The Mercury News

Goosetown Lounge owners grateful for region’s support

A fundraisin­g campaign to save the beloved bar raises $20,000 in 15 hours

- Sal Pizarro

Gary Rovai, who died in August 2019 at age 75, grew up in Willow Glen and was a guy who almost always said yes to someone in need. Willow Glen schools, St. Christophe­r Church, youth sports teams — you name it and Goosetown Lounge was happy to help. When kids would cut through Goosetown’s parking lot to get to the elementary school behind the bar, Rovai served as an impromptu crossing

guard to make sure they arrived safely.

“He was the heart and soul of Goosetown,” said his wife, Lynne Rovai, who continued running the bar with her longtime employees after Gary’s death. “He never met anybody who wasn’t going to be his friend.”

Goosetown Lounge opened in 1996, taking over the Lincoln Avenue location of the Willow Glen Inn, and has become an institutio­n in the San Jose neighborho­od, with a reputation for

being a comfortabl­e watering hole during the week and a fun karaoke spot on weekends. Of course, just a few months after Rovai’s death, the COVID-19 pandemic changed everything, shutting down Goosetown in March and forcing the Rovai family to worry about its future.

But that future is secure — at least for a few more months — thanks to an overwhelmi­ng flood of support for a GoFundMe campaign that raised $20,000 in just 15 hours and now stands at more than $37,000. As of Monday afternoon, 345 people had donated in amounts ranging from $20 to $1,000. The funding will allow Goosetown to pay its rent, utilities and insurance for the next few months, as well as potentiall­y providing for improved outdoor seating when it’s allowed to reopen. (Check out the campaign at www.gofundme. com/f/help-save-goosetown.)

The fundraiser was the idea of Kristen Carlson, Gary and Lynne’s daughter.

For her birthday, she would encourage friends on Facebook to donate to a different nonprofit each year. But when her 40th birthday was approachin­g this month, she talked to her mom and her two sisters and decided to see if the community would support the family business. She considered the initial $20,000 goal to be “ambitious,” but was persuaded to ask for an amount that would provide the necessary

help.

“We’ve been overwhelme­d by the amount of people, and so many messages,” said Carlson, who works in the tech industry but put in her time waiting tables at Goosetown as a teenager. “I never thought we’d get to $20,000. This is the first time in a long time, I feel like there’s a light at the end of this tunnel.”

Both mother and daughter can’t help but believe

that all this support wouldn’t have happened if people didn’t remember Gary Rovai and the times they’d stop by Goosetown to have a chat with him or came to him to support a fundraiser of their own. “He wouldn’t have wanted to do this,” Carlson concedes. “He was so proud. But he was always the first one to give.”

CHEF’S MARKET GETS AN EXTENSION >>

Chef Rodney

Baca is elated to share the good news that Chef’s Market — the pop-up initiative he started with four other restaurant­s — is being extended to the end of January. If you’re not familiar with the concept, you can place an online order — for a single meal or a family meal for four — and pick it up from the mobile kitchen in the Valley Title parking lot at 375 S. Second St. in downtown San Jose.

For each meal that’s ordered, another meal will be prepared and delivered to Hunger at Home or SJ SHIP Kits, two nonprofits that are providing food for unemployed workers. The restaurant­s involved are The Shop by Chef Baca, Robee’s Falafel, Loteria Taco Bar, Hyland House of Sushi and Jora Peruvian Food. Goto chefs market 1. square. site to view the menus and order from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.

Baca says the community response has been great, and you would think that some of the bigger downtown firms — especially those with employees working from home now — could see this as a good opportunit­y to treat their employees to a fantastic lunch while also helping those who aren’t working at all.

COLLECTING CONTEMPORA­RY ART >> The doors of San Jose’s Institute of Contempora­ry Art may be closed right now, but it’s still working to engage people in the arts with the ICA Social Club. The bi-weekly online gathering launches this month with a goal of connecting ICA members with artists and other experts from the art world in a series of virtual events, classes and happy hours. It opens Jan. 28 with “A Master Class in Collecting Contempora­ry Art,” a Zoom event featuring artist Conrad Egyir, the next artist who will be featured in the ICA’s “Facade Project.”

The first program is free and open to the public, but the following events are reserved for specific membership levels. Go to www.icasanjose.org/uncategori­zed/ icasocialc­lub for details.

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Lynne Rovai, left Lindsey Beall, Stephanie Whaley and Kristen Carlson gather at Goosetown Lounge in the Willow Glen neighborho­od of San Jose on Monday. A campaign has raised enough funds to keep the bar open for the immediate future.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Lynne Rovai, left Lindsey Beall, Stephanie Whaley and Kristen Carlson gather at Goosetown Lounge in the Willow Glen neighborho­od of San Jose on Monday. A campaign has raised enough funds to keep the bar open for the immediate future.
 ??  ?? Owner Rovai said that her popular late husband, Gary, “was the heart and soul of Goosetown.”
Owner Rovai said that her popular late husband, Gary, “was the heart and soul of Goosetown.”
 ??  ??
 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The immediate future of Goosetown Lounge in San Jose is secured because of the fundraisin­g efforts of customers, friends and neighbors of the bar’s ownership and staff.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The immediate future of Goosetown Lounge in San Jose is secured because of the fundraisin­g efforts of customers, friends and neighbors of the bar’s ownership and staff.

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