Nata Anthoni
Pappy and Harriet's in 2007
Restaurant information
Owner(s)Robyn Celia, Linda Krantz
ChefC. Ward
Food typeBarbecue, lunch and dinner
Street address53688 Pioneertown Road
CityPioneertown
CountySan Bernardino County
StateCalifornia
Postal/ZIP Code92268
CountryUnited States
Websitepappyandharriets.com

Pappy & Harriet's Pioneertown Palace is a honky-tonk, barbecue restaurant and music venue near Joshua Tree National Park in Pioneertown, California. Accessible from California State Route 62, the restaurant lies four miles northeast of Yucca Valley.

In 1946, a group of filmmakers built a Western-style movie set in the high desert 25 miles north of Palm Springs for the cowboy actors Roy Rogers and Gene Autry.[1] Production designers decorated the facades of "Main Street" with a Western saloon, bank, chapel and a cantina. Pioneertown and its cantina were used in more than 50 films and television programs throughout the 1940s and 1950s, including The Cisco Kid and Judge Roy Bean.[1][2] In 1972, Francis Aleba and her husband purchased the building and developed the property into a cantina.

The Cantina, 1946-1982 edit

In 1946, at the site where Pappy & Harriet's stands today, filmmakers built a cantina set that was used in numerous Westerns during the 1950s. In 1972, Harriet's mother, Francis Aleba, purchased the building and opened The Cantina, an outlaw biker burrito bar. The Cantina rollicked for 10 years before its closing [citation needed].

Pappy & Harriet's, 1982 onward edit

In 1982, Aleba's daughter Harriet and her husband, Claude "Pappy" Allen, bought The Cantina and renamed it Pappy & Harriet's Pioneertown Palace. The cantina, with its family style Tex-Mex cuisine and live music, often featuring Pappy, Harriet and their granddaughter Kristina, attracted the likes of bikers and became a local haunt for people from all walks of life.

When Pappy Allen died in 1994, hundreds of mourners from around the world attended his memorial, including Victoria Williams, who later recorded the song "Happy to Have Known Pappy" for her Atlantic Records release, Loose.

A local airplane pilot, Jay Hauk, owned Pappy and Harriet's for a short stint before it was bought by its present owners, New Yorkers Robyn Celia and Linda Krantz.

In the summer of 2006, the Sawtooth Complex fire threatened Pappy & Harriet's and the rest of Pioneertown, but the town and club were not among the 50 homes and over 60,000 acres of desert burned.[3][4]

Notable performers edit

Billboard Magazine named Pappy & Harriet's one of the Top Ten Hidden Gems in the Country in its 2012 Best Clubs issue. The club attracts artists and musicians from all over the world.

NY Times Magazine featured Pappy and Harriet's in its 2013 article "Listen Up | In The California Desert, A One Of A Kind Music Venue Blossoms."

SXSW featured the documentary The Pioneertown Palace in 2014.

Anthony Bourdain featured Pappy & Harriet's in the "US Desert" episode of his television show Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations.

Performers who have appeared at Pappy & Harriet's over the years include Eric Burdon, Eagles of Death Metal, Queens of the Stone Age, Rufus Wainwright, Grizzly Bear, Neko Case, Spiritualized, Lucinda Williams, Leon Russell, Arctic Monkeys, Daniel Lanois, Band of Horses, Sean Lennon, Billy Corgan and the Spirits in the Sky, Vampire Weekend, Wanda Jackson and so many more.[1][2] A surprise appearance by Robert Plant in early 2006 led to a jam with the Sunday evening house band, The Thrift Store All Stars, which featured Victoria Williams.

Coachella Festival promoters Goldenvoice Productions and Santa Monica-based NPR station KCRW have presented shows at Pappy & Harriet's, although the majority of booking is generated by the club's co-owner Robyn Celia.

A Monday night Open Mic hosted by musician Ted Quinn features hundreds of performers. Most of the Open Mic performers are local or lesser-known traveling troubadours, but many established artists, including Feist, Julie Christensen, Ke$ha, and Matt Costa have also made appearances for this low-key event.

Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven hold a successful annual outdoor festival, The Camp-Out, at Pappy & Harriet's each year. Gram Rabbit has an annual Halloween party and plays the part of The Grim Rabbit. Americana singer-songwriter, Jim Lauderdale, performs at Pappy & Harriet's every spring in a show known as "Jim-fest."

Use as a set edit

The building that houses Pappy & Harriet's has been used as a set in many films and television programs from the 1940s to the present.[2]

  • The Howling 7: New Moon Rising was shot in and around Pappy & Harriet's and Pioneertown. The film featured many of the bar's regular customers as cast members.
  • The club is used as a location in the documentary Nowhere Now: The Ballad of Joshua Tree.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e McManis, Sam (April 14, 2013). "Pioneertown relives a West that never was - Travel - The Sacramento Bee". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved April 18, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c Devereaux, Jackie (August 16, 2012). "Pappy & Harriet's Pioneertown Palace – A Must See Wild West Saloon". Desert Star Weekly. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  3. ^ http://www.fire.ca.gov/communications/downloads/communique/2007_winter/PhotoEssay.pdf
  4. ^ "Hi-Desert Star - Yucca Valley, CA: Sawtooth Complex Fire". Hidesertstar.com. Retrieved October 14, 2008. [dead link]
  5. ^ http://www.imdb.com/search/title?locations=Pioneertown,%20California,%20USA>

External links edit


Category:Music venues in California Category:Restaurants in California