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  1. www.lofficielusa.com › politics-culture › history-gay-nightlife-nyc-clubs-drag-ballThe History of Gay Nightlife in New York City

    1 Ιουν 2023 · Sprawling the city’s five boroughs, today’s gay nightlife spots are a mix of casual hangouts, performance based-spaces, and techno bangers. Hell’s Kitchen—home to many of Manhattan’s gay bars and clubs—continues to be a favorite for the community and swanky spots like Metropolitan and The Rosemont flourish in Brooklyn.

  2. While their significance is often underestimated or dismissed by heterosexual society, bars and other establishments played a pivotal role throughout the 20th century — but particularly in the pre-Stonewall era — as centers for LGBT activism and community.

  3. 14 Ιουν 2015 · Jeff Ferzoco has created an interactive map, OUTgoing, that captures the ever-unfolding history of New York’s LGBT nightlife venues. Ferzoco, an information designer with his own company, linepointpath, came by the idea naturally.

  4. 18 Αυγ 2017 · There will always be gay bars, but will they be as vivid, sexy, and subversive as the haunts of yore? The history of NYC nightlife is studded with the memories of fascinating boîtes that attracted gays in desperate need of connection, then ultimately fell away as newer spots and trends emerged.

  5. 24 Οκτ 2024 · The club, music, food, fashion and gay scenes all produced future legends that year, despite the creative community being decimated by AIDS. The Pyramid Club is the stuff of downtown New York legend. In the 1980s, a tiny little dive bar on Avenue A near Tompkins Square Park became ground zero for the exploding New York drag scene. It was punk.

  6. 4 Ιουν 2024 · Where to Soak Up New York City's LGBTQ History. The gay bars, bookstores, museums, community centers, and more that are worth a visit to immerse yourself in queer scenes past and...

  7. 3 Ιουν 2020 · By the 1920s, the area was called “a street of hotels.” The area with long-established waterfront taverns, losing the rough seamen and longshoreman patrons by the 1960’s, had become a nucleus for bars catering to a gay clientele (those bars that remain still draw nice crowds).