Mickie Finn's
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Mickie Finn's (also known as Mickey Finn's) was a
nightclub A nightclub (music club, discothèque, disco club, or simply club) is an entertainment venue during nighttime comprising a dance floor, lightshow, and a stage for live music or a disc jockey (DJ) who plays recorded music. Nightclubs gener ...
in
San Diego, California San Diego ( , ; ) is a city on the Pacific Ocean coast of Southern California located immediately adjacent to the Mexico–United States border. With a 2020 population of 1,386,932, it is the eighth most populous city in the United States ...
, established in 1960 by piano player Fred E. Finn (Fred Soetje) and his wife Barbara, who used the stage name "Mickie Finn". Finn later extended the brand to a second club in
Beverly Hills Beverly Hills is a city located in Los Angeles County, California. A notable and historic suburb of Greater Los Angeles, it is in a wealthy area immediately southwest of the Hollywood Hills, approximately northwest of downtown Los Angeles. Bev ...
, a television show on NBC in 1966, a series of compilation record albums issued from 1966 on, and a stage show continuing into the 21st century.


Nightclub

Fred and Barbara Soetje opened Mickie Finn's on October 28, 1960. They converted an old warehouse on University Avenue in the Hillcrest neighborhood of San Diego, into a "Gay '90s / Roaring '20s / Swinging '30s" nightclub. Finn was a piano player from San Francisco and had recently received a business administration degree from
San Jose State College San José State University (San Jose State or SJSU) is a public university in San Jose, California. Established in 1857, SJSU is the oldest public university on the West Coast and the founding campus of the California State University (CSU) sy ...
.Red Watson
webpage from th
Jazz Banjo
website
He considered Washington and Hawaii for his planned nightclub, but chose San Diego because of logistics—he could not afford to transport his collection of old nickelodeons, 1890s pictures, and various turn-of-the-century items, with which he planned to decorate the new club, to the more distant locations. Mickie Finn's had seating for 600 people, but often had larger crowds. It grossed over $250,000 in its first year. Over the next 14 years, four million customers consumed 250,000 gallons of beer. Banjo player Red Watson, Finn's musical partner in San Francisco, played at the club until 1965, when he moved on to play in Las Vegas. Finn's wife then played banjo at the club until the couple divorced in 1973. Finn promoted the club with various publicity stunts. He raced a 1927 Seagraves fire engine at the El Cajon Speedway, and he fired an old cannon after every score by the
San Diego Chargers The San Diego Chargers were a professional American football team that played in San Diego from 1961 until the end of the 2016 season, before relocating to Los Angeles, where the franchise had played its inaugural 1960 season. The team is now ...
football team at all home games.Churnin, Nancy "Recall Mickey Finn Show? It's Stomping Back to S. D." San Diego Spotlight: Stage section of the LOS ANGELES TIMES (June 8, 1990) available online at th
online Los Angeles Times archive
/ref> In the early 1970s, the Finns opened a second Mickie Finn's nightclub in Beverly Hills on Restaurant Row, in the new Los Angeles Emporium. The San Diego location closed in 1974. Finn's second wife, Cathy, took over the banjo duties from 1980 on.


Summer TV show

In 1965, Finn was approached by television producer Bill Yagemann about doing a television series featuring the band and named after the club.
webpage on the HARMONIZE.COM website
''Mickie Finn's'' was a summer replacement series for the failed NBC sitcom ''
Mona McCluskey Mona McCluskey (also known as ''Meet Mona McCluskey'') is an American sitcom that aired on NBC as part of its 1965-66 schedule. The series stars Juliet Prowse in the title role, and aired from September 16, 1965 to April 14, 1966. Synopsis Prowse ...
'', which had starred Juliette Prowse and
Denny Miller Denny Scott Miller (born Dennis Linn Miller; April 25, 1934 – September 9, 2014) was an American actor, perhaps best known for his regular role as Duke Shannon on ''Wagon Train'', his guest-starring appearances on ''Gilligan's Island'' and ''C ...
on Thursday nights. The show's Nielsen ratings were better than its sitcom predecessor's, but were not competitive with ABC's hit '' Peyton Place'' in the time slot, and NBC did not renew the show for the 1966–67 fall season.


Record albums and singles

Dunhill Records, run by Lou Adler, signed Fred E. and Mickie Finn in 1966 during the run of their television show. Through the late '70s, Dunhill issued their singles (sometimes in simultaneous batches of four or five), and several albums (''Mickie Finn's Live'', ''Mickie Finn's: America's #1 Speakeasy'', ''The Now Sound of Mickie Finn's'', and ''Saturday Night at Mickie Finn's''). Neither the albums nor the singles ever "climbed the charts", but are sought today as collectors' items.


Stage show

After the television show ended, the ''Mickie Finn'' stage show began headlining at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas in October, 1966, and continued to play other Las Vegas clubs until 1988. Fred Finn, with second wife Cathy on banjo, brought the show back to San Diego twice: first in 1988, for four performances at the Fiesta Dinner Theatre; and again in June 1990 for one month at the Hahn Cosmopolitan Theatre, produced in association with Scott Pedersen. From 1990 on, Finn continued his stageshow presence throughout the US from a base in Florida, changing the show's name from ''Mickie Finn's to ''Mickey Finn's''.Mickey Finn Stage Show
website


References


External links


Mickey Finn Stage Show

Mickie Finn's
webpage on the Internet Movie Database website {{Authority control Nightclubs in California Culture of San Diego