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・ Miclești, Criuleni
・ Miclești, Vaslui
・ Micki
・ Micki & Maude
・ Micki Dickoff
・ Micki DuPont
・ Micki Free
・ Micki Grant
・ Micki King
・ Micki Marlo
・ Micki Meuser
・ Micki Pistorius
・ Mickibri, New South Wales
・ Mickie Caspi
・ Mickie DeMoss
Mickie Finn's
・ Mickie Finn's (TV series)
・ Mickie Henson
・ Mickie James
・ Mickie Knuckles
・ Mickie Krause
・ Mickie Most
・ Mickies Dairy Bar
・ Mickiewicz (crater)
・ Mickiewicz Battalion
・ Mickiewicz Legion
・ Mickiewicz Square
・ Mickinock Township, Roseau County, Minnesota
・ Mickisha Hurley
・ Mickle


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Mickie Finn's : ウィキペディア英語版
Mickie Finn's
:''For the variety television series, see Mickie Finn's (TV series).''
''Mickie Finn's'' (also known as ''Mickey Finn's'') was the creation of piano player Fred E. Finn, who developed the concept in several different forms: a 1960s nightclub in San Diego, a television show on NBC in 1966, a series of compilation record albums issued from 1966 on, and a stageshow continuing on into the 21st century.
== Nightclub ==
The first ''Mickie Finn's'' started on University Avenue in the Hillcrest section of San Diego, California, where Fred and Mickie Finn converted an old warehouse into a rambunctious "Gay '90s–Roaring '20s–Swinging '30s" nightclub. Red-haired piano player Fred E. Finn (born October 4, 1938, in San Francisco) was a recent Business Administration graduate of San Jose State College, a base from which he and banjoist Red Watson played the San Francisco club scene from 1956 to 1959.〔( Red Watson ) webpage from the ( Jazz Banjo ) website〕 One detail he learned in college was location — he considered Washington and Hawaii for his planned nightclub, but chose San Diego, partly, he said, because of logistics — he couldn't afford to transport his collection of old nickelodeons, 1890s pictures, and various turn-of-the-century items, which he planned to use as "atmosphere" for his new club, anywhere else.〔
''Mickie Finn's'' nightclub opened on October 28, 1960, with seating for 600 people — soon, over a thousand people would cram into the building each evening. The first year, the nightclub grossed over $250,000. Red Watson played his banjo with Fred at the nightclub until 1965, when he moved on to play in Las Vegas, preceding Fred's move by a few years.〔 Over the next fourteen years, four-million customers consumed 250,000 gallons of beer. Fred would race a 1927 Seagraves fire engine at the El Cajon Speedway as a publicity gimmick for the nightclub, as well as fire an old cannon after every score by the San Diego Chargers 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 the (online Los Angeles Times archive )〕 In the early 1970s, Fred and Mickie 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.〔 Fred's blonde banjo-playing wife (born June 6, 1938, in Hugo, Oklahoma) always appeared in the show using the stage name 'Mickie Finn', and never spoke. She and Fred were divorced in 1973, and Fred's second wife Cathy took over the banjo duties from 1980 on.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Mickie Finn's」の詳細全文を読む



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