Jean-Pierre Boccara

Jean-Pierre Boccara is a French-Italian-American nightclub and restaurant entrepreneur and artist known for founding several seminal clubs in Los Angeles, California. Lhasa Club, Lhasaland, Café Largo, and Luna Park were known for bookings across many genres, including: music, spoken word, comedy, cinema, cabaret, and pre-digital media art shows. These venues received critical acclaim not only for their range of groundbreaking acts, but also for their excellent cuisine and ambiance.

Jean-Pierre_Boccara, photo by Robert Mann

Early life

Born in Tunisia and raised in Paris, Boccara first came to Los Angeles in 1976 as a film student. He directed and produced two short films in Paris, L’Homme Désintégré (The Disintegrated Man) in 1978 and Par Exemple: Le Poison Dans l’ Eau (For Example: Poison in the Water) in 1979. Par Exemple: Le Poison Dans l’ Eau had its distribution rights revoked after being censored by the French government as "an apology for terror."

The Clubs

Lhasa Club (1982–1988) in Hollywood

The three hundred person capacity multimedia space functioned as a stage, art gallery, cinema, special events venue, and café. The club was known for its eclectic and surprising bookings of original talent. Named by the LA Weekly "Best after hours hangout" in 1982, "Best avant-garde club" in 1983, and "Best cabaret" in 1984, the club was often covered in media outlets including KCRW, LA Weekly and the LA Times.[1] The Lhasa Club emphasized visuals, film loops, slide shows, and handmade special effects.

It became a watering hole for both unknown and established artists, not only in all genres of music but also spoken word, comedy, cinema, cabaret, and painting. Some of the artists who appeared on Lhasa’s stage where: Ann Magnuson, Henry Rollins, Sandra Bernhard, Jane’s Addiction, Hubert Selby Jr., Nick Cave, Duran Duran, Christian Death, Kevin Costner, Exene Cervenka, Chris Isaak, Joey Arias, Thomas Dolby, The Kipper Kids, John Sex, Lypsinka, Lance Loud, The Fibonaccis, Lydia Lunch, Angie Bowie, John Lurie, John Fleck, Stray Cats, Llyn Foulkes, Jello Biaffra, and Rachel Rosenthal.

Henry Rollins Live at Luna Park dvd cover, shot at Rollin's March and April 1999 shows

In 1984, a live album entitled The Lives of Lhasa[2] was produced by Boccara, Anna Mariani, and David Yuratich. It featured, among others, Henry Rollins, The Fibonaccis, and Linda J. Albertano.

In 1987, Boccara began a film of one hundred performers performing short pieces in front of a single camera. Only about a third of the project was completed. Final edited footage was released in 2015 as The Lhasa Club Tapes on the LhasaLargoLuna[3] page on YouTube and Lhasa Largo Luna[4] on Facebook.

In 1988, Boccara established the Lhasa Foundation, a non-profit arts group.

Lhasaland (1988–1989) at the Musician’s Union in Hollywood

The one thousand person capacity, multimedia two-level concert/party hall presented major national acts including Devo, The Knitters and Depeche Mode. Music and film industry parties included the L.A. Weekly 10th anniversary party.

Café Largo (1989–1992), on Fairfax in Hollywood

The 120 seat critically acclaimed[5] club and restaurant featured comedy, jazz, world music, spoken word, live music and record industry showcases. In 1990, the LA Reader said "Largo mixes food and music memorably" and the LA Weekly named it the "Best Supper Club" in 1991. It was sold in 1992 and operated until 2008.

The talent roster included comedians (Nora Dunn, Lotus Weinstock, Sharon Barr), singers (Victoria Williams, The Del Rubio Triplets, Suzanne Vega, Peter Himmelman, Grant Lee Buffalo, Joe Higgs), cabaret performers (Weba Garretson, Lypsinka, Philip Littell, Stephanie Vlahos, The Les Stevens Show), and spoken word artists (Henry Rollins, Barry Yourgrau, Wanda Coleman, and Timothy Leary.

For three years, Largo hosted the weekly series Poetry in Motion, presented by Eve Brandstein and Michael Lally.

Luna Park (1993–2000) in West Hollywood

The seven hundred person capacity multi-level nightclub featured two stages with live entertainment, dancing, and a global cuisine restaurant.

Notable accolades include: "Triple the ambiance" (Daily News, 1994), "Best food in Los Angeles" (Buzz, 1995), "Best food in a nightclub" (L.A. Weekly 1998), "The best nightspot in town, with a great Euro-Asian menu...[6]"(Travel and Leisure 1998), and "Possibly the best music club on the planet" (Los Angeles Magazine, 1999). The LA Times coverage[7] and reviews[8] of the performances were extensive.

Some of the acts included:

During its seven years span Luna Park hosted Beth Lapides' Uncabaret. The weekly unconventional comedy show showcased the talents of Margaret Cho, Andy Dick, Andy Kindler, Taylor Negron, Bobcat Goldthwait, Julia Sweeney, Janeane Garofalo, Bob Odenkirk, Kathy Griffin.

References

  1. "IN THE NEWS: Lhasa Club". latimes.com. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  2. Guy, Curious. "V/A The Lives Of Lhasa LP". http://phoenixhairpins.blogspot.com. Retrieved 6 November 2015. External link in |website= (help)
  3. "LhasaLargoLuna". youtube.com. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  4. "Lhasa Largo Luna". facebook. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  5. Douglas, Sadownick (December 3, 1989). "The Comeback of a Cabaret : The pioneering owners of a defunct performance art Mecca rekindle the flame at Cafe Largo in the Fairfax District". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  6. Rubin, Chris. "Insider: Los Angeles". travelandleisure.com. Travel + Leisure. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  7. Siegmund, Heidi (October 27, 1994). "LunaPark an Eclectic Venue Without Westside Snobbery". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  8. "IN THE NEWS Lunapark". latimes. Los Angeles Times.
  9. "Henry Rollins - Live in Luna Park DVD". henryrollins, themerchcollective. Henry Rollins. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  10. LeVasseur, Rovi, Andrea. "Henry Rollins: Live at Luna Park (2004)". New York Times. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  11. Brandon, Sideleau. "Henry Rollins Live At Luna Park DVD". punknews.org. Punk News. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
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