| San Francisco's oldest and grandest nightclub,
the Great American Music Hall carries guests back to an earlier, more
elegant era, with its ornate balconies, soaring marble columns and
elaborate ceiling frescoes. Long-time customers and newcomers alike
feel at home in the 5,000-square-foot concert hall that symbolized
renewal and optimism when it opened in 1907. Today, a professional
sound and lighting system, two full bars, a modern kitchen and a spacious
oak dance floor help to blend contemporary quality with turn-of-the-century
graciousness.
The remarkable interior design came from
an unlikely duo: a French architect who designed the building in
1907, and Chris Buckley, a political mover and shaker who wanted
to erect a grand structure after the devastating 1906 earthquake.
The result was Blanco's, characterized as one of the most popular
entertainment spots during San Francisco's notorious Barbary Coast
Era. The restaurant/bordello offered fine food, gambling and fast
women right up until the dark days of the Great Depression in 1933.
Three years later, in 1936, the extravagant
and elaborate fan dances of local favorite, Sally Rand, brought
new life to the dark building. She called it the Music Box, and
swanky city dwellers would dance the night away there for the next
decade.
With the end of World War II, the Music
Box turned out its lights. Blanco's reopened in 1948 as a jazz club.
In the 1950s, the premises were taken over by members of the Moose
Lodge. The building went into an ignominious decline that hit bottom
when the building was condemned by city building inspectors. A last-minute
reprieve saved it from demolition, and the tarnished interior was
spruced up a bit when a short-lived French restaurant named Charles
(after the proprietor, Robert Charles) took over the building. But
it was not until 1972, when the Great American Music Hall opened,
that happy music lovers filled the hall once more.
The past three decades at the Great American
Music Hall have been full of music, with artists ranging from Duke
Ellington, Sarah Vaughan and Count Basie to Van Morrison, the Grateful
Dead and Bobby McFerrin.
If you're looking for good food and drink
and your favorite artist in a warm, civilized and intimate setting,
come join the ranks of those who have delighted in the beauty and
charm of this historic building throughout the twentieth century.
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