Montreal's oldest gay bar to close its doors
NIGHTLIFE / Le Mystique will change hands and then fold
Matthew Hays / Montreal / Tuesday, September 08, 2009
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GOING OUT WITH A BANG. Mystique manager Steven Wells hopes to hold a big closing party for Montreal's oldest gay bar. "There's something really incredible about having a drink with friends in a bar that's a piece of history," he says.
(Rachel Granofsky photo)
After 37 years, Montreal's oldest gay bar will be closing its doors for the final time. Though the bar, and its upstairs neighbour, the Stanley Pub, have been up for sale for over a year, Mystique manager Steven Wells confirms a deal is close to being finalized and that the new owners have "no plans to keep Le Mystique open."

And for many who know Le Mystique's place in Montreal's queer history, this is indeed sad news. "Obviously, we are greatly saddened by this," says Wells, "and not just for staff. Many of our regulars are disheartened to know the place won't be around."

Le Mystique is the last gay outpost west of Montreal's east-end gay Village, situated on Stanley Street in a discreet spot halfway between McGill campus and Concordia's downtown campus. Though there were recent efforts to get more students in to drum up more business, Wells concedes these are tough times for gay drinking holes. "A lot of younger people meet online now. Since Mystique's heyday in the '70s, we've had the AIDS crisis, which took a lot of patrons, we've had the Village move east, and we've had the smoking ban. These things haven't helped us. In May, Loto-Quebec also took out our three lotto machines, and that's hurt us too."

Despite its rather drab décor — it seems like a very run-of-the-mill basement pub — Quebec's gay historians say Mystique is hallowed ground, a crucial spot in the city's queer evolution. Ross Higgins, co-founder of the Quebec Gay Archives, points to Mystique's spot in a key moment of social change for Montreal's queer citizens. In the wee hours of Oct 21, 1977, police raided several of the gay bars on Stanley, including Truxx and Le Mystique. The police used ludicrously heavy-handed tactics, arriving with guns drawn, arresting 146 gay men on spurious charges. It is now thought that, beyond homophobia (which obviously played a part), it was part of the municipal government's plan to continue to harass the city's gay milieu and the businesses that served them, effectively pushing them away from the downtown core and further east. Since most of the arrests happened at Truxx, the night has since become known as the Truxx Raids.

THIS IS WAR. The Oct 21, 1977 police raid on gay bars on Stanley, including Le Mystique and Truxx, was a catalyst that brought Montreal's gay community together. The Oct 24, 1977 cover of the Journal de Montreal is shown above.
(image courtesy of the Quebec Gay Archives)
The police action prompted a potent counter-reaction, however. It inadvertently helped to galvanize the gay community. Gay men who previously had felt no political connection to being gay began speaking out and protesting. By the very next night, over 2,000 gay men and allies blocked the corner of Ste-Catherine and Stanley, effectively paralyzing the downtown core. This drew huge amounts of media attention and put the issues of human rights front and centre. Many said they felt that a majority of straight people supported their cause, and that enough was enough in terms of police harassment.

By the following December, the effects could be felt. Quebec's national assembly, then in the hands of the PQ, approved Bill 88, which added sexual orientation to Quebec's charter of human rights as an illegal basis for discrimination. This made Quebec the first place in North America to have such protection (and it would be quite some time before another province would follow suit). It also led to one of Montreal's first Pride Parades, in 1979.

Since its glory days, Le Mystique has gotten occasional notices in the press, not all of them welcome. Some patrons expressed their dissatisfaction after reading a 1996 Montreal Mirror cover story on Montreal's "strangest bars." Le Mystique was listed, and was likened to the scene captured in William Friedkin's landmark 1970 film The Boys in the Band, which depicted a group of pre-Stonewall gay men who were unhappy, self-hating and often addicted. Not such a flattering analogy, the regulars said at the time.

Wells says it's too bad this historic spot could no longer make a go of it. "Right now we're just waiting to find out precisely what the timeline is for closing the doors. We just hope they give us enough notice that we can have a big closing party. Our patrons deserve that. And so does the spirit of Le Mystique. There's something really incredible about having a drink with friends in a bar that's a piece of history."

Le Mystique's farewell bash — all are welcome! — will happen on Sat, Sep 26. Fun starts at 7pm. Come and celebrate a crucial piece of Montreal's queer history.


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Reader Comments


 
SUCKS!!!
I love this place! I hope there's a big closing party! I will so be there!
Preet, Toronto Ontario
09/09/09 1:07 PM EST
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That's what you get!
Everyone wants to complain, but unless you are going and spending money, how can they stay open. Spend your pink dollars wisely or you may not have a place to spend them!
Mike, NYC USA
09/10/09 4:07 PM EST
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Bye Bye and merci, Le Mystique!
Le Mystique was always in competition with Bar Cléopatre as declaring itself Montréal's first gay bar. Cléopatre of course is still standing, and I hope both bars' owners (and new owners) will erect a plaque of some sort dedicated to their importance in Montréal's queer history.
David King, Montréal Québec
09/10/09 7:45 PM EST
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My first gay bar experience!
While on a high school music trip to Montreal in the early '80s, I went to a club with my classmates to hear a band that they liked. Sitting at the bar was a guy wearing an oversized shirt with big red polka-dots on it. I figured he was safe to ask about gay bars in the area. He told me that he was the MC at a drag bar in the neighbourhood, but that it wasn't the place for me. He directed me a couple of blocks away to Le Mystique, and I met a handsome, sexy man that night who knew how to take care of a horny teenager. Ah, the memories!
Clifford, Hamilton Ontario
09/11/09 1:06 AM EST
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Yeah, but...
So, Wells laments that the Mystique (aka the "Mistake" in days gone by) went downhill because "...we had the AIDS crisis, and that took a lot of patrons." Gee, after losing all of my friends and loved ones and barely surviving myself, the fact that AIDS was bad for business somehow doesn't make me run for my crying towel.
Mick, Montreal Quebec
09/12/09 5:46 PM EST
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Les dimanches au Mystique!
From the late 1970's to the early 1990's I spent most of my Sundays at Le Mystique. It was crowded, smokey, the cold pizza was very average and pissing complicated as the ceiling was very low but was it ever fun. One's friends were also there. Picking up boys? I don't remember that but I only went on Sundays. Three years ago I went back with a friend, on a sunny summer Sunday. We both recognized the bar tender who recognized us. It was depressingly quiet...
Al, Montreal Québec
09/15/09 9:23 AM EST
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more fiction
More historical revisionism by Xtra's Queer Comrades. There are no "queer" back then, asshole! It was gay men in the bar and gay men politicized about their homosexuality. The inclusive queer juggernaut of LGJLNMOPBLAH did not happen till the 90s. Another example of political stance whitewashing gay history to advance "inclusivity", the dogma of Xtra. Pathetic!
david, toronto ON
09/15/09 10:26 AM EST
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[Editor's Note]
RE: more fiction
Thanks for your feedback David. We've changed a few references of "queer" to "gay men and allies" or simply "gay men," where that would be the more accurate description of who participated in these events.
Brent Creelman, Toronto ON
09/15/09 5:06 PM EST
reeling with shock
That is the first time in the history of post-90s Xtra that someone has actually acknowledge the historical reality of gay men in a pre-Queer era. Could it be a sign that the Gulag of Enforced PC Queer Inclusivity which has destroyed your paper (and the "community") is finally losing its death grip. We will see. In the meantime, thanks.
david, toronto ON
09/15/09 5:23 PM EST
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Things Have CHANGED
Ironically as I type this comment on my computer via the internet, I have to say that the reason many gay bars / clubs around North America are in fact closing is mainly because of the internet. When I was much younger, the only way to meet other gay guys was to get up on a Saturday morning, get dressed, pocket some change for the bus, and head downtown to the big city. Downtown you would find the various cruising areas during the day and the bars / clubs during the night. Now, young guys sit in their bedrooms in their underwear cruising the internet meeting other guys for sex and friendship. They don't have to leave their bedroom to meet someone anymore. That's why major line-ups in front of a gay bar 5 or 6 nights a week is a thing of the past. And, that is why gay bars / clubs are no longer viable business ventures these days. Very little demand for them now. In my day, if you weren't at a bar's door by 11:00 and you weren't lucky enough to have a VIP pass, you waited in a line-up for 20 or 30 minutes to get in. These days, I can't remember seeing such a line-up (only maybe during Pride in the major cites). In fact you can now leave your apartment at midnight, arrive at your bar of choice and walk in on most nights of the year. Everything has change - mainly due to technology as strange as that might sound.
Jeff T., Toronto Ontario
09/20/09 7:34 PM EST
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Nice to meet you!
Having been a big fan of Harvey Milk we stopped by here on the Friday night before they were to close. I had a chance to meet and speak with a few Old timers who spoke of all the history and what they have seen, done and did all these years. It’s a real shame to see such a historic site just get swept away. Steven thank you for a wonderful night at Le Mystique….you will forever be in our hearts.
Ray & Jeff, Orlando Florida
10/12/09 6:23 PM EST
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How did I miss that?
I just found out here. I attended the offical opening of the bar when I was about 21 -- I would have loved to have attended the closing, too!
John Woolfrey, Montreal QC
11/23/09 9:36 AM EST
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