They are considering a fourth cocktail to honor the gay Black writer James Baldwin. Walker Summer Martini, named after the novelist Alice Walker and the Jos Baker Manhattan, named after the famed civil rights activist Josephine Baker. Kincaid Daiquiri, named after the novelist Jamaica Kincaid A. Susanne FairfaxĪt least three of their cocktails are also inspired by famous intellectuals who were Black women: The J.
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Renauda Riddle, left, enjoys a Pink KItty cocktail while Angela Barnes makes a point with her Hibiscus Mimosa. “I was like ‘OK, yeah … we found the name,’” Riddle said.
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She shared it with Riddle, who “was ecstatic.” “Oh, my goodness, I love this,” Barnes recalled thinking. It felt like the perfect name for the space they wanted to create. For inspiration, Barnes, a corporate attorney, turned to her home library of books written by famous authors of color, and came across one of her favorite poems, “Be Nobody’s Darling,” Alice Walker’s ode to setting one’s own path unapologetically, regardless of being seen as uncool or an outcast, she said. These openings and reopenings come amid a broader trend of lesbian bars closing their doors since the 1980s.Īt first, Riddle and Barnes, who are Black and queer, struggled with what to call their new bar. Dave’s Lesbian Bar, a pop-up space for queer women in Queens, New York and Hershee Bar in Norfolk, Virginia, an iconic lesbian bar that will soon reopen after being shuttered for nearly three years. The cocktail lounge joins a handful of other new or soon-to-be opened bars for queer women across the country, including Herz in Mobile, Alabama As You Are Bar in Washington, D.C. “The energy as soon as you walk in the door, people say they feel that energy.
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“We put our love into this bar, and people feel it,” Riddle, 41, said. The first night was “packed,” according to the owners, and business hasn’t slowed since. in the Andersonville section of Chicago - known informally as “Girlstown” for its once-booming lesbian community - in late May. Nobody’s Darling officially opened its doors at 1744 W. “That’s what we’ve been trying to create.” Nobody’s Darling, as it is now called, “is built to be welcoming,” Barnes, 52, told NBC News.