Lee's Palace

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Lee's Palace
Lee's Palace.jpg
Lee's Palace in March 2011 featuring a mural by Alex "Al Runt" Currie.
Former namesAllen's Bloor Theatre (1919-1923)
Bloor Theatre (1923–1957)
The Blue Orchid (1967-1976)
Oriental Palace (1976-1985)
Address529 Bloor Street West
Toronto ON M5S 1Y5
LocationToronto, Ontario, Canada
Coordinates43°39′55″N 79°24′34″W / 43.665272°N 79.409448°W / 43.665272; -79.409448Coordinates: 43°39′55″N 79°24′34″W / 43.665272°N 79.409448°W / 43.665272; -79.409448
OwnerCollective Concerts (Jeff Cohen)
TypeNightclub, music venue
Genre(s)Alternative, Indie
Seating typeStanding room
Capacity450
Construction
Builtearly 1900s
Opened5 September 1985
Website
leespalace.com

Lee's Palace is a rock concert hall located on the south side of Bloor Street West east of Lippincott Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

The two-floor facility in The Annex neighbourhood has a long history prior to being adapted in September 1985 for its current use as a concert venue and nightclub.[1] While the Lee's Palace live performance venue that accommodates just over 500 guest is on the ground floor, the top floor is occupied by The Dance Cave, a nightclub that on weekends mostly caters to university and college students from the nearby downtown Toronto schools such as University of Toronto, Ryerson University, OCAD University, and George Brown College with alt-rock while attracting older patrons during the work week with a fare that includes goth rock, mod music, punk, and indie.

Having been established and owned for 16 years by the Korean Canadian entrepreneur Chong Su Lee a.k.a. Mr. Lee,[2] the venue has since 2001 been owned by Collective Concerts, a Toronto-based music promotions company (owned by Jeff Cohen with partners Ben Pearlman and Bruce Bennett) that also has the Horseshoe Tavern, another iconic Toronto music venue, among its list of assets.[3] In 2006, they also bought the building that houses Lee's Palace.

History[]

The building at 529 Bloor Street West, which currently consists of two floors of 5,000 square feet each, dates back to early 1900s and was reportedly a bank at one point[3] as well as a shoemaker shop.[4]

Allen's Bloor Theatre[]

During late 1910s, the building's redesign got initiated by its new owners — Canadian-based Allen Theatres chain that decided to turn it into a silent film theater. With the redesign executed by the Detroit-based Howard Crane's company,[4] the 782-seat Allen's Bloor Theatre became one of Toronto's (a city of some 200,000 inhabitants at the time)[5] most luxurious suburban movie houses.[6] The undertaking came as part of Allen Theatres' aggressive 1917-1920 expansion into the Toronto marketplace, a period during which they built/redesigned many buildings around the city into theaters such as Allen's Danforth on the Danforth and Allen's Beach Theatre in the Beaches neighbourhood in addition to purchasing many existing theaters like the nearby Madison Picture Palace across the road on Bloor St. and the 1,100-seat Beaver Theatre in the Junction neighbourhood.[6]

Allen's Bloor Theatre's premiere screening was held on 10 March 1919 with Cecil B. De Mille's Don't Change Your Husband starring Gloria Swanson.[6]

In 1923, the Allen Theatres chain was sold to Famous Players, which by 1928 financed major renovations to the theatre including building an orchestra pit.[7] The venue remained an active movie theatre until 1957.[7]

The Blue Orchid[]

Following a period of almost ten years during which the property remained vacant, in 1967, the venue was purchased for C$129,000 by local entrepreneur Ed Silverberg who then invested further C$250,000 in order to convert it into a cabaret named the Blue Orchid.[7] Inspired by the New York City drag shows, it functioned as a dinner theatre featuring burlesque shows and plays with all-male casts.[7]

It was Silverberg who decided to turn the venue's upper balcony level into a tucked away, speakeasy-type bar with a dance floor.[7] The Blue Orchid went away by 1976 and was replaced with Oriental Palace, a dinner and dance hospitality venue.[2][7]

Lee's Palace[]

By mid 1980s, the building was purchased by Chong Su Lee a.k.a. Mr. Lee, owner of a nearby Stop & Go corner store on Bathurst and Harbord, who had become interested in the music venue concept through The Cameron House and the rest of the 1980s Queen West scene.[2] On Thursday 5 September 1985, Lee's Palace was opened as a music club by Mr. Lee, the venue's namesake, with dancing on the top floor and live music on the main floor, much as it is today.[3][8] The very first live show at the new venue on its opening night was Handsome Ned.[2] The second live show—Blue Rodeo, who were booked on Handsome Ned's recommendation—took place two weeks later on 19 September 1985.[2] The club was open seven days a week initially with Sundays becoming its signature night featuring local Toronto entertainer Frank Fazi's recurring Sunday Night Jam showcase with various local scene participants such as members of Greg Godovitz's Goddo.[2]

The venue's early live concert booking policy—bringing fledgling local rock bands plus emerging international (mostly British and American) indie acts—established a formula that would be continued throughout the decades that followed.[7] Initially, local Toronto-area and other Canadian acts were routinely recruited from the nearby Queen West scene: doing well at Queen West spots such as The Cameron House, Horseshoe Tavern, and The Rivoli would usually result in being booked at Lee's Palace.[2] The venue's chief booker Craig Morrison—hired by and answering directly to the owner Mr. Lee—was reportedly extremely diligent about determining a local young band's popularity and viability by scouting their Toronto bar and club gigs ahead of booking them at Lee's, including subsequently keeping meticulous records on each booked act with information on the number of tickets sold and associated bar sales during the show.[2] The Tragically Hip—five youngsters in their early-to-mid-20s from nearby Kingston gigging locally in bars throughout Ontario with no releases yet—played Lee's Palace in late October 1986, years before becoming a best-selling and celebrated musical act in Canada. Ahead of the show, their manager Jake Gold reportedly phoned Morrison in order to try to negotiate a C$75 fixed payout on top of the door intake but got flatly rejected.[2]

Later that year, on Wednesday 3 December 1986, the venue hosted Red Hot Chili Peppers, a young band from Los Angeles that would go on to great commercial success within a few years.[9][10] Supporting their second album and making their Toronto debut with a lineup featuring the band's twenty-four-year-old founding member and original guitarist Hillel Slovak who would die of drug overdose eighteen months later, the show—opened by fellow Southern California punk rockers T.S.O.L. and Thelonious Monster and closed with the Peppers infamous and soon-to-become signature trademark 'socks-on-cocks' stage performance during an encore of Jimi Hendrix's "Fire"—marked the first instance of a future globally-known musical act playing Lee's Palace.[11][10]

In 2001, Mr. Lee died and the business was bequeathed to . In 2006, the business changed hands again to the current owners.[3]

Live music[]

Lee's Palace is a Toronto hotspot for live music. Known for its intimacy and strong acoustics, it hosts live music nearly every night of the week. The music genre generally played at Lee's Palace is alternative rock. Canadian music groups such as Moist, Sloan, Our Lady Peace, Barenaked Ladies, and The Tragically Hip have played this venue's[12] tiny stage early in their careers. International stars such as The Verve, Nirvana, Tortoise, Blur, The Smashing Pumpkins, Oasis, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Arctic Monkeys and The Magnetic Fields made their Toronto debut at Lee's Palace.

The capacity of the venue is roughly 600 people in the concert area, and more upstairs in the "Dance Cave", the dance club under the same roof. The Dance Cave caters to the alternative rock crowd, playing retro rock, Mod, '60s, Britpop, and indie rock during the week, and straight alternative on the weekends.

Regulatory agencies[]

As the venue serves alcohol, attendance at concerts and events at Lee's Palace is generally restricted by the laws of the province of Ontario to those 19 years of age or older, although the venue occasionally hosts all-ages shows (usually on weekend afternoons or early evenings) where alcohol is not served.

References[]

  1. ^ Doug Taylor (2016). Toronto's Local Movie Theatres of Yesteryear: Brought Back to Thrill You Again. Dundurn Press. pp. 152–154. ISBN 9781459733428.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Edwards, Samantha (24 September 2015). "A very brief history of Lee's Palace". Now. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d "History". Lee's Palace. Archived from the original on 14 October 2011.
  4. ^ a b Boles, Benjamin (8 May 2014). "A brief history of Lee's Palace". BlogTO.com. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  5. ^ Veillette, Eric. "When the Junction Flickered". SilentToronto.com. Archived from the original on 12 October 2014. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Veillette, Eric. "Allen's Bloor Theatre". SilentToronto.com. Archived from the original on 9 September 2015. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Boles, Benjamin (11 October 2020). "The history of Lee's Palace in Toronto". blogTO.com. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  8. ^ Punter, Jennie (14 September 1995). "Lee's thrives on nuturing [sic] local acts", Toronto Star, p. H10.
  9. ^ Red Hot Chili Peppers at Lee's Palace, Toronto, ON, Canada
  10. ^ a b McGinnis, Rick (8 June 2015). "Live: Red Hot Chili Peppers, 1986". SomeOldPicturesITook. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  11. ^ Brown, Melody (29 April 2012). "Red Hot Chili Peppers light a fire at the ACC". BlogTO.com. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  12. ^ "Best of List". Lee's Palace. Archived from the original on 23 February 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2011.

External links[]

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