Vancouver Sun

A SPECIAL PLACE IN TIME

Olympia Pizza owners George Kerasiotis, front centre, with pizza, along with brothers, from left, Peter, Jim and Nick celebrate 50 years of business in one of the city’s iconic restaurant­s, on West Broadway.

- JOHN MACKIE jmackie@postmedia.com

In 1959 times were tough on the Greek Island of Evia. So a beneficent English lord who employed many of the island’s young people put up the money to send a bunch of them abroad.

John Kerasiotis was dispatched to work on a berry farm in Ontario. But he wasn’t too fond of the winter, and within a year he migrated across the country to B.C.

Kerasiotis worked in pulp mills up the coast, and slowly but surely brought his five brothers over from Greece. Peter came in 1962, George in 1966, Jim in 1968, and Nick and Tim in 1974.

In 1967, the family opened a restaurant in Kitsilano with their friend George Scouras. But it wasn’t a Greek restaurant, it was a pizza joint.

“That was the thing to do back then, pizza,” said George Kerasiotis, 69.

“When we started, there was only John’s Pizzarama across the street. But then everybody followed, every Greek was opening a pizza and pasta place.”

Fifty years later, Olympia Pizza is still going strong at 3205 West Broadway.

And it is still owned and operated by the same Kerasiotis family, who have become a Vancouver institutio­n.

In 1975 the family went into the nightclub business with the Luvafair, which started off as a gay bar, turned into an alternativ­e music venue and reeled in generation­s of night clubbers until it closed in 2003.

In the ’80s the family ran another alternativ­e hot spot, Graceland. Today they own three thriving nightclubs: Celebritie­s, the Venue and the Caprice.

It all began at Olympia Pizza, where all six brothers worked.

“Some were cooking, some were managers at the front, some did the late shift,” said Nick Kerasiotis, 66.

“We did everything,” said Peter Kerasiotis, 73.

“We washed dishes sometimes too.”

“They put me as a dishwasher first,” said Nick with a chuckle. “A year as a dishwasher. (In Greece) I was an accountant.”

The restaurant thrived thanks to their hard work.

“We opened at 11 in the morning for lunch, and stayed open ’til four in the morning,” said George, who was initially known as “Small George” (the late co-founder Scouras was “Big George”).

“We would get busy for dinner, five to eight-nine, then have an hour quiet period, then people would come in from the bars and we would get full again, and go to four in the morning.”

Still, immigratin­g to Canada wasn’t easy.

“When I came I had no English at all,” said George.

“It’s hard when you leave your country, family and friends when you’re 18 or 19, to go to another country. And when I came here it was raining for a week. Rain, rain. (Then) two weeks. I was going out and looking, ‘where is the sun?’ It must have rained over a month straight.”

When big brother John told him he had to go to Ladysmith for work, George said he was going with him, or going back to Greece. So John took him, and he stayed.

John (who died in 2008) went through some trying times himself.

“I have to tell you a good story,” relates Nick.

“(John) was working in Ontario on a farm. The foreman was from Vancouver, and said to (the young Greek farm workers) ‘Vancouver, it’s a better place, I will take you there.

“But he said ‘On the train, people are stealing. So I will keep all your money.’ There was four of them. They said ‘OK’ and gave all their money to the foreman.”

Unfortunat­ely the foreman hopped off the train in New Westminste­r, and the four young immigrants stayed on to Vancouver. They waited and waited for the foreman, but he had absconded with their money.

They started walking west with their bags, winding up at 8th and Trafalgar.

“A Greek guy was sitting having a coffee and saw them sweating,” said Nick.

“He called to them ‘Hey are you Greeks?’ They said ‘Yeah.’ He said ‘Come here.’ He invited them into his house, fed them. They told him the story, they said ‘we don’t have a family (in Canada).’

“He said ‘Fine, work for me.’ ” The stranger was Peter Milos, co-owner of Scott’s Café downtown. John Kerasiotis remained friends with him the rest of his life — Milos was the best man at John’s wedding.

George still works at Olympia, but most of the family business is now done by the next generation — 14 sons of the six Kerasiotis brothers.

Many of their customers remain from Olympia’s early days.

“We’ve met a lot of people who used to come to Olympia when they went to UBC, and now they come in with their families,” said George.

“They married, they’ve got kids and they still come here.”

It’s hard when you leave your country, family and friends when you’re 18 or 19, to go to another country.

 ?? MARK VAN MANEN ??
MARK VAN MANEN
 ?? MARK VAN MANEN ?? Olympia Pizza owner George Kerasiotis stands outside the West Broadway restaurant with an old photograph of himself, centre, and two of his brothers. The family, which immigrated to Canada from Greece, is celebratin­g 50 years of business for one of the...
MARK VAN MANEN Olympia Pizza owner George Kerasiotis stands outside the West Broadway restaurant with an old photograph of himself, centre, and two of his brothers. The family, which immigrated to Canada from Greece, is celebratin­g 50 years of business for one of the...

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