Dorian Gray (club)
Dorian Gray was a popular nightclub in the 1980s and 1990s, located in Frankfurt Airport in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. The owners, Gerd Schüler and Michael Presinger, opened the club on 8 November 1978. The idea was to offer similar events as New York's famous club Studio 54. This was one of the largest nightclubs in Germany at that time. The design of the nightclub cost more than 2.5million Deutsche Marks[1] and laid the cornerstone for the successful Airport club brand.[2] The name of the club comes from Oscar Wilde's novel The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Dorian Gray entry doors (2005) | |
Private | |
Industry | Music |
Founded | Frankfurt am Main, Germany (November 8, 1978 ) |
Founder | Gerd Schüler and Michael Presinger |
Defunct | December 31, 2000 |
Headquarters | Frankfurt am Main , Germany |
Area served | Germany |
Dorian Gray was, unusually for a nightclub, located in Hall C of the airport's Terminal 1 building. For this reason, the nightclub remained opened during early morning hours, while the rest of the airport remained closed.
Music
Up to 2500 guests danced on three dancefloors (Runningman, Studio 54 and Chillout)[3][4]– End of 1970s to Disco, Funk und Soul, and later, from 1984 onwards, to Electronic dance music such as EBM, House, New wave and Techno, and from 1992 to urban music in the smaller section of the club.
Famous DJs who played at Dorian Gray were Carl Cox, Paul van Dyk, Sven Väth, Torsten Fenslau, Ulli Brenner, Michael Münzing (one half of Snap!), DJ Dag, Talla 2XLC, Tom Wax, Mark Spoon, Heinz Felber, Pete Marvelous, Paul Oakenfold, Pascal FEOS, Björn Mulik and Andy Düx.
Tone and light effects
The nightclub had at the time a spectacular Richard-Long-Sound-System-Design.[5] which used large sound system speakers with a JBL and Gauss-Alnico base sound system which produced loud and clear sound. The DJ equipment consisted of Thorens and later from mid-1990s Technics turntables. The light system was made out of red, green and orange colours which were positioned to reflect the mirrors on the floor. Until the mid-1990s a strong laser show was used. One of the video jockeys was also Alexander Metzger.
Closure
On 31 December 2000 the nightclub ceased operations in Frankfurt am Main, due to continuing problems in securing fire safety certification from the airport inspectorate. The last record that was played on the closure was „Lovin’ You“ from musician Minnie Riperton and was played by the resident DJ Ufuk in the small club. Several years after the closure of the nightclub, the painted entrance doors were still visible with the original image. In January 2008 the existing space in Hall C was renovated into a shopping area.
Various
In the early 2003 both of the original owners started a newly opened nightclub in Berlin on Potsdamer Platz, which couldn't reach the fame of the original nightclub and therefore ceased to operate. The sister nightclub of Dorian Gray in Perkins Park in Stuttgart, which opened in 1980 with the similar idea of events still operates today. In the years 2006-2008 there were dedicated party events at the end of the year called Airport-Night to remember the days when Dorian Gray existed.[6]
References
- "o.V.: "Millionen-Disco im Airport"". Der Spiegel 49/1978, page 228. 4 December 1978.
- "Von Wellershoff: "Flug in die Nacht"". Der Spiegel 48/1997, page 137. 24 November 1997.
- "tranergy.de – Dorian Gray Zeitmaschine (Floornames @ 2:52, 3:09)".
- "tranergy.de – Video Mark Spoons Birthday 2000 (Floornames at Running order near DJ-desk)".
- "Richard Long (* 1933; † 9 December 1986)". Archived from the original on 21 January 2013. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
- "Rund 15.000 Gäste bei der Frankfurter Airport Night" (in German). pressrelations.de. 28 November 2008.