The name of the nightclub was reused later as a strip club in San Francisco, from the late 1960s until 2019.
Name
Artist Mark Adams said in a 1983 interview about his design of the interior of the club:
In 1950, I was acting and designing sets for an amateur theatrical group. One of the men said he wanted to start a small club where actors could go after rehearsals and have coffee, pastry, a beer, et cetera, and sit around and talk—unwind from the work. He asked if I would design the interior, and also think of a name. I came up with hungry i—which referred to all the various hungers of the first person singular. The other man changed his name and personality as the club developed, and became Big Daddy Eric Nord of the Beat Generation. — Mark Adams, artist[3][4]
In another story, the lower-case "i" was meant to represent "intellectual". "I was going to call it the Hungry Intellectual, but I ran out of paint" for the sign, Nord would tell interviewers. In another story, the sign was not finished in time for the club's opening, and next-day reviews in the San Francisco papers cemented the name for all time. Banducci swore that it was Freudian and was short for "the hungry id".[5]
History
The hungry i was founded in 1949 or 1950 as an 83-seat venue in the Sentinel Building's basement at the corner of Kearny and Columbus, by Eric Nord, who sold it to Banducci in 1951.[1] After operating it as a venue for folk singers including Stan Wilson, Banducci began hiring comedians in 1953 with Mort Sahl, encouraging them to express themselves freely.[1] Their success caused queues around the block, until Banducci moved the Hungry I to the nearby International Hotel (nicknamed "the I-Hotel") at 599 Jackson Street in 1954.[6][1]
The young Barbra Streisand begged Banducci for a single night at his nightclub, insisting that she would soon be a huge star. Banducci agreed to sign the singer, who had never performed professionally but was soon starring in I Can Get It for You Wholesale on Broadway. The resulting concerts (March–April 1963) were well-attended, giving Streisand nationwide acclaim.[10]
The comedy and folk music scene wilted in the mid-1960s. On 12 October 1967 Banducci closed the club at its International Hotel location and moved to Ghirardelli Square; it was mainly a rock music venue, and closed in 1970.[6] Banducci and many of the club's performers, including Mort Sahl, Jonathan Winters, Irwin Corey, Jackie Vernon, and many others, reunited in 1981 for a one-night performance, which also featured film of the late Lenny Bruce. The event was captured for the nationally televised documentary Hungry I Reunion, produced and directed by Thomas A. Cohen and featuring reminiscences by Bill Cosby, as well as by Maya Angelou, who had performed there early in her career as a singer.[13][14]
Strip club
In the late 1960s, clubs along the Broadway strip began to transform into fully nude strip clubs run by a consortium of club owners. As the Hungry I was shutting down in its final location at Ghirardelli Square, Banducci sold the rights to its name and logo to this consortium. One of the clubs, Pierre's at 546 Broadway, was promptly renamed "Hungry I Club" and continued to operate as a strip club under various owners,[15] until 2019.[citation needed]
^Hamlin, Jesse (2007-04-04). "His hungry i helped put S.F. on the map as rebel artists' haven". SFGATE. Retrieved 31 May 2021. Banducci can still recall Sahl's first tentative performances at the original hungry i, a tiny cellar space in the Sentinel Building at Columbus and Kearny, now owned by Coppola. He'd bought it from Eric "Big Daddy" Nord, the North Beach boho who'd opened the bar with a partner in '49 and named it (the i stood for id). Banducci bought it with $800 borrowed from a friend....Three years later the club moved to its famous cellar location at 599 Jackson St. It was a smoke-filled space where patrons sat around the three-sided stage in canvas director chairs with built-in drink holders. Candles flickered in artfully cut tin cans. The artists were announced by a stentorian voice belonging to the light and sound man, Alvah Bessie, the blacklisted screen writer who was one of the infamous Hollywood Ten.