The bar invites visitors to "drink where the locals drink" and also has some Whatever is your scene, you'll find companions here. The Double Play is a rather "wild" neighborhood bar that is frequented by every kind of person imaginable. Occasions and its Tailgate buffets for televised sporting events. It's also noted for its fab and huge complimentary buffets on special You canĪlso catch monthly art shows and is the most popular sportsqueer bar in the This popular neighborhood bar features local talents on occasion live. Out the incredible menu at The Country Club Restaurant. Party! Bask in the sun, and in the moonlight with the hottest guys in townįrom early morning until late, late at night. The Country ClubĬlothes and cool your (high) heels at the city’s ONLY pool and hot tub XXXIII Lisa Beaumann, Barry Bareass and the Corner Pocket Dancers. Month features Pot Luck Burlesque starring Southern Decadence Grand Marshal Night featuring all dancers vying for the $100 cash jackpot. Crowds flock to the club 7 nights a week beginning at 9pm to see the latest dancin'īoys the bar has cornered for its stable. The Corner Pocket is your basic neighborhood bar during the day and early evening. Quite "entertaining." The Corner Pocket 940 St. "adventurous" in their pursuit of beads and the balcony at Lafitte's can be Table and the balcony! During Southern Decadence and Carnival, because the GayĬrowd dominates this part of Bourbon Street, people tend to be a little more His years in New Orleans, Tennessee Williams used to frequent Lafitte's.Īnd video. Oldest Gay bar in the country and has a long and interesting history. The Bourbon Pub is a premeire videoīar with some of the hottest videos on the circuit while upstairs is the This popular hot spot is two clubs in one. Quaint bar in the Marigny that attracts people living in the neighborhood. Mix of video lounging in a historical setting. Located in the heart of the French Quarter, 700 Club is the perfect
Located outside of New Orleans - Slidell - Billy's attracts a neighborhood crowd,
The patio is often the scene of some lively BBQs andĤ Seasons often has live entertainment and other special functions Billy's Past the long main bar and out the back door is a beautiful patio and bar that's a perfect place to relax on cool evenings.
When you enter 4 Seasons, you'll see the main bar. Housed in an "A" Frame building, you'll find 4 Seasons right off Interstate 10 going towards the Lake on Causeway Blvd. But, you are not allowed to carry glass containers or cans.ģ229 North Causeway - Metairie, LouisianaĤ Seasons is one of the most popular bars in Metairie. You can drink on the streets in New Orleans. For example, when you leave a bar, you can take your drink with you anywhere so long as it is in a plastic "go cup". New Orleans has some rather relaxed liquor laws. So, if you don't see hours listed it's because most bars in New Orleans never close. Most bars in New Orleans are open 24 hours a day, every day. This directory contains valuable information about the best GLBT bars and clubs in the Big Easy. After all, it is the City That Care Forgot. New Orleans has some of the hottest clubs in the country. The videos featured below were produced in association with New Orleans PBS Affiliate WYESTV-12 in 1996 and edited by Courtney Eagan and Billie Norris.Hot and Happening Bars and Clubs - Gay New Orleans For the majority of its existence, the club allowed only white patrons and white performers. The once risque club had been rendered too tame by the sexual revolution and changes in dress and mores.
The club relocated to the French Quarter for a short while before closing for good. Grayline Tours brought tourists by the busload for decades until a 1972 fire destroyed its lakefront location. The New Orleans club was one of several in the United States whose impersonators performed for heterosexual as well as homosexual audiences. The Wonder Bar eventually closed from the 1930s through the 1960s, the My-O-My served as a popular part of New Orleans nightlife for tourists as well as residents. The Club My-O-My joined the older Wonder Bar in the West End area of New Orleans. It flourished after first being kicked out of an informal, after-hours home in a fur warehouse in the Vieux Carre in the early 1930s, according to oral history in the New Orleans gay community. By Thomasine Bartlett, Michael Mizell-Nelson & David Wolf TextĬlub My-O-My was a female impersonator club that originated and ended in the French Quarter.