Every Place Has a Story

Repurposing Vancouver’s Icons–The Smilin’ Buddha Cabaret

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You would think that if a couple of young entrepreneurs wanted to bring business to the Downtown east side, one that offered a safe haven from the streets, served healthy, affordable food, and breathed life back into an old icon, the City and the myriad of agencies that have made an industry out of the poor and troubled would be there to help.

Well no, they’re not.

109 East Hastings Street
John Atkin and Malcolm Hassin outside the former Smilin’ Buddha Cabaret

Andrew Turner, 33, and Malcolm Hassin, 30, opened SBC Restaurant last December on East Hastings, near Main Street. They tell me it’s the only indoor skateboard park in Vancouver.

The building has great vibes. As the Smilin’ Buddha Cabaret, the outside of the building used to have an 800-pound neon sign featuring a Buddha with a jiggling belly. The plan, says Malcolm is to get the restaurant back up and running, and grow fruit and vegetables on the roof of the building. They want to bring live music back to the venue.

The Smilin’ Buddha Cabaret was an integral part of Vancouver’s music scene from 1952 until the early 1990s.

The Vancouver Heritage Foundation named the building one of Vancouver’s 125 places that matter last year, and according to the heritage plaque, in the ‘50s it was the Smilin’ Buddha Dine & Dance. In the ‘60s it was part of the touring soul and rock music circuit, and in the late ‘70s it became part of the punk and alternative music scene.

Smilin' buddha Cabaret
Avon Theatre Program, 1954

Jimi Hendrix played there, so did Janis Joplin, Aretha Franklin, DOA and Jefferson Airplane. 54-40 named their 1994 release after the place, bought the sign and restored it.

The building has sat derelict for the last 20-odd years, another blight on the DTES. It’s still no beauty queen, but give the current business owners a break and that will also change.

When I was there on Thursday there was a steady stream of mainly young male customers. Malcolm says that customers range from eight to 56, and there’s a bunch of “older skater dudes” in their 50s that come once a week, plus a lot of people from the film industry.

Like everything in the building, the skateboard ramp is completely salvaged and repurposed. The ramp is part Expo 86, part donation from skateboarding rock star Kevin Harris, and partly built from several ramps scavenged from various eastside backyards.

BC Hydro wants $30,000 from the guys for an immediate upgrade.

The City is jerking them around about a business licence and stopped them serving food. It’s bureaucracy at its stupidest and I bet the Buddha’s smilin’.

 

More stories of the DTES:

The Regent Hotel

The Main Street Barber Shop

 

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.

Whistling Bernie Smith and the Penthouse Nightclub

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Known for decades as Bernie “Whistling” Smith because he whistled while he patrolled the streets for the VPD

Bernie Smith once told me a story about busting Strathcona bootlegger Wally “Blondie” Wallace in the 1940s. Blondie was a neighbourhood hero, dodging the cops by night and teaching local kids to box in the basement of his house during the day. He operated a thriving bootlegging business from his house at 446 Union Street.

“We’d stake the place out and grab the cars as they came out,” Bernie told me. “He’d have four or five drivers, and they’d be at all different places and they’d have cheap cars in case they got caught.”

The first time a bootlegger was caught they were fined, the second time they went to jail. Caught with liquor in the car, both the booze and the car became the property of the Crown.

Blondie Wallace:

“In about 1950, Blondie Wallace had a brand new Chrysler and he got arrested for bootlegging from the car. The car was seized and he gets three months in Oakalla,” said Bernie. “Hugh Christie was the warden and when they seized the car, they gave the warden the car and there’s Blondie Wallace watching the warden drive his car.”

I was thinking of this story while I was at the Penthouse on Thursday night for the launch of Aaron Chapman’s Liquor, Lust, and the Law.

Known for decades as Bernie “Whistling” Smith because he whistled while he patrolled the streets, Bernie started work for Joe Philliponi in 1937 when he was just 14. Philliponi owned Eagle-Time Delivery Systems, and Bernie said Joe called him “Speed Ball 21.” Later, when Bernie told him he wanted to be a cop, Philliponi encouraged him.

The Penthouse:

Bernie joined the VPD in 1947 the same year that Philliponi opened the Penthouse Nightclub on Seymour Street. Despite a series of set-backs including its closure in 1975 by the vice squad, Philliponi’s 1983 murder in a botched robbery at the club, and a fire last year, the Penthouse continues to be a Vancouver institution run by Joe’s nephew, Danny Filippone.

Bernie died November 14 aged 89 or I’m sure he would have been at the Penthouse Thursday night. He would have enjoyed knowing that both swing-band leader Dal Richards and punk rocker Randy Rampage of D.O.A were part of an eclectic audience packed into the club for the launch.

There is a celebration of life for Bernie at 1:00 pm Monday November 26 at the Croatian Cultural Centre, 3250 Commercial Drive. Bernie was a charming, fascinating individual, and my bet is that his service will be just as packed.

For the November 22 launch of Liquor, Lust, and the Law
Aaron Chapman and Danny Filippone

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.