Romagnoli became a well-known figure in New York's
West Village neighborhood in 1972 as hostess of Bonnie & Clyde's, a lesbian bar owned by Louis Corso; she welcomed a celebrity clientele including
Gloria Steinem and
Yoko Ono, and held fundraisers and other community events. After Bonnie & Clyde's closed, she opened the Cubby Hole in 1983;
Stormé DeLarverie was the Cubby Hole's bouncer for a time. She also ran a restaurant, Bonnie's by the Bay, in
New Suffolk, and a
tapas bar called Sunset Strip. In 1991, all of her 1980s businesses had ended, and she opened another bar, Crazy Nanny's. She sold Crazy Nanny's in 2004, just before she retired. == Personal life ==