Group aims to save legacy of Montreal's red light district
MONTREAL / City threatens demolition of historic bar
Lina Harper / National / Thursday, June 18, 2009
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IT'S GETTING HOT IN HERE. Café Cleopatra hosts a monthly fetish night called Club Sin.
(Michel Laloux photo)
A proposed development in Montreal's red light district has jeopardized the future of a neo-burlesque strip joint used by members of the queer community.

The proposal would see Café Cleopatra, the oldest show bar in town, demolished to make way for a 12-storey office building and a strip of retail stores on St Laurent Boulevard. Three other buildings are also slated for destruction if the city allows the development to proceed.

Café Cleopatra has always attracted people who don't fit society's norms, says owner Zoumboulakis. "We have room for the alternative, the different. For the people [who] want to express himself or herself differently. Especially the transvestites, the transsexuals," he says, referring to the bar's popular second floor shows.

The area has a long reputation as a hotspot for sex and partying in Montreal. While the red light district has been in decline in recent years, the area hit a peak in the 1950s with the opening of Ponts de Paris, a club that featured drag performers. Café Cleopatra is one of the last remaining traces of the area's racy nightlife.

Vivian Namaste, research chair in HIV/AIDS and sexual health at Concordia University adds that, "Historically, it's a very important milieu. It's a place where a lot of transsexuals and transvestites go, and they have a very important place in Quebec culture."

The city has been abuzz since the development plans were announced last year, with academics, queers, activists, artists and performers outraged over the possible closure of the historic bar. Plans to expand Quartier des Spectacles, the city's arts district, were put through public consultation in early June. A group of concerned artists and community members have organized against the development, creating a Facebook group and an online petition



The city has said it may expropriate the land if Café Cleopatra refuses to sell to the developer. The building was built in the late 1800s, and Zoumboulakis has owned it for 33 years. Though there is talk of preserving the outer layer and gutting the inside, Zoumboulakis says there is a rich history behind the Café's doors. "It's just the facade — it doesn't tell the whole story," he says.

REDEVELOPMENT. A rendering of the plans for Quartier des Spectacles, Montreal's growing arts district.
(City of Montreal)
Eric Paradis runs Club Sin, a monthly fetish night at Café Cleopatra. He says Montreal has a reputation for diversity and openness, and that the city must recognize St Laurent's social history. "We're something that's been there for five years, it's socially acceptable, it's legal, and it's colourful. It's no different than when you do a theatre [show]."

However, Montreal Mayor Gerald Tremblay recently vowed to pave the way for developers, as quickly as possible. "We've consulted everyone [about city projects] but we're not going to stop because a minority says it might effect certain things that are important to Montreal," he said this week, according to the Montreal Gazette.

City councillor Karim Boulos says there is a need for revitalization of St Laurent.

"I understand they don't want to be moved, but [renovations are] needed," says Boulos. "I don't see how the new structure could get rid of someone." Boulos says the overall business under which the Café operates needs to be examined, saying that "Café Cleopatra should be concerned with the future of the sex trade."

Emilie Laliberté of Stella, a Montreal group run by and for sex workers, says the city must take into consideration the strippers, queers and sex workers who interact with the space everyday.

"They didn't even ask the people who have been living there for years. This issue is about gentrification," says Laliberté, adding that sex workers need an area where they can work safely.

Though the city is enjoying a renaissance of burlesque culture, Montreal must recognize that its history is entrenched with nightlife, sex and partying, says Velma Candyass, founder of the Dead Doll Dancers cabaret act. "Forget the morals of whether or not it's a strip club — it's a business. Café Cleo just really reflects the neo-burlesque aesthetic."

After public consultations are completed, city bureaucrats will provide a report to city councillors, who have the final say on the matter.

Coalition of Artists of the Cabaret Cleopatre.
Facebook group.
Petition.

Café Cleopatra.
cleopatramontreal.com.

Club Sin.

clubsin.ca
.

— with files from Nisa Malli



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Reader Comments


 
Historical
They should seek a historical designation. It might work.
Randy, Windsor ON
06/18/09 2:33 PM EST
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how sad
It's very sad. I remember when The Roost closed. When a piece of the community disappears it leaves a hole in people and our community. As I get older (I'm in my early 20's) I am noticing more and more of these queer places disappearing. They're being replaced by condos, town-houses, Strip malls, and cafe's. However, as sad as this is for all of us and for me to be part of the generation to 'grow up' watching this, it's not unexpected. Times are changing, more and more people of all walks of life are moving to, starting lives and families in the urban centers and not the suburbs. These people will want places to work, places to shop and places to live. They are gentrifying the urban areas. I'm not saying that this is good for us at all. But this is not an attempt to oppress queer people. As the economics of the middle class change the urban areas will change too. It's an inevitability and if we as a community want to survive and keep at least part of our identity we will just have to adapt. This place is just the beginning, change is coming whether we want it or not. We can try to adapt and keep part of ourselves or we can try to fight it, loose and then loose every thing that makes our community special.
Mike, Edmonton Alberta
06/19/09 2:07 AM EST
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Save the Cafe
Isn't there a National Historic Preservation Group...That could block the change....Or how about a philantrophist to step in and change this outlook? Good Luck...Once this building and business is gone....it's gone forever..
K Joseph, Lakeview Michigan, (USA)
06/19/09 9:52 AM EST
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Amnesia
Has Gerald forgotten what happened when he tried to change the name of Montreal’s Avenue du Parc in 2007? In that debacle, he was indeed “stopped because a minority says it might effect certain things that are important to Montreal.” http://www.cbc.ca/canada/montreal/story/2007/02/07/qc-parcave20070207.html
Daniel Allen Cox, Montreal Quebec
06/20/09 10:02 AM EST
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