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The No Exit Cafe
6970 North Glenwood
Chicago, IL, 60626 USA
Phone: (773) 743-3355
For booking, please go to the
contact
us page for all booking information.
Then, please contact: Brettly
In addition to being host to several
theatrical performances, book readings, music and more, the
No Exit cafe is also available for private parties, gatherings,
political events, and more, which can be catered by the Heartland
Cafe. Just contact Brettly.
Hours
We are open about one hour
prior to show time, and close with in one hour of the shows
ending.
The No Exit serves food and beverages for
the public events that we host
Our delightful space
is available for special events, rehearsals, meetings, film
shoots and parties.
Historical Essay
by Susan Kozin
"It's a magical place, a place that
will grab by the scruff of the neck and not let go."
I am trying to explain the Exit to customers who are new to
the place. "Not everyone will see it that way. They will
come in have coffee and leave, they don't get it. The Exit
grabbed me in '68, it took me 31 years to shake the grasp."
The No Exit Cafe/Gallery began in Evanston, Illinois, in September
1958 by two Northwestern University students, Bill Harmon
and Dick McKernan. Housed in a narrow store front next to
the Foster El station, No
Exit became the hang out for the beat generation college student.
Word is that Sorority girls could be deplegded if they were
seen in the cafe. N was called abeatnik coffeehouse, but the
economic and social diversity could be well noted with the
clientele.
About three months after the cafe opened, Joe Moorewas hired
to run the cafe.After nine months Joe bought out Harmon and
McKernon. Joining the college student crowd were the racing
crowd, the writers like Frank Robinson and the folk singers
like Art Thieme1 Dodi Kallack, and Judy Bright. In the following
years singers like, Steve Goodman, Harry Wailer, Michael Smith,
Claudia Schmidt, Christy Moore, Blues man Jim Brewer, Pat
Clinton, Couple a Fat Guys, Jim Craig and somany more have
graced the stage.
Brian Kozin started hanging out in 1961 during the hay day
of the Joe Moore ownership. During the early 60's the expresso
was hot and the Jazz was cool. Ira Sullivan led a jazz combo
on Saturday afternoon's. Brian also remembers one night after
Jim Brewer finished his set, he needed a ride back to the
west side. Brian offered to takehim in Joe Moore's car. Joe
asked if Brian could drive. "Sure I can drive."
Brian replied. Several month later Brian came into the Exit
and proudly showed off his new drivers license. "I thought
you had a license" exclaimed Moore. "No, you asked
if I could drive" was Kozin's retort.
When Northwestern University bought the building No Exit was
in to add student housing in '67, Moore started looking in
Rogers Park for the new location. No Exit opened at Lunt and
Glenwood on December 7th, 1967. It didn't take long for a
wholelot of new regulars to join the old one's. Sue Kozin
was one of them. "I moved up from the far south side
town of Harvey because I was told of this great coffeehouse
opening up" said Sue. "It took me a couple of months
of peering in the door before I walked in." By spring
I was waiting tables Thursday nights and Steve Goodman was
the entertainment. 1968 was a year of politics and demon-strations.
The '68 Democratic convent-ion and the protest riots against
the Viet Nam war became a hot topic around the regulars table.
No Exit was a polling place and Rogers Park was then part
of the regular Democratic machine. The room became even more
enriched with tie dyed Hippies interspersed with the business
types. Everyone seemed to coexist. No Exit settled into music,
chess and car racing.
In 1972, Joe Moore and his wife Joanne decided to buy an old
resort in Fort Atkenson,Wisconsin. He then sold No Exit to
Peter Steinberg, his long time manager. The first thing Steinberg
did was to get rid of the racing crowd and throw a chair through
thetrophy case. This was Stein-berg's gesture of freedom.
The Japanese game of G0 replaced chess.Mathematicians and
computer programmers replaced the race car drivers. Folk music
was still the staple part of the culture. Times were good
and there were many venues on Chicago for music. No Exit prospered
through the efforts of many artists who were working for the
satisfaction of the performance. Howard Berkman, Art Thieme,
and Dan and Roxanne Kedding, Mike Dougal and Al Day became
featured performers. The gallery space was also in use by
new area artists. Ned Broderick and Pete Peterson, returning
Vet Nam vet's displayed works both humorous and grim views
of life and war.
Brian and Sue Kozin purchased No Exit from Peter Steinberg
in April 1977. For Sue this was a realization put into motion
some seven years earlier. "The one thing Joe Moore did
was to educate me in the right and wrong ways to run a coffeehouse."
according to Sue. Brian seconded that statement. We took our
time and returned the cafe back to the vintage 50's and 60's.
We retained singers like Art Theme and Howard Berkman, and
added the talent ofMichael Smith, Suzy Boggus, Rosalie Sorels,
Pat McDonald (who later headed the group Timbuk 3) and Andrew
Calhoun to give a short list. Jazz was re-instituted on Saturday
and Sunday afternoons with Bob Dogan, Jennie Lambert, Merle
Boley, Doug Lofstrom, and tradiation was kept alive with Mike
Finnerty and Mike Linn. Improv theatre was also instituted
with Let's Have Lunch in the 80's and Bang Bang Spontaneous
Theatre now in it's eighth year. Bang Bang was one of many
spring boards to send talent to Hollywood movie and TV land.
The Kozin's managed the coffeehouse and raised three ids in
the process. According to Brian they have met everyone from
rocket scientist to murders. "With our son David being
the first, we have had some 23 children born to the regular's
over the years" mentioned Sue. At the beginning of the
holiday season every year No Exit hosted a Thanksgiving potluck
dinner the last Sunday of November. This gave Brian and Sue
a chance to relax and spend time with the customers, musicians
and friends around No Exit. This tradition lasted the whole
22 years of the Kozin ownership.
The decor was a eclectic as it's customers. Either there were
too many plants and some were donated, or a person was moving
and didn't need the Elk antlers. A painting of James Dean
was left one day. The Armadillo was the gift of a waitress.
The library of text books came from many students. The paperback
book library was take one bring one back. There was a student
doing his Cultural Anthropology paper on the No Exit. He spent
a week catalogingeverything in the cafe.
In 1983 a building was bought and volunteers built a new and
permanent No Exit Cafe. The building bought was an old gentlemen's
card playing club, The Sherman Bridge Club, and they didn't
play bridge and no women were allowed. For several years after
the move, Cadillacs and Lincoln Continentals would drive slowly
by looking for the bridge club. "We tried to change the
decor, and brighten the place" according to Brian. "But
the customers stayed away until the burlap and curio's went
back on the walls."
Like any thing else you do for twenty years, there comes a
time to stop. For the Kozin's it was the years of no vacations
and the children growing up. It was time to pack it up. Lesley
Kozin tried to keep the cafe open one more year, but it proved
too much for her. "We made it look too easy" said
Sue "There's so much that's not seen. The prep work and
shopping and bills to pay the people to hire and train. It
takes time." No Exit closed June 30, 1999. Brian took
some offers, nothing serious until Michael James and Katy
Hogan came along. No Exit has been saved, and reopened February
24, 2000
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