space type: parties | neighborhood: crown heights | active since: 2009 | link: blog, facebook
The Red Lotus Room is breathtaking. The first time I went was for BANZAI!!!!!, a surreally crazy art and performance
party, full of elaborate costumed revelers, an eclectic selection of multimedia
art, and performances from drag acts to DJ sets. The second (and third, and
fourth, and fifth) time I went back was for the famous Shanghai Mermaid
party, an underground, more-or-less-monthly, themed event (usually Paris,
Shanghai, Berlin, or New Orleans in the twenties or thirties), where everyone
has to dress accordingly. It was a beautifully bizarre experience, riding the
subway out to Crown Heights in period attire, wandering down darkened streets in
heels, then stepping through the door into a sprawling, whirling, huge space,
walls draped with red velvet, tables laden with candles, everyone in hats and
suspenders and fans, sequins and rhinestones and fringes, with cigarette girls
hawking candy and treats, exotic cocktails and food, and hours and hours of
amazing performers: aerialists, fire dancers, musicians, burlesque, and more.
The parties start at ten and go until dawn, if not later. It’s an absolutely
phenomenal way to spend a Saturday night.
So how did it all get started? Read on for my interview with Juliette,
who’s responsible for the whole thing.
Blue Vipers of Brooklyn,
photo from shanghaimermaid.com
brooklyn spaces:
So how did it all get
started?
Juliette: I really had a vision. I just
decided I wanted to do a nightclub like Paris in the 1920s. Paris and Berlin and
Shanghai all had these very decadent underground club scenes at that time. There
was so much turmoil throughout the world, but people who have traditionally been
marginalized—artists, intellectuals, gay people, people of color—have
historically created underground scenes as a reaction to the mainstream, which
then, ironically, takes its cues from the underground. Anyway, at the very
beginning, my dear friend Tanya Rynd suggested that i throw some parties in lieu
of trying to start an actual nightclub, to see if anyone was interested. For the
first party, I think we each sent out fifty emails, and we were really
particular about who we invited, because we wanted people who would really get
it and appreciate it. And it was amazing. I had friends who had this space in
Dumbo, and even though Dumbo hasn’t been dangerous for a long time, at night
it’s kind of desolate, and four years ago even more so. People would be walking
around going, “Are we in the right place?” and they’d walk through this maze of
tagged walls, and then they’d hear music, and they’d walk in and it was just
complete glamour, candlelight and chandeliers, the whole thing. It was really
unexpected, which for me is part of the magic. You want to feel like you’re in a
different time and place. That’s really my goal, to make people feel like
they’ve been completely transported.
Lady C, photo by Erica
Camille
brooklyn spaces: It’s kind of like a gift
you’re giving to people.
Juliette: I don’t think there’s enough
glamour in the world, I really don’t. Even though we may not have any money, we
certainly can have glamour. If you have talented and creative people around you,
you can make anything you want. But it’s definitely a lot of work, you have to
be really obsessed to manifest your vision because it’s definitely against all
odds, sometimes.
photo from Red Lotus
Room’s blog
BANZAI!!!!! co-creator
Eric Schmallenberger, photo by Gabi Porter for New York Metromix
brooklyn spaces: So what happened to the
Dumbo space?
Juliette: Well, we outgrew it really
quickly. Shanghai Mermaid got listed on Nonsense NYC, which is a wonderful list, and Jeff Stark
wrote something very nice about it—I think he mentioned that we use real
glassware. It was really exciting, but it made the party huge. And the landlords
happened to be driving by and they called the cops and the fire department.
About a dozen fire trucks and cop cars descended on the space. They walked in
and were like, “Oh my god.” But they stayed for like an hour. Amber Ray was performing
when they finally turned the lights on and the music off, and everyone started
booing. I said, “You know what? You’ll look way cooler if you let her finish her
number.” And they said okay. They were really, really cool.
photo by Michael Blase
brooklyn spaces: Did you get the Red Lotus
Room right after that?
Juliette: No. We were mobile for awhile,
which was so much work. Everything at Shanghai—tables, chairs, tablecloths, bar,
chandeliers, curtains, the stage, the lights, the sound—we had to bring all that
with us. Then we’d set up for hours, and when it was over, I’d be sweeping the
floor in a ball gown at seven in the morning. So I knew I needed my own space, I
didn’t want to keep setting up and breaking down. But finding a space in
Brooklyn is super hard. I looked for a year and a half. I really wanted Red
Hook, I wanted something on the water, I love turn-of-the-century warehouses,
but finally I realized I had to be realistic. I like that it’s in Crown Heights,
that people have to go a little bit out of the way to get here. I think when you
have to work harder for something, you appreciate it more. Like the dress code.
I hate to turn people away, but if someone’s going to go spend money and time to
create an outfit from another era, I don’t want other people to come in in a
polo shirt and jeans. It’s not fair and it breaks the whole illusion.
Trixie Little & the
Evil Hate Monkey, photo by Benjamin Mobley
brooklyn spaces: What’s your relationship
with the people in the neighborhood?
Juliette: I try to be a part of the
community, and I’ve had a great response. I support the neighborhood, I buy
everything I can around here. And there’s all these little kids, really nice
kids, and they don’t have anything to do, so sometimes I let them come in, and I
show them the backstage area and all the costumes, and I let them on the stage.
I really want to try to do kids’ workshops or classes here, it’s definitely
something the community needs. On the whole, there’s good things and bad things
about gentrification. I remember being at Home Depot when we were first building
out the space, and this guy said, “I’m so happy white people have moved into
this neighborhood.” I said, “You are?” and he said, “Yeah, because now when you
call the cops, they come.” That just gave me the chills.
Maine Attraction, photo
by Michael Blase
brooklyn spaces: Who are some of your
favorite performers to work with?
Juliette: Les Chauds Lapins,
they were the very first act at the very first Shanghai Mermaid. I love Hot Sardines, Baby Soda Jazz Band, Blue Vipers of
Brooklyn—they were also at the first Shanghai Mermaid. For burlesque
performers, I tend to go for people who are costumey and conceptual, like Veronica Varlow, and Maine
Attraction, she’s got this great personality, very Josephine Baker. Amber Ray performed at the April in
Paris party, when everything was very French and dramatic. Then there’s the fire
performers, there’s so many great ones, like Reina
Terror, Christine Geiger, Lady C and Flambeaux. And for aerialists I adore Seanna Sharpe, and
of course Anya
Sapozhnikova from House of
Yes and Lady
Circus; she’s another example of someone who’s not only a
performer, as I am, but who works her ass off to run her own venue while
performing all around town. I’m very impressed with her and her
dedication.
BANZAI!!!!! photo by
Gabi Porter for New York Metromix
brooklyn spaces: Do you think the exclusive
nature of the parties attracts people?
Juliette: Shanghai Mermaid is not
exclusive, and I’ve never wanted it to be. Everyone is welcome. It’s just that
for survival it had to be really on the down-low. Although lately it’s not so
down-low anymore; it’s listed as a venue on Time Out New York, Gothamist just wrote about it, the Village Voice called it the “Best
Literally Underground Cabaret Show.”
photo from
shanghaimermaid.com
brooklyn spaces: Since this is a Brooklyn
blog, tell me your thoughts on being in Brooklyn these days.
Juliette: I very much believe in Brooklyn,
in the Brooklyn scene. I think Brooklyn’s really exciting. There’s still a
little bit of a Wild West quality here, which I don’t feel like Manhattan has
anymore, it’s gone really corporate. The party-throwers in Manhattan, they have
PR agents and big websites, they want to do a lot of corporate stuff. I usually
stay away from that. There’s definitely money in it, but the thing is, who are
you creating it for? Not that people who go to corporate events don’t deserve
something fabulous, but it’s just not something I’m going to go after. I guess
I’m a purist.
Blue Vipers of Brooklyn,
photo by Erica Camille
brooklyn spaces: What’s one of the best,
most beautiful memories from the parties?
Juliette: I’ll always remember the
very first moment at the very first Shanghai Mermaid when the curtains opened
and Les Chauds Lapins were playing, and I looked around and saw all these people
dressed so beautifully, and I thought, “We did it, and it’s so lovely!” It
really was how I imagined it. That’s a great memory. Opening night at the Red
Lotus Room was really exciting too. It’s a tremendous amount of work, but it is
super rewarding to be able to do something like this and share it. And I’ve
always been very, very blessed to have beautiful wonderful people come. When I
walk down the aisle, people grab my arm and say, “Thank you so much for doing
this.”
***
Like this? Read about more underground party spaces: Rubulad, Newsonic, Gemini
& Scorpio loft, The
Lab (Electric Warehouse), 12-turn-13, Gowanus
Ballroom, Big Sky
Works