Current:Home > StocksSteve Ostrow, who founded famed NYC bathhouse the Continental Baths, dies at 91 -EverVision Finance
Steve Ostrow, who founded famed NYC bathhouse the Continental Baths, dies at 91
SafeX Pro Exchange View
Date:2025-04-09 18:15:33
NEW YORK (AP) — Steve Ostrow, who founded the trailblazing New York City gay bathhouse the Continental Baths, where Bette Midler, Barry Manilow and other famous artists launched their careers, has died. He was 91.
The Brooklyn native died Feb. 4 in his adopted home of Sydney, Australia, according to an obituary in The Sydney Morning Herald.
“Steve’s story is an inspiration to all creators and a celebration of New York City and its denizens,” Toby Usnik, a friend and spokesperson at the British Consulate General in New York, posted on X.
Ostrow opened the Continental Baths in 1968 in the basement of the Ansonia Hotel, a once grand Beaux Arts landmark on Manhattan’s Upper West Side that had fallen on hard times.
He transformed the hotel’s massive basement, with its dilapidated pools and Turkish baths, into an opulently decorated, Roman-themed bathhouse.
The multi-level venue was not just an incubator for a music and dance revolution deeply rooted in New York City’s gay scene, but also for the LGBTQ community’s broader political and social awakening, which would culminate with the Stonewall protests in lower Manhattan, said Ken Lustbader of the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project, a group that researches places of historic importance to the city’s LGBTQ community.
“Steve identified a need,” he said. “Bathhouses in the late 1960s were more rundown and ragged, and he said, ‘Why don’t I open something that is going to be clean, new and sparkle, where I could attract a whole new clientele’?”
Privately-run bathhouses proliferated in the 1970s, offering a haven for gay and bisexual men to meet during a time when laws prevented same-sex couples from even dancing together. When AIDS emerged in the 1980s, though, bathhouses were blamed for helping spread the disease and were forced to close or shuttered voluntarily.
The Continental Baths initially featured a disco floor, a pool with a waterfall, sauna rooms and private rooms, according to NYC LGBT Historic Sites’ website.
As its popularity soared, Ostrow added a cabaret stage, labyrinth, restaurant, bar, gym, travel desk and medical clinic. There was even a sun deck on the hotel’s rooftop complete with imported beach sand and cabanas.
Lustbader said at its peak, the Continental Baths was open 24 hours a day and seven days a week, with some 10,000 people visiting its roughly 400 rooms each week.
“It was quite the establishment,” he said. “People would check in on Friday night and not leave until Sunday.”
The Continental Baths also became a destination for groundbreaking music, with its DJs shaping the dance sounds that would become staples of pop culture.
A young Bette Midler performed on the poolside stage with a then-unknown Barry Manilow accompanying her on piano, cementing her status as an LGBTQ icon.
But as its musical reputation drew a wider, more mainstream audience, the club’s popularity among the gay community waned, and it closed its doors in 1976. The following year, Plato’s Retreat, a swinger’s club catering to heterosexual couples, opened in the basement space.
Ostrow moved to Australia in the 1980s, where he served as director of the Sydney Academy of Vocal Arts, according to his obituary. He also founded Mature Age Gays, a social group for older members of Australia’s LGBTQ community.
“We are very grateful for the legacy of MAG that Steve left us,” Steve Warren, the group’s president, wrote in a post on its website. “Steve’s loss will leave a big hole in our heart but he will never be forgotten.”
___
Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Texas Oilfield Waste Company Contributed $53,750 to Regulators Overseeing a Controversial Permit Application
- Navigator’s Proposed Carbon Pipeline Struggles to Gain Support in Illinois
- Richard Simmons’ Rep Shares Rare Update About Fitness Guru on His 75th Birthday
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Police believe there's a lioness on the loose in Berlin
- Minnesota Has Passed a Landmark Clean Energy Law. Which State Is Next?
- Make Traveling Less Stressful With These 15 Amazon Prime Day 2023 Deals
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Minnesota Is Poised to Pass an Ambitious 100 Percent Clean Energy Bill. Now About Those Incinerators…
Ranking
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Coal Ash Along the Shores of the Great Lakes Threatens Water Quality as Residents Rally for Change
- New Study Reveals Arctic Ice, Tracked Both Above and Below, Is Freezing Later
- Tearful Damar Hamlin Honors Buffalo Bills Trainers Who Saved His Life at ESPYS 2023
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Get a 16-Piece Cookware Set With 43,600+ 5-Star Reviews for Just $84 on Prime Day 2023
- The ‘Environmental Injustice of Beauty’: The Role That Pressure to Conform Plays In Use of Harmful Hair, Skin Products Among Women of Color
- The Surprising History of Climate Change Coverage in College Textbooks
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Yes, a Documentary on Gwyneth Paltrow's Ski Crash Trial Is Really Coming
Supersonic Aviation Program Could Cause ‘Climate Debacle,’ Environmentalists Warn
The Capitol Christmas Tree Provides a Timely Reminder on Environmental Stewardship This Holiday Season
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Pennsylvania Environmental Officials Took 9 Days to Inspect a Gas Plant Outside Pittsburgh That Caught Fire on Christmas Day
A 3M Plant in Illinois Was The Country’s Worst Emitter of a Climate-Killing ‘Immortal’ Chemical in 2021
UN Water Conference Highlights a Stubborn Shortage of Global Action