Book Review: “Peppermint Lounge:
The Mob, the Music, and the Most Famous Dance Club of the ‘60s”
Authors: John Johnson, Jr. and Joel Selvin
Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books
All Access Review: A-
Peppermint Lounge - 2012 |
The mob
had its hooks into the Peppermint Lounge and Johnny Biello. A high-ranking
Mafioso, Biello was a silent – deathly silent – part-owner of the hottest
nightclub in New York City in the early 1960s, thanks to a dance craze called
“The Twist.”
At the height of the Peppermint Lounge’s popularity, there
were nights when the police would cordon off the entire block in an attempt to
manage the overflowing crowds that descended upon what was once a small
unassuming little joint where shady, backroom dealings and criminal enterprises
were conducted with the utmost secrecy. It was Biello’s son-in-law, Dick Cami,
who suggested the place start playing rock and roll, and business took off. Biello
and his cronies wanted none of the attention.
The parallel universes of the thuggish, brutal world of the
mob and star-studded, “Twist”-mad club-goers collide in the engrossing
“Peppermint Lounge,” a book written by John Johnson, Jr. and Joel Selvin in
collaboration with Cami for Thomas Dunne Books. Laced with danger and full of mob intrigue, “Peppermint
Lounge” provides an insider’s look at mafia life, with a cast of colorful, if
violent, characters running devious racketeering operations and committing
daring robberies, bloody hits and failed executions, bruising beatings and
treacherous acts – all of which Biello unsuccessfully sought to leave behind in
attempting to become a respected businessman.
Blissfully ignorant of the criminal underworld operating behind
the scenes, the glamorous denizens of New York City’s Peppermint Lounge –
another was established in Miami Beach – danced and partied into wee hours, as
“The Twist” swept across the nation. The place was hopping, and Cami recounts
how celebrities such as Greta Garbo and Shirley MacLaine mingled with sweaty
youth and nubile, rail-dancing wait staff in writhing nightly orgies of
twisting to house band Joey Dee and the Starlighters and Chubby Checker. Along
with detailing historic Peppermint Lounge visits by the likes of Muhammed Ali,
John Wayne, Tennessee Williams, and The Beatles – a whole chapter is devoted to
the Fab Four and how Ringo Starr, unbeknownst to him, almost found himself in scalding
hot water – Selvin and Johnson deftly chronicle the rise and fall of The Twist
with heady writing, compellingly arguing for its importance as a force for
cultural, sexual and societal change while gleefully delving into all the silly
marketing schemes it birthed.
Well-paced, often funny and occasionally heartbreaking,
“Peppermint Lounge” seamlessly shuffles between the disparate worlds of the
mafia – with Frank Sinatra caught in its orbit – and the glitzy Peppermint
Lounge in a confident, conversational manner, using a wealth of anecdotes and
insight from the likeable Cami, and others, as a means of pulling back the
curtain. Not just a dance club, the Peppermint Lounge holds a special place in
rock and roll history, as it helped propel The Twist into the national
consciousness, while also helping to launch the careers of such greats as
Ronnie Spector and the Ronettes, whose story gets special attention in the
book. Selvin, Johnson and Cami have admirably preserved legacy of the place.
- Peter Lindblad