Montreal Gazette

Côte-St-Luc club shuffles along

Shakespear­e’s Elbow launched more than 21 years ago and is still going strong

- ISAAC OLSON

Back in 1960, two young Montrealer­s met on a baseball diamond in the Adirondack­s when their summer camps came together to compete and that chance encounter evolved into a lifelong friendship chiefly centred on what some people say is the smartest card game ever invented — bridge.

Nearly six decades later, the pair runs Canada’s largest bridge club right in the heart of Côte-St-Luc on the fourth floor of the Quartier Cavendish and that bridge club, named Shakespear­e’s Elbow, recently turned 21 years old.

“Bridge is just so good for the brain,” said Lenny Zelnicker, sitting at a card table next to Michael Efraim as he answered dozens of incoming phone calls from players asking about upcoming games. “It keeps people young.” All 196 seats may still be filled on a busier day in warmer months and reservatio­ns are recommende­d, but attendance plummets in the winter when snowbirds fly south.

In recent years, interest has waned and an increasing number of seats left empty as people move on to other games or to the grave.

Players in their fifties are considered “young bloods” and one woman just turned 100.

Shakespear­e’s Elbow has trimmed back from seven days a week to six and evening matches are a thing of the past. However, Efraim, 72, and Zelnicker, 85, keep plugging away with hopes that younger generation­s in the area will take up the game and interest will grow strong once again.

Back in the ’50s, immigrants brought bridge to Quebec and, by the ’60s and ’70s, Montreal became a hotbed for the game.

Those immigrants passed the game down to their children, like Efraim, who learned how to play from his parents.

“One time Montreal was a top bridge city in the world,” said Efraim and, Zelnicker added, “years ago, a lot of guys paid for their education at McGill by playing bridge in the washroom there.”

While some people play for money, that’s not the case at Shakespear­e’s Elbow.

Competing in teams of two, most players’ goals are to amass points. Some play tournament­s, vying for American Contract Bridge League master points with hopes of achieving the rank of life master like Efraim, who competes globally. At Shakespear­e’s Elbow, players pay $14 to play three-hour rounds. A catered lunch is included. “You don’t become rich running a bridge club,” said Efraim.

“If you did, everybody would be in the bridge club business.”

Instead, he explained, it’s something he does as a way to pass the time in his retirement. It’s more of a public service, he explains, and it’s a service he enjoys. “You meet people,” he added. “You talk to people. It makes for a really nice social life.”

Efraim was a teenage sleepaway camper summering in northern New York when he first met Zelnicker, who was a counsellor at the opposing camp’s baseball team.

By the late ’60s, the two, both from Montreal’s west end, ended up working together at Camp Pembina in St-Donat.

Zelnicker was head counsellor there and he was developing an interest in bridge. He heard Efraim, a counsellor, was already an experience­d player and he invited him to play with fellow staffers.

Once back in Montreal, they played when they could, but life got in the way of their hobby. Zelnicker went into the men’s fashion industry and Efraim became an engineer.

They had spouses, children and busy jobs. Efraim started a constructi­on firm and Zelnicker travelled throughout North America to sell clothes.

They stayed friends over the years, but it wasn’t until the mid’80s when they started getting serious about bridge again, playing at local clubs.

“Where we were playing, the owners were not friendly people and they were driving people away,” said Zelnicker. “And then Mike had a vision.”

Once they found a vacant space in the local mall, Efraim closed his constructi­on company and Zelnicker eventually quit his job so they could both retire in style. They launched Shakespear­e’s Elbow on Aug. 1, 1996, and, said Zelnicker, “it took off right away.”

As far as the name is concerned, Efraim came up with it and found it catchy. Zelnicker added, “It was either that or Lenny’s Bad Knee, but then both knees went so that didn’t work.”

One of the first people through the door was Barbara Bernstein, a newbie who was immediatel­y hooked.

“I’ve been playing there since they opened,” said Bernstein.

“I played, believe it or not, seven days a week.”

Now she plays six days a week, her passion for bridge unwavering.

“It’s wonderful for your mind,” she said. “It’s wonderful to meet other people. It’s very competitiv­e and you can play to any age.”

 ?? ALLEN McINNIS ?? Lenny Zelnicker, 85, says bridge is “just so good for the brain.” He and fellow Montrealer Michael Efraim run Shakespear­e’s Elbow, Canada’s largest club devoted to the card game.
ALLEN McINNIS Lenny Zelnicker, 85, says bridge is “just so good for the brain.” He and fellow Montrealer Michael Efraim run Shakespear­e’s Elbow, Canada’s largest club devoted to the card game.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada