Jewel's Catch One

Jewel's Catch One was a dance bar owned by Jewel Thais Williams, located on West Pico Boulevard in Los Angeles. Open for forty years, It was the longest running black gay dance bar in Los Angeles. It is now called UNION and is owned by Mitch Edelson.

History

When it opened in 1973, the club was one of the first black discos in the United States, and was for a long time the major black gay bar in Los Angeles.[1] The original owner of the club was Jewel-Thais Williams. She graduated from UCLA with a B.A. in History and during her college years she wanted to be self-employed. Her first business was a boutique, but it went out of business so she bought a bar. She opened the club after she experienced discrimination in different clubs around West Hollywood because she was black and female. Women at the time were not allowed to tend bar, but Jewel saved enough money and bought the bar despite the limitations.[2] When the club opened it became a hub for a diverse population of performers including The Fabulous Sylvester, Rick James and Madonna.[3]

Unfortunately, as the years went by the attendance of the bar went down. Jewel was about to shut the club down, but it was bought by Mitch Edelson (who also owns Los Globos) in November, 2015.[4] After that, it became known as the last Black owned disco and was renamed The Union. It's still the site of a large LGBTQ crowd.

The club was featured as an organization in an exhibit in the City Hall in Los Angeles called Defiant Spaces.[5]

A documentary about the nightclub, "Jewel's Catch One" premiered during Outfest on July 10, 2016, at Hollywood’s Harmony Gold. It explores the club’s historical importance and Thais-Williams’ influence in the local community and abroad.[6]

Jewel Thais-Williams

While she was still owner of the nightclub, Jewel went back to school and got her Master of Science degree in Oriental Medicine from Samra University in 1998. Due to the high rate of preventable diseases such as diabetes and obesity in minority populations, Jewel decided to open a non-profit called the Village Health Population. It was created with the purpose of educating lower-income communities on nutrition and living a more healthy lifestyle.[2]

Her active work in the community was documented in an academic journal in 2011 in the series called Thinking Gender Papers. The journal discussed Jewel's use of the club's building as a source to give health advice and run her non-profit. Also, it served as a space for political organizations to have their community meetings.[7]

To honor her contributions to the LGBT community, Thais-Williams was appointed the Grand Marshall of the 2016 Los Angeles Pride Festival.[8]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.