Don the Beachcomber One of the earliest and perhaps the first known tiki bar was named "Don the Beachcomber," established in the Hollywood area of Los Angeles, California in 1933 by
Ernest Gantt (who later legally changed his name to "Donn Beach"). The bar served a wide variety of exotic rum drinks (including the
Sumatra Kula and
Zombie cocktail), and later Cantonese food. It displayed many artifacts that he had collected on earlier trips through the tropics. When Beach was sent to World War II, Don the Beachcomber flourished under his ex-wife's management (Sunny Sund), expanding into a chain of 16 restaurants. Ultimately there were at least
25 restaurants in the chain. When Gantt returned from the War, he moved to Hawaii and opened
Waikiki Beach, one of two archetypal tiki bars. The bar was designed to evoke the South Pacific, with palm trees, tiki masks on the walls, a garden hose that showered a gentle rain on the roof and a
myna bird that was trained to shout "Give me a beer, stupid!" The bar was located on the beach, lit by tiki torches outside which enhanced its ambiance. He began opening franchises outside of California, beginning with
The Outrigger in
Seattle, Washington in 1949. In 1957, lacking the capital to expand, Bergeron partnered with Conrad Hilton and licensed the Trader Vic's brand to
Hilton Hotels for $2,000,000, for use in Hiltons across the US and worldwide. Hilton retained Bergeron to oversee the decoration, staffing and operation of the restaurants for an annual salary of $65,000. Hilton soon estimated the popular Trader Vic's establishments were earning his hotel chain $5 million a year. As the chain expanded, Bergeron also marketed tiki mugs, cocktail mixes, and other products for mass retail sale. Members of the Bergeron family still have a hand in the operations of at least one branch. The original restaurant in Oakland, California, no longer exists but there is still a Trader Vic's a few miles away in nearby
Emeryville. Roughly 20 locations are operating throughout the world and bearing the iconic name.
Other historical establishments Prior to Donn Beach opening his first tiki bar, during the 1930s South Pacific-influenced dreams of escapism had started to become more prevalent in American music and popular culture. The original restaurant was demolished, but a much smaller version in the form of a side-room bar named the
Pacific Seas resides at another Clifton's location. The
Tonga Room of the
Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco is an iconic tiki bar operating since 1945, still retaining its Polynesian flair after having undergone a number of facelifts over the years. At one time the Sheraton Hotel, Hilton Hotel, and Marriott Hotel chains all had several tiki bars incorporated into their establishments. From California, tiki spread north, and
The Alibi Tiki Lounge is a currently operating tiki bar established in Portland, Oregon from 1947. The
Kalua Room opened as part of the Windsor Hotel in Seattle in 1953 and was one of the first to put a tiki-like image next to their restaurant's name. The oldest operating tiki bar in Hawaii is the
La Mariana Sailing Club Tiki Bar and Restaurant, established in 1957. The
Hawaiian Village Hotel was the home to legendary tiki bartender
Harry Yee. California's
Tiki Ti is another historically important tiki establishment still in operation, as is Florida's
Mai Kai, which is a focal spot for a large annual hukilau tiki gathering. Shelter Island, San Diego had at one time a heavily concentrated area of tiki bars, the best known being the still operating
Bali Hai. In 1962, the now famous Kon Tiki Bar opened in
Tucson,
Arizona. Also in 1962, the
Sip 'n Dip Lounge opened in
Great Falls, Montana, bringing a tiki theme to the cold northern state and featuring a swimming pool where swimmers could be observed underwater from a window in the bar, a concept inspired by a similar design at the
Playboy Club in Chicago. The
Kahiki Supper Club was a very large tiki restaurant and bar in Columbus, Ohio (since demolished). The
Pago Pago Lounge was in Tucson, and the
Chin Tiki and
Mauna Loa were in Detroit (both closed). The
Zombie Hut closed in 1990. Stephen Crane's
The Luau restaurant is also gone but was considered historically important in the tiki craze's early days, as were Trader Vic's and Don the Beachcomber.
Eli Hedley (1903–1981), a sculptor and beachcomber, had "Island Trade Store", a Polynesian-themed tiki bar, in
Midway City, California, "Tiki's Tropical Traders", a retail venue in
Disneyland, where
Steve Martin worked, and also worked with
Donn Beach.
Decline and revival The original tiki bars flourished for about 30 years, and then fell out of vogue. In the 1990s, the
tiki culture was revived by a new generation of fans and new tiki bars were founded worldwide that often looked to Trader Vic's and Don the Beachcomber for inspiration. In that decade, the Sip 'n Dip Lounge, which had survived with its tiki theme intact, added the feature of having women dressed as
mermaids swimming in their pool within view of the bar's patrons. The live mermaid incorporation and the overall
retro tiki ambience led
GQ Magazine to rate the lounge as one of the top 10 bars in the world for 2003. By the mid-2010s, both traditional tiki cocktails and new cocktails with tiki characteristics were being served in bars associated with the
craft cocktail movement. Michael Warren of
The Dispatch associates the tiki revival in the 2010s and 2020s with bars such as San Francisco's
Smuggler's Cove and Brooklyn's
Sunken Harbor Club. == Design and aesthetics ==