favourite
watering hole. Though drowned out by thumping music and masked by dark
lighting, the goings on behind the bars and Staff Only doors can be as
entertaining as the front-of-the-house show.
The job of a bartender,
for example, comes with some amount of celebrity, which can create drama
where you least expect it. First, there's the competition for spots.
"We get a dozen
or two applications per month," says Woody's manager Dean Odorico.
A large chunk of the resumés are from straight men savvy enough
to know that they'll make more tips than at a straight bar where female
bartenders are favoured. For Odorico, it's like casting a movie with demographic
diversity in mind.
"I look for ones that will attract a different crowd, from age groups,
leather aficionados or sports fans," says Odorico. "They don't
have to be a Greek god." Nor do staff have to be gay. At Remington's,
for example, Hievegi estimates that up to 70 percent of his dancers are
straight. At Slack's, part of the fun for patrons is trying to figure
who's queer - their girlie-girl staff are hard to peg.
The bartenders often
jockey for the best assignments. At Woody's, the front and back
bars are the busiest; at the Black Eagle, it's the one on the second floor.
"That's where
a lineup tends to form and that's where everybody wants to work,"
says Black Eagle manager Ed MacNeil.Another
skill MacNeil says Church St's bartenders need to learn is how to handle
customers interested in more than a drink.
"Every guy who
goes into a bar has a bartender they are secretly in love with,"
he says. "Most people don't give a voice to it and the majority doesn't
press the matter."
Usually don't press
the matter, that is. MacNeil recalls one customer who struck conversation
and poses to attract his attention until the patron eventually became
overcome with frustration.
"He stomped up
to the bar, slammed down a bouquet of flowers and stomped back out,"
MacNeil says. "He did return but never brought it up - which was
a relief."
Robin Corriveau, a
manager and bartender at Remington's, says a customer's adoration for
a bartender is usually fleeting. "Sometimes it feels like there's
a bartender of the week, someone fresh and new who attracts the customers
from week to week."
And there is the lustful
drama going under the radar of patrons.
"There have been
some issues around two employees becoming involved and then things not
going so well and it can be a real problem," says Steve Clegg, Woody's
associate general manager. "We'll try to schedule them apart from
each other but that's not always possible so they'll check out each other's
bar and see who they're talking to and get into a fuss over that.... Our
bartenders meet thousands of people here so if people are watching with
jealous eyes, it can be a real nuisance."
From obeying the Liquor
Licence Act to stamping out illegal drugs, bar owners have more rules
to follow than you could imagine.
"It's like being
stripped naked and set on fire and told to jump through hoops, after which
they tell you there's still more to do," says Carol Hylton, operation
manager of Slack's, about getting a liquor licence.
The owners of Slack's,
which has been in the process of getting off the ground since the summer,
had to spend more than $10,000 to bring the premises up to fire code,
including putting sprinklers in its walk-in fridges. (Asked how much it
cost overall to get the bar up and running, Hylton's eyes start to wander.
More than $100,000? "Yes." More than $200,000? "Higher."
$300,000? "It definitely cost a lot.")
Crews And Tango owner
Gary Manz says he is dealing with several levels of government and the
police regularly - even weekly.
"It seems like
a heavily policed industry," he sighs.
"I think the
biggest issue is that there's just so much now that you're responsible
for when operating a bar," says Terry Mundell, president of the Ontario
Hotel, Motel And Restaurant Association. "It's a full-time job just
understanding all the legislation and then making certain you meet all
the requirements, from pricing, minors, advertising and risk management
issues so that your insurance doesn't go wild."
MacNeil says he's
seen enforcement of liquor laws become much more rigid in the last 10
years. Some of it he agrees with, while some leaves him scratching his
head.
"Why is it against
the law to carry a drink up the stairway? That's the sort of law that
was old when Queen Victoria was young," MacNeil says.
There are tricks to
getting customers to comply. To keep drugs out of the bar during Pride,
staff at The Black Eagle coat all flat surfaces in the bathroom with lube.
"You should hear the screams when a guy sees his line of coke dissolve
before his eyes," says MacNeil. "It's a wonderful old custom
that smart bar operators have revived."
A big part of running
a bar is luring customers and making it easy for them to part with their
hard-earned dollars. Hievegi believes customers are generally spending
less nowadays.
"I think people
are more conscientious of spending money when they go out because more
and more are saving to buy a house or paying down the mortgage,"
speculates Hievegi.
Some bars rely on
their patrons to generate the entertainment ("You wouldn't believe
how many straight women come here, and the straight guys who tell me it's
a great place to pick up straight women," says Larry Peloso, co-owner
of Lüb). But most rely on at least some performances. In this category,
DJs and drag queens dominate. You try wrangling these divas.
"When it comes
to drag queens, they are people like anyone else," Manz says. "For
the most part, if you treat them well, they wind up treating you well....
Though infrequently, while under the influence of alcohol, they will say
things they regret. That can be a problem." Manz refuses to name
names.
Odorico remembers
one drag queen who insisted on performing a ballad among her typically
upbeat songs on a Sunday night at Woody's. "She sang it and people
were looking at one another and didn't really know what to do or how to
react," he says laughing.
Fly Nightclub manager
Gaelen Patrick recalls a night of entertainment that fizzled pretty quickly
-- Aug 20, 2005, when the downtown was hit by a power outage.
"It was our third
annual splash party where guests come dressed in Speedos and everyone
has water guns and has fun squirting one another," Patrick recalls.
"Just when the party had really started and DJ Shawn Riker was spinning,
the power went off," leaving Patrick and his 600 guests following
an emergency evacuation plan to ensure everyone's safety. "It certainly
wasn't the nightcap people were expecting."
Either through experience
or evidence, many customers seem intent on leaving their mark on a favourite
bar. More often than not, the bathroom is involved.
Graffiti is commonplace.
"I've seen some nice art over the years, which is better than something
horrible, but it still wasn't commissioned," says Clegg.
Since opening this
summer, Slack's has replaced its toilets three times, finally installing
industrial-commercial grade toilets.
"Girls flush
a lot," says Hylton.
"We've pulled
more things out of a toilet," laughs MacNeil. Church St's receptacles
have been stopped up with a menagerie of items, more than simply toilet
paper -- of which MacNeil estimates the bar uses about 1,500 industrial
rolls per year.
"A few years
ago, one of the busboys was plunging a toilet when out popped a dildo,"
says MacNeil. "We all had a good laugh. On another occasion, we brought
in a plumber who must have been straight because he was wondering how
a curtain ring found its way into the toilet."
There was a similar
mystery after Lüb's opening party, says Peloso.
"We found a pair
of men's underwear behind a toilet in the washroom. We don't know whose
they were, how they got there or why," says Peloso.
Manz says the reason
to flush under-garments and toys is obvious. "More often than not
you look for an atmosphere of fun and entertainment but I also suspect
each gay person goes to a bar to get laid and the sooner the better."
Apparently beer isn't
the only thing sloshing around in our mouths in bars. Clegg estimates
his bar sells 30,000 bottles of beer each month, most of it Labatt Blue
and Molson Dry. But it's gum that presents the biggest problem. "We
spend hours scraping it up every morning."
MacNeil made another
surprising discovery on one of The Black Eagle's naked nights. "I
went onto the patio and found two men were fucking really enthusiastically,"
he says. "I asked them to stop, get their clothes and go home, and
one responded, 'But I didn't get my first warning yet!'" While MacNeil
admits some patrons were looking on, "at a bar like ours, it generally
didn't cause that much of stir."
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