One can find talents like Matthew Broderick and Nathan Lane (from The Producers), Colm Wilkinson(from Les Miserables) as well as Oprah Winfrey. Monday night is the best night for the showtunes because all theatres in Chicago are dark that one day of the week. The place is home to all theatrical devotees. Sidetrack is known as one of the coolest gay bars in Chicago. It’s amazing that over the last twenty years, Art Johnson, Pepe Pena and Chuck Hyde have established the Broadway showtunes musical video format as the basis of a successful neighborhood bar that has become a worldwide attraction. The tremendous assortment of showtunes from all the great Broadway musicals, MGM musical films and even special PBS concerts are formatted in a way that creates a show within a show. Sidetrack Video Bar is almost completely filled. There is not another bar in Chicago where you can watch and sing along to the greatest music from the greatest shows by the greatest artists. This number has become a classic for the patrons of Sidetrack because it impacts the power of a great showtune done with a large ensemble performing a slick tap number.
Next we see a stage full of pretty girls and sailors with a redheaded Patti LuPone singing and tap dancing to the great Cole Porter tune ‘Anything Goes’. A chorus of bar patrons are singing: “Some people got the dream, yeah, but not the guts…but some people aren’t me.” We see Mama Rose stealing the gold plaque from her father, thus allowing her and her children a chance in show biz.Īn old black and white video of Ethel Merman singing ‘Good To Be Here’ gets a loud response from the Sidetrack patrons. Hence, we see Rosalind Russell doing her ‘Some People’ number from Gypsy. After a break for a five-minute comedy routine featuring Cher, the VJ decides to capture the spirit of independence and determination. The Sidetrack crowd is starting to get into the spirit of the classic showtunes. The next number features Beatrice Arthur and Angela Lansbury reenacting their famous ‘Bosom Buddies’ number from Mame. When that number ends, the screen cuts to Betty Hutton singing ‘I Got The Sun In The Morning’ from Annie Get Your Gun.
In four languages the MC tells the patrons that they’re in for a musical treat.
Joel Gray opens the show with ‘Welkommen,’ the opening number from the movie Cabaret. in order to get a seat on the upper level where they can see the six-by-eight foot video screen. They come to Sidetrack Video Bar (3349 North Halsted Street) for Showtune Mondays. No, it’s not for Monday Night Football or a Cubs game. While many Chicago bars are closed on Monday nights or hardly doing any business, there is one spot that packs them in.