- The EndUp
The EndUp is the longest-running dance club in
San Francisco ,California having been founded in 1973. It is located on the corner of 6th and Harrison, in theSoMa (South of Market (Street)) district. The EndUp has two bars, a lounge with fireplace, a dance floor with mirrored columns, and a large open-air deck with a waterfall, plants and seating. The venue has hosted a variety of benefits, events and clubs and each night has a unique dance focus catering to subsets of the dance community. The club reflects the changing nature of gay, dance and San Francisco cultures.History
Early years
When the
nightclub first opened by owner Al Hankin, the dance floor was made of translucent plastic with flashing lights below. The EndUp was originally an entirelygay dance club, catering mainly toAsian-American s and their admirers. It was famous as the location of the "Sunday Afternoon Wet Jockstrap Dance Contest" from about 1974 to about 1992 . Entering this contest is how many San FranciscoGo-Go dancer s began their go-go dance careers. This contest was made famous in the 1976 book "Tales of the City", the first volume of the six-volume series (hexology)Tales of the City by San Francisco authorArmistead Maupin and recreated on thePBS made for TV mini-series of the same name.The EndUp began opening at 6am on Sunday morning in 1980 for a party originally called "The Church" with DJ
Steve Fabus . Those who had been up all night dancing at theTrocadero Transfer and still wanted to dance more, came to "The Church" when the Trocadero Transfer closed at 6am. The EndUp is famous amongDJ s as the place whereHi-NRG music began with the DJPatrick Cowley at the "Menergy" parties in 1982 . OnValentines Day (February 14 ) 1984, a contest called "Go-Go's Wild" was held at the EndUp in which the person who was judged by the audience to be the best go-go dancer in a wooden cage (with four vertical poles--shaped like a telephone booth) got a prize of $100. Many people entered this contest and it inspired many to begin their go-go dance careers.Early 90s
In the early 1990s, the EndUp was the location of the popular
avant-garde queer clubClub Uranus (often referred to by its patrons simply as "Uranus") every Sunday night from December 1989 to December 1992 (with occasional special events such as the "Miss Uranus" contest continuing until April 1994) and theKlub Dekadence every Friday night from December 1991 to December 1993.Created by counter-culture nightclub promoter
Gregg Taylor , who later also created "Product" at 1015 Folsom, Club Uranus was not only a very fun club but also fostered a community of artists and "freaks" who celebrated excessive creativity and encouraged others to flex their creative energies. TheDJ s wereLewis Walden andMichael Blue . With co-MCJerome Caja and a cast ofClub Kids , drag artists and performance artists likeTrauma Flintstone ,Diet Popstitute ,Steven Maxxine ,Kitty Litter and performers likePussy Tourette andElvis Herselvis , Club Uranus was the place to be a part of thebohemian underground scene. The annual "Miss Uranus Pageant" became widely known in the largerLGBT community when a contestant, aperformance art dancer named "Betty" fed ahamster with carrot sticks. She threw acarrot hitting an audience member in the eye. She had been feeding the animal by holding the carrot between her butt cheeks. The local gay media ran a series of letters attempting to get any legal names of the performers but no one cooperated.The club also served as a catalyst to the mushrooming early-90's rave scene as a place for the mixed crowds to gather at 6AM after a night of partying, since the End Up was and is open 24 hours a day on
weekend s.1995-2005
The most popular clubs at the EndUp between 1995 and 2005 were
Fag Fridays on Friday evenings (which featured male go-go dancers),Other Whirled created by promoter Alison Page on Saturday mornings, and a "T-Dance" on Sunday morning from 6AM til 8PM.The EndUp today
Its most popular parties are the daytime
Sunday T-Dance andReggae Gold - 2nd & 4th Saturday nights. The EndUp has played host to an enormous spectrum of internationalDJ talent, and continues to represent the artistic-underground culture of the city. Some of the regular acts currently performing in the space includePink Mammoth , Red Melon, Green Gorilla Lounge, and Deep House Project.From October 2005 to July 2006 one Saturday a month, the EndUp hosted the "Revolutionary" club, put on by
club promoter Jim "Astro Boy" Williams and featuringDJ Keoki .The Sunday morning T-Dance is still the longest running party at the EndUp. The T-Dance has always featured a lineup of some of the best-known house dj's in San Francisco such as Aaron O, Blackstone, Nikki Rivera, Tommy Rogers and many others from "back in the day" of the early house music era. The Current DJ lineup includes residents Jim Hopkins, Vince, Adrian, Nikola Bayalta and Hawthorne as well as various once a month guests like "The Early Show".
.
Ownership change in 2005
In August 2005, the club was sold by Carl Hankin, the brother of the founder, to a group of six owners with eclectic backgrounds.
The EndUp is currently trying to make most of the promotions in-house to maintain control, as the new owners learn the business and establish relationships with the staff and clientele'. The clubs at the venue still have a lot of variety including the gay disco and early house music that helped create the club, the classic sounds can still be heard Sunday afternoons. Music styles include
reggae ,mash-up s,break beat s, andtechno /Tech-House. DJ's from around the world still appear includingDerrick Carter ,Tommy Sunshine ,DJ Sneak . With the departure ofFag Fridays DK Hawthorn'sGhetto Disco has been added to the lineup. First Saturdays areKontrol featuring minimal techno and micro-house with an emphasis on live performance. Third Saturdays now hasJohn Early ofBurning Man fame. Sydney Leung, one of the new owners emphasized that the EndUp is committed to keeping the place "legendary".References
* [http://www.thewavemag.com/pagegen.php?pagename=article&articleid=24404 The EndUp Endures]
* [http://endup.tribe.net/thread/c1b6fa5d-f2e2-4678-80df-68fe5bfafaaa Thirty Years of the Endup (reposted from SF Bay Guardian, on tribe.net)]External links
* [http://www.theendup.com http://www.theendup.com]
* [http://www.theendup.com/blog http://www.theendup.com/blog]
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