Learn to love Monday

Majestic Mondays, a new queer event, has landed on Ottawa's nightlife calendar

A new queer event has hit Ottawa’s nightlife scene, transforming what the venue owners call a “straight nightclub” into a gay Monday-night party.

Ilon Tyan, owner of Mansion Nightclub, started the Majestic Mondays event because he says he felt disconnected from the community he used to work with when he was a DJ at Club Edge. “At Mansion we like to promote style; we like to promote fashion,” he says. “I felt like the gay scene would really appreciate it.”

The venue, however, will be unfamiliar to many in Ottawa’s queer community. “I feel like there is a bit of hesitance,” Tyan says. “Why is a straight bar doing a gay night? Out of a lot of other bars in Ottawa, we may be seen as more straight because we hold hip-hop events and stuff like that, which can be seen as anti-gay.”

Sapphire Champagne, who hosts Majesty Mondays, says that so far there has been positive feedback from the community. “The audience has been amazing, from students, industry staff, drag queens, local celebrities and everything in between. We are getting a good mix of people.”

Ottawa drag queen Jade London bartends the event.

“The challenge is always getting people out,” Champagne says. “Mondays are hard because people don’t necessarily think of Mondays as fun. We are going to change that.” — Layla Cameron

Layla Cameron is a freelance journalist and PhD student at Simon Fraser University. She has been writing for Xtra since 2011, and can usually be found working for film festivals or exploring the west coast. You can contact Layla at layla.a.cameron@gmail.com or see more of her work at www.laylacameron.com.

Read More About:
Culture, Ottawa, Nightlife, Arts

Keep Reading

A pink background with two hands made out of American dollar bills in a handshake; behind the hands are women playing sports

Womens sports is booming. Can it continue ethically?

ANALYSIS: The WNBA and PWHL are thriving, but will problematic partnerships in the interest of profits threaten their success?
Protestors under a silhouette of a singer.

Is it time for Eurovision to face the music over Israel’s participation?

Pressure is mounting for the über-popular song contest to drop its most controversial contestant
Six members of the Rideau Speedeaus hold a sign with the league's name on it in front of a pool

Queer sports leagues offer safety and joy

Recreational sports leagues across Canada are offering LGBTQ2S+ people something essential: the freedom to just show up and play
The cover of 'I Remember Lights'; Ben Ladouceur

‘I Remember Lights’ is a time machine trip to Montreal’s gay past

Ben Ladouceur’s rigorously researched new novel is romantic, harrowing and transportive