
1010 Main St
Boise, Id
(208) 345-6605
www.myspace.com/thebouquet
The Bouquet has been a
The Bouquet was at one time
Like the blues, the Bouquet has had a colorful history dating back
to the turn of the century. It was doing business at
The centerpiece of the old Bouquet was an ornate, gargantuan,
The back bar, still the predominant feature of the Bouquet, was
originally installed in the Overland Hotel's ballroom. The hotel was
torn down in 1904 and replaced by the
Al Berro first saw the bar when he was sixteen. Al was a boxer from
After World War II, Berro came back from a stint at the
One of Berro's customers and friends was Tony Uranga, who owned a
couple of bars in town. Uranga asked Berro in 1955 if he'd like to
be his partner and buy the Bouquet. Al worried about the price, but
eventually said yes and borrowed the money to do it.
"When I bought it, it was a pretty good place," says Berro. "Bob
King and Johnny Callas owned it then. King had owned it since 1934.
It was a club where they played cards. It wasn't legal, but
Berro became sole owner of the Bouquet in 1960. His partner, Tony
Uranga, wasn't satisfied with the returns on his investment, so Al
bought him out. Uranga went on to open the first club in Jackpot,
A drunken fighter caused quite a stir one slow Monday night. Only 30
or 40 people were in the bar when a guy Berro had kicked out earlier
for raising hell, came back shooting. He fired three shots. One went
right through the front window. Another shot hit a patron who ducked
behind the Foosball game, bleeding profusely. Everybody else hit the
floor. Berro grabbed the gunman from behind and held him in a death
lock until somebody grabbed the wild man's gun. It's amazing nobody
got killed in the scrape. The fighter went to jail for a few days.
The Bouquet Sportsman's Center was just a tavern until 1968. A place
where you could buy a beer or a cigar, get something to eat, or play
some cards. A change in police chiefs brought a change in attitude
towards gambling. Card games were no longer openly tolerated. The
cops sent in stool pigeons with marked money to plan pan, then
busted everybody. Berro was arrested three times that summer. He
decided that without card games for income he'd have to get a liquor
license.
In the early 70s,
Berro invested his returns in a building at 1010 Main, the site of
the old
For a while there were still some card games in the basement,
operated by a dealer who rented the space from Berro. A door in the
front of the club opened to a spiral staircase that went downstairs.
You had to know someone to get through that door. Eventually those
card games were also shut down by the police.
The Bouquet began bringing in live music in the late '70s. At first,
just light jazz groups, but then bands like Chops, Wilson-Fairchild
and Billy Braun began making regular appearances. The Robert Cray
Band was one of the first big blues acts to appear in 1978. Bonnie
Raitt played there in 1979. The Bouquet soon became one of
In the early '80s, after 29 years, Berro decided to sell the
Bouquet. He was having problems with his family, who were involved
in running the club. "I was just disgusted," he says. "I thought,
Hell, I'm gonna sell out." He was introduced to Chris Findlay and
Tom Rexroad who arranged to purchase the club in 1984.
The previous owners inaugurated
Because of the success of blues night, the Bouquet began booking
more blues bands. Many top-name acts came to play, including Albert
Collins, James Cotton, Rory Block, Taj Mahal, Curtis Salgado and
Eddie Shaw. The Paul deLay band from
In 1986, financial and management problems led
In 1989, Bob Dreyer bought the Bouquet and spent more than $200,000
dressing up the place, remodeling the floors and bathrooms. Dreyer
then leased the club to a restaurant group from
About the same time the Bouquet closed its doors, Barney Southard
and Ken Harris ran into each other at a
Southard and his wife Dee were interested in opening a blues club
and asked Harris if he'd be interested. "We thought, if we could
just get this guy to commit," says Southard, "we might have
something." Harris agreed to give it a go and started making plans
to move back to
Initially, the group planned to open a club called "Wang Dang
Doodles." They scoured the city looking for the right location,
checking out the Riders Bar, the Watering Hole on
The Hoochie Coochie Men became a five-piece band with the addition
of guitarist
Most out of town artists are pleasantly surprised at the Bouquet's
good acoustics, large stage and especially the enthusiastic crowds.
Mark Hummel said it was "the best place we played on the last tour."
The Bouquet has lived through half-a-dozen wars, prohibition, the
depression, multiple owners, shootings, arrests, three address
changes and the Boise Redevelopment Agency. It has also logged a
number of strange and unusual events. Longtime patrons remember the
night Billy Braun came in wearing an Easter rabbit suit and streaked
the club. John Laufenberger recalls paying Paul deLay a compliment
one night that Paul misinterpreted as a pass. A number of club goers
remember the night ten years ago when Albert Collins walked the
length of the bar, blasting his Telecaster while picking up and
downing shots of Jack Daniels without missing a note.
Bartender Marsha St. John opened up the Bouquet
one afternoon recently and was astonished to see a figure seated at
Ken Harris' keyboards on stage. When she walked closer to see who it
was, the figure vanished and a dove flew off the keyboards and into
the office. Marsha opened the door, then went looking for the bird.
It flew down from the rafters, glided past her head, landed again on
the keyboards and then flew out the door. Could the ghost of some
long gone piano player be putting its seal of approval on one