Gay bar in hacienda heights

These stylish frocks will make you feel like a million bucks. Steve Terradot learned how to play pool in the back room at the Boulevard bar in Pasadena in He spent many nights there, relishing the feelings of safety and community the space provided. He lost 11 close friends to the disease and felt a sense of urgency to do something about it.

In his hometown, he felt ashamed and struggled to acknowledge his identity. The move afforded him the opportunity. Inhe started bartending at the Boulevard. Inhe bought the bar. Over the years the Boulevard became a safe haven for the gay community in the area and an alternative to the West Hollywood bar scene.

1733 Gay Park Way, Hacienda Heights, CA 91745

Business was good. There was karaoke six nights a week. Three nights a week drag queens from all over the state took to the small stage. The disco ball reflected dancing beads of light in celebration of a constant barrage of birthdays and post-work get-togethers. Mark Lanza and Mark Chou became regulars at the Boulevard a decade ago.

Here, unlike the many bars in West Hollywood they had visited, gay felt a sense of belonging. The couple joined the panorama of people from Ontario, Temple City, Rosemead and Pasadena, finding common cause with their stool mates, who seemed content to sip beer and moderately priced heights in a welcoming environment.

About three years ago, Terradot needed a bartender, and Lanza offered to help. Terradot taught him how to bartend and the two became good friends. The pandemic upended the Boulevard community and employees. When the space closed for the first time in 40 years after the government-mandated shutdown in Marchthe bills started to pile up.

The bar was not set up to offer to-go cocktails and there was no food for takeout. The immediate future promised only bar. Terradot did not receive his first unemployment check until June This year, payments stopped in March, and he hasn't received a check since. Despite daily calls, he has been unable to get anyone from the state Employment Development Department on the phone.

He'd been using his unemployment checks to pay the bills and considered taking out a mortgage on his home. The money he received from his single PPP loan in is long gone. Lanza suggested hacienda a fundraiser campaign on the GoFundMe website, but Terradot pushed back.