Advertisement

Toronto Life - The Hype

A critical guide to Toronto’s cultural events, TIFF and high society. Plus, local celebrity news. Sign up for Preview newsletter for weekly updates

Creative Types

3 Comments

Five things we learned about Peter Gatien’s quiet Toronto life

Peter Gatien’s story is legendary to a generation of New York club kids and would-be New York Club kids who had the bad luck of living elsewhere. In the ’90s, Gatien made NYC’s Limelight an institution for creatives who wanted to party (hard) and express themselves by wearing outrageous outfits, including Madonna, Michael Musto, Chloe Sevigny, Michael Alig and James St. James. He made millions, but ended up broke following a series of legal battles, including investigations that attempted to link Gatien to the sale of party drugs in his clubs (the case was later dropped, but he was left with hefty legal fees), and a tax conviction that led to his deportation from the U.S. and brought him to Toronto in 2003.  Limelight, a documentary about the rise and fall of the one-time “King of Clubs,” opens tomorrow. In anticipation, the New York Times sat down with Gatien at his Queen West apartment wherein, it seems, the once fast-paced life of a New York club overlord can very quickly turn to a life of quiet reflection. What we learned after the jump.

• His Queen West rent is a very modest $3,000 per month, paid largely by friends and family.

• There still isn’t a definitive answer on why Gatien left Circa, the John Street megaclub that he was hired to forge into Toronto’s answer to Limelight. Gatien alleges that he parted ways because  investors were unwilling to update the space regularly, telling the Times, “If you want something to be an institution, you have to keep investing in it.” Unfortunately, investors Ari Kulidjian and Stephen Katmarian are unwilling to comment, which means unsatisfying rumours about Gatien “not running things properly” remain.

• In an effort to provide his 17-year-old son with what he describes as a “stable lifestyle,” Gatien devotes 90 per cent of his time to him, which means keeping to a strict budget and almost never leaving the house. Gatien quipped, “Luckily, college tuition in Canada is 20 per cent the price in the U.S.”

• His only remaining connection to New York City is his former lawyer Benjamin Brafman.

• In 2003, Gatien lived alone in a $1,200 one-bedroom apartment on King West, waiting a year before his wife and son would make the trip from NYC—his wife, Alessandra, wanted their son to complete sixth grade before they moved.

Peter Gatien, Club King Without a Club [New York Times]

3 Comments

Comment on this post

  1. confused. why is this newsworthy or even remotely interesting? the guy seems to be living his life quietly in toronto like anyone else.

    September 23, 2011 at 11:26 am | by sk
  2. edit:
    “Five things the New York Times learned about Peter Gatien’s quiet Toronto life”

    Couldn’t interview him yourself? I hear he lives in Toronto.

    September 23, 2011 at 5:28 pm | by dunno
  3. To the confused. This is a man who, well, clearly you don’t get it. He shaped nightlife in NYC with clubs that cannot be matched again. He was prosecuted in what became a witch hunt and huge failure on behalf of the us federal system and despite being cleared of charges was spitefully deported for a minor tax issue. This is a celebrity in NYC that has done so much to shape music and a generation. And it’s a crime that, after spending 30 years in the us, marrying a us citizen and having us children he himself is banned because of a bunch of sore losers in the DEA, federal ‘justice’ department and of course the Juliani camp.

    Why the US is so concerned about what people do to have fun is beyond me. I just thank people like this for shaping the house music gendre.

    May 22, 2012 at 8:22 am | by mike

Comment on this post

Neither the author nor Toronto Life necessarily agrees with the comments posted here. Editors will not correct spelling or grammar. Toronto Life reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. Read our full policy

 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement