The Flame Lounge (1946-1981)

 The Flame on West Main (just east of the Missoula Club) was the perfect place for a clandestine rendezvous.  Dimly lit by rose-colored ceiling-washing cove lighting, the back room, which could be accessed from the alley, was lined with red leather tufted booths one could sink into so deeply as to escape all but the most determined detective.   Entering from the front, one was immediately struck by the moderne styling, from the shiny black glass facade crowned by a massive neon torch, to the aquaria and red leather tufted bar inside.   The bartenders were quite knowledgable in making any number of cocktails, many of which were years out of style.   “French 75” anyone? 

 The Flame torch

The Flame – The bar was at the northwest corner of the front room

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3 thoughts on “The Flame Lounge (1946-1981)

  1. The building was built in 1891, as a home for the Western Montana newspaper; converted into a speakeasy during prohibition; decorated in plush red tones as The Flame lounge during the mid-20th century; fondly remembered as Jay’s Bar for a handful of decades following; and finally renovated and reopened as today’s Downtown Dance Collective.

  2. The Flame was owned by George Pramenko who lived at 521 University Avenue.

    – George and Margaret Pramenko residence

    Deed records show that the Northern Pacific Railroad sold this property to the South Missoula Land Company in 1889. Company shareholder A. B. Hammond subsequently platted the Hammond Addition. Buyers of his lots signed an agreement promising to build homes worth at least $3,000. This lot, however, remained undeveloped. Real estate investor George L. Steinbrenner bought the property in 1912, but it was not until the late 1920s that he built this Craftsman style home as an investment. Anthony and Cora Dawes were its first residents. Cora operated the Varsity House here from 1929 to the mid-1930s, offering student lodgings close to campus. In 1944, George and Margaret Pramenko purchased the home. Pramenko, the longtime owner of the Flame Lounge, was a well-known businessman and a wonderful entertainer, a master at playing the tamburitza, and famous for his trademark Tom and Jerrys. Wide eaves with exposed rafters and a shed dormer characterize the Craftsman style, but decorative windowpanes and half-timbering in the gable ends lend it a personality as distinctive as its longtime owner.

  3. The Flame was demolished shortly after its closure In 1981. Chuck’s Bar, next door in the same building, expanded into the space. In 1984 the property’s second floor became Jay’s Upstairs, a venue for punk and grunge bands. It even had a mosh pit. After Jay’s closed in 2003, the building was fixed up with a new facade. It is now called the LaFlesch Building and Jay’s Upstair’s is a chi-chi members-only social club “for doing business”, named “The Loft.” The downstairs space where The Flame was is now a dance collective.

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