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Created June 11, 2001 |
©
The
Chicago Bar Project |

1824 W. Wabansia Ave. (1700N,
1800W)
Chicago
(773) 227-2300
When most Chicagoans think of excellent Italian dining, they think
of the Italian Village,
Orso's,
Mia Francesca, or even
Tuscany. When
most Chicagoans think of swanky lounge scenes, they think of the Funky Buddha
Lounge, Subterranean,
Holiday, or even the
Leopard Lounge. Only those in the
know, know where to go for both: Club Lucky. The club combines the feel of
1940's era lounging with a supper club featuring authentic Sicilian cooking.
The combination makes Club Lucky one of the coolest and most unique venues in
Bucktown
and all of Chicago, and one that occasionally attracts hipsters
like Vince Vaughn and Peter Billingsly (! -
"Ralphie" from the movie, A Christmas Story). Not bad for a venue
that used to serve as a hardware store, speakeasy, polling place for the
35th Ward, and Polish banquet hall...
At the corner of Honore and Wabansia, "Club Lucky" spelled out in pink neon lights beckons with its promise of "traditional Italian food," (the $6 valet sign is somewhat less inviting). Step through the wooden door with its circular portal, and you step into a time where Sinatra was the Chairman, and martinis outsold Budweiser. The multicolored linoleum floor, red naugahyde booths, pastel wallpaper, recessed ceiling lit with pink light, and funky metal wire artwork supplement the martini-and-cigars atmosphere. Glass blocks frame a large picture window in front, while wooden blinds block out the sun during summer nights to preserve the night. At Club Lucky you get the feeling that, at any moment, a black limousine will pull up with either a powerful politician, Mafioso, or world-class entertainer stepping out with a blonde on each arm.

The bar area is an exact replica of the
original room, as it was in 1938. A few televisions frame the
long, polished Formica-topped bar, but are thankfully turned off most of the
time. Martinis shaken, not stirred, are mixed in stainless steel shakers and
are made from one of 21 vodkas, eight gins, and olives hand-stuffed with
cocktail onions, anchovies, pimentos or blue cheese. And just for the record: Club Lucky was
serving mean martinis way before the current cocktail phase, and will be long
afterwards. The jukebox is filled with Rat Pack tunes and jazz from swing
bands, and really sets the mood. In recognition of these efforts, Club Lucky
was voted into the Audience Top 10 in Citysearch: Chicago's Best Jukebox and
Best
Martini for 2001 polls. Dinner is served in the bar area, but I suggest
the dining room as it is more open and less smoky.
"If I had the time to hang out in an Italian restaurant, this is the kind of place I'd choose. The good feel of the place got me the first time I walked through the door."
Pat Bruno, restaurant critic for the Chicago Sun Times
When your table is ready, step up the
few stairs and you'll enter a large, 140-seat dining room, noisy with
conversation, the clink of wine glasses, and the sound of cutlery on porcelain
plates. There are several large booths on the south side of the room, and every
other square inch of space is filled with tables. Be prepared to be bumped when
people are coming or going from their table. The waiters and waitresses wear
red coats and try hard but unfortunately know little about giving truly good
service, so you may only receive mediocrity with your wine recommendation that
just happens to be the most expensive on the menu. A counter in the dining
room's southwest corner, formerly used as a second bar in the 1930's, stands by
with antipasti appetizers and desserts. Here, tomatoes and lemons are piled up
in pyramids under cylindrical canister-style lights. Large framed mirrors,
diamond floor tile, a variety of retro lamps, painted white brick, a pressed
tin ceiling, and satellite-like lights hanging from the ceiling completes the
picture. In fact, the aluminum and glass light fixtures in the dining
room are replicas of pieces found in the Empire State Building when it was
built.
The Southern
Italian-influenced food is excellent. My recommendation: start off with the
bruscetta, move on to the magnificent filet oreganato, and finish off with a
cannoli. While Club Lucky's martinis are killer, have a Moretti La Rossa amber
lager or one of their many bottles of wine if you're not into cocktails. Other
notable menu items include lightly fried calamari and stuffed artichokes for an
appetizer; lobster ravioli, baby back ribs and Capellini
Siciliana (with eggplant), pasta e fagioli entrées (average price $12-$20); and
tiramisù, spumoni and profiteroles for dessert. Complimentary
warm bread starts off every meal. The budget conscious may enjoy an Italian sub
or meatball sandwich at pub grub prices. In the 2002 edition of
Zagat's Chicago Restaurants survey, Club
Lucky was even highlighted as one of top 80 good values in the city. Zagat's
went on to rate Club Lucky overall as having very good food, nice decor and
very good service, with an average meal costing you about $25.
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Since 1990, Club Lucky has been a pioneer
in Bucktown's regentrifying neighborhood. It was then that co-owners Jim
Higgins and Robert Paladino purchased a Polish corner neighborhood bar (by the
same name) and the adjacent, abandoned community center and transformed it into
Club Lucky over the span of a year. Chicago history buffs may be interested to
know that Club Lucky joins the likes of the
Green Mill,
Glascott's and
Lottie's, as having also served as a
speakeasy during prohibition,
with a hardware store front and gin martinis as the signature drink. Today, the
vodka martini rules and the Club is a great place to take a date, friends or
colleagues from out of town, or to meet with a large group of talkative
friends. Recently, a Sicilian friend of mine chose Club Lucky as an appropriate
place to gather all of us to announce that he was about to have a baby. It was
the perfect setting. If you have a very large party, Club Lucky will be happy
to rent out its private dining area that seats up to 130 people. Club Lucky
even keeps to tradition by serving as a polling place during elections.
"Big portions, family-style service,
reasonable prices, and good cocktails," is how Higgins (part Sicilian) aptly
describes Club Lucky's raison d'être. I couldn't put it any better, aside
from saying that one will not be disappointed from a night at Club Lucky (not
to be confused with
Club 950 Lucky
No.), whether it's cocktails in the fashionable lounge or dinner and drinks
in the cavernous supper club.
According
to the Official Chicago Bar Guide (1994), Club Lucky is described in
this way, "Your DeSoto's parked out front, my good man, and your martini is
dry, the way you like it. One-time dump transformed into a stylish 40s club."
If you like Club Lucky, you'll probably also like
Bungalow Loungebar, a mellow bar
reminiscent of Las Vegas hotel lounges that is under the same ownership
further north, perhaps for a cocktail afterwards.
For more information, the complete menu, or to purchase Club Lucky's
homemade marinara sauce (whose price is as robust as the sauce at $6.95), Club
Lucky-emblazoned t-shirts, hats, and pocket protectors (?!?), check out the
Club Lucky website. Manga!
"All recipes include a little love"
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
[back to the Chicago Bar Project]
written by Sean Parnell
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