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New Delhi Cabaret, Vancouver

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New Delhi Cabaret, 544 Main Street, Vancouver


I was on a mission tonight to find old photos of a friend from the ancient days before digital cameras and was therefore rooting through ye olde banker's box of photos. In the course of doing this I found the above cabaret ticket with the photos I inherited from my father. The ticket has to date from the early 1960's. My dad drove a taxi for Black Top Cabs in the early 1960's. I posted one of his old fare-receipts last July.

I did a little research on the New Delhi Cabaret. It was a live music venue that focused mostly on R&B and was in operation from 1956 to 1973, run by a guy named Leo Bagry. They had a house band and also had feature bands and novelty acts. Durius Maxwell played there as a novelty act as a teenager. Tommy Chong's (as in "Cheech and Chong") band "The Shades" played there frequently in 1959-1960. They had burlesque dancers. Choo Choo Williams started her 12-year dancing career at the New Delhi Cabaret. Miss Lovie danced there in there starting in 1964 and here is her own description of her act:

"I made things happen with my body. I'd sit on the floor, I'd stick my legs up high, up above my head, and I'd make my butt pop. I made my buttocks work like drums through muscle control. I could move around the floor like a clock, in a circle. I did the splits. I used to do a lot of black light dancing, and I used to wear a lot of glitter all over my body. That use to be my thing: I glittered."

It's also my understanding that these cabarets weren't licenced, but nonetheless people brought their own liquor in brown paper bags that they would hold under the tables. Elaine tells me that her dad, my father in law, used to go to these places and verifies the booze-in-a-bag-under-the-table thing. This wasn't officially sanctioned, but nothing was done about it. Note the 4 a..m. closing time on the ticket, too.

The New Delhi wasn't the only cabaret like this in the East End. In 1967, an article in the Vancouver Province noted: "As a tourist attraction, Chinatown probably ranks second only to Stanley Park, and so contributes greatly to Vancouver's fame abroad. With its restaurants, stores and nightclubs, it adds entertainment spice for resident and visitor alike."

Vancouver wasn't always "No Fun City."



Below is 544 Main Street as of last spring (from Google.)

544 Main Street, Vancouver



Sources:
"Tripping with Chong" http://www.canada.com/story_print.html?id=c55e75c8-90cb-46c5-89cb-73fc6b...
"Pacific Northwest Bands" http://www.pnwbands.com/newdelhicabaret.html
"The Drum Network" http://thedrumnetwork.ning.com/profile/DurisMaxwell
"Spectacular Striptease, Performing the Sexual and Racial Other in Vancouver, B.C., 1945-1975", Becki Ross, Kim Greenwell, Journal of Women's History 17.1 (2005) 137-164



Oringinal post: http://mbarrick.livejournal.com/917641.html



Comments

This is unbelievable. I used to frequent the New Delhi in 1960-61. My boyfriend for a moment was Howie Hope, the guy who is on the ticket stub. He taught me how to use chopsticks, as he was 1/2 Chinese. I was only 17 and its true about the liquor kept under the table. The bouncer was Clydell Jones at the time and he would buy mickeys ( pints ) of whiskey, bring them into the club and sell it to the patrons, for a big profit I might add. It was owned and run by East Indians. You entered at street level and went up a long flight of stairs, and it took up the whole upstairs. It was a rough place as I remember but the music was great. My girlfriend and I spent many nights dancing til early morning, to R & B and funk music of the time. That's where I learned to do the Twist. My friend was the drummer of the house band, Larry Singh. Thank you for refreshing my memory. Great memories. That was an area where there was a lot of different stuff going on, not always good. My father also drove for Black Top cabs-Cab # 24, in the 50's and 60's. Thank you Michael Barrick

Michael would you consider selling these items. I am a a collector of vintage concert tickets and have over 500 of them