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  1. In the early 1970s, Jacques and The Other Side were the subjects of many police reports of prostitution, drugs, and violent crime in the area. The bars became a point of contention within the gay community.

  2. 12 gru 2017 · Jacques, which is snug and charmingly frayed, still looks like an old-school gay bar with grit—a far cry from the cavernous Lansdowne Street super-clubs such as Avalon and Axis, where Knievil...

  3. While bars like Twelve Carter and Buddie’s in Back Bay, known for its shirtless bartenders and annual Thanksgiving dinners, cultivated a crowd of mainly younger, white gay men, Boston has a long and complex history of bars catering toward women, people of color, and the transgender community.

  4. Jacques Cabaret, which opened in 1938 and is still in operation, is now Boston's oldest surviving "LGBT establishment." It became a gay bar in the mid-1940s, a lesbian bar in the 1960s, and a venue for drag performers in the 1970s.

  5. Tucked into a corner of Bay Village, along with drag bar Jacques Cabaret, Napoleon’s, and a handful of other restaurants and bars, the Other Side offered a safe haven for many young LGBT people—including street kids, who might sit at the booths downstairs for hours, waiting for the disco to open.

  6. 11 kwi 2024 · Walker photographed in the Combat Zone, Bostons red light district of strip clubs, burlesque bars and porno movie houses. In 1982, he also recorded friends in Fort Hill Faggots for Freedom, “a radical living collective of more than 20 gay people” in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood.

  7. For example, Jaques' Cabaret, the city's only lesbian bar from the late 1960s to the early 1970s, and evolved into a venue for drag performers, which remains its focus to today. We want to tell these stories of how queer spaces have evolved.

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