GIPSY GAY BAR LAS VEGAS FREE
Free valet and self-parking is available in the front and lots nearby. There is typically no cover charge, and Happy Hour is from 9pm till midnight on Thursday through Sunday. The last significant gay bar raid in Las Vegas happened at this address on Halloween 1980, McBride says, when undercover. SOUNDBITES There was this one time in Phoenix when I was called to. Gipsy is located between Harmon and Tropicana at 4605 Paradise Road, Las Vegas, Nevada 89169-7153. In 1980 it became Village Station, then the gay nightclub Gipsy in 1981. Diary of a Las Vegas Call Bear: Not Every John Is a Freakshow. Lace Saturdays feature Ladies Night with $1 well drinks, and Sundays offer drag production numbers. Fridays are all about dance, from electro/nu-wave to disco, punk, indie, and more. Gipsy was the first gay nightclub in Las Vegas when it opened in 1977. Gypsy is a popular gay bar with dancing starting at 10:00 p.m. Theme nights occupy most of the week, starting with an amateur talent show on Thursdays, accompanied by all-you-can-drink well liquor and a Miller Beer Bust from 11pm to 1am. Located a few blocks off the bustling Las Vegas Strip, the Rio All-Suite. Dress ranges from casual to swanky and downright slutty. Las Vegas first gay nightclub, Gipsy, is months from closing its doors thanks to its verbally abusive and over intoxicated owner. The focus here is on lively music, drinking, dancing, and uninhibited, unpretentious fun until whenever the party ends. In 2004, it was voted the Las Vegas Weekly Readers' choice for Best Gay/Lesbian Bar. His mother Marilyn passing in 2001 at the age of 66 was extremely difficult for Paul. Gipsy nightclub became a family business with Paul’s mother, Marilyn ‘Mother’ San Filipo, helping to manage the Gipsy Nightclub until her retirement. Gipsy was one of the first dance clubs established in the "Fruit Loop,'' a cluster of gay bars, stores, and restaurants within a strip mall area between the Las Vegas Strip and the UNLV campus. Paul purchased Gipsy Nightclub from Chuck Melfi in 1994, once Las Vegas’ most popular LGBTQ+ nightclub.