Miami Herald (Sunday)

Singer created first disco, taught Miami how to party

- BY HOWARD COHEN hcohen@miamiheral­d.com Associated Press

When Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr. and Liza Minnelli needed to unwind in class together after a 1988 Miami Arena concert they billed as The Ultimate Event, they knew they needed the ultimate place and the ultimate hostess. They found both in Régine at her namesake Régine’s nightclub atop Coconut Grove’s Grand Bay Hotel.

And with three of the century’s premier talents in her room on the Grand Bay penthouse commanding attention, the sophistica­ted Régine made sure not to forget that one of her Miami friends had something to celebrate, too. But Julio Iglesias could not join his peers in person. So Régine dashed off to make a phone call to wish the Spanish crooner a happy birthday in San Francisco.

That was the ever attentive Régine — one name only like Cher and Madonna because, really, who needs the bother of two when the world knows you by one fabulous handle?

Régine, who also ran Jimmy’z, a nightclub tucked inside The Forge in Miami Beach, died in

Paris at age 92 on May 1, according to her granddaugh­ter Daphne Rotcage.

THE FIRST DISCO

Régine was credited with creating the world’s first disco, back in the 1950s. Her chain of dance clubs, including those in Miami, New York, Los Angeles, Monte Carlo, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Saint Tropez, London, Düsseldorf, Cairo and Kuala Lumpur, helped define 1970s and 1980s glamour and gave Miami a visual setting as richly lavish as on TV’s “Dynasty.”

“With enormous fanfare, she opened her New York club in 1976 on the ground floor of Delmonico’s Hotel, at 59th Street and Park Avenue. She moved into the hotel’s penthouse suite,” The

New York Times announced in her obituary.

It was penthouses all the way, including in Miami where her club Régine’s in the five-star Grand Bay Hotel was the place to be for Madonna, Michael Jackson, John Travolta and Luciano Pavarotti and for those with the gelt, glam and gumption to mingle among them. Not to mention, pay $220 a bottle for the disco’s signature bubbly, Dom Pérignon. (That would be about $577 today, adjusting for inflation.)

“Regine’s in Miami was the most of everything,” Régine told the Miami Herald in 2000. “People went there to spend money like crazy. When I opened, I offered exclusive membership­s for $1,000 each. Right away I had 3,000 members. There were a lot of nouveau riche in Miami. Cubans, South Americans. Yes, some of it may have been drug money, but every period has that.”

Régine created the concept of the velvet rope and bottle service long before Studio 54 in New York became world famous for these amenities in the late-1970s. And she did so decades before long-gone glam nightclubs like Liquid on South Beach’s

Washington Avenue revived the concept locally in the 1990s.

Terry Zarikian directed public relations for Régine’s in the former Grand Bay and was the club’s executive director. The memories he can share could fill 10 seasons of a “Dynasty” reboot, but such a series would lack the love he still feels for his beloved Régine.

The pair first met in 1976 when the doorman at Régine’s Manhattan disco told Zarikian he could enter but only if he was properly dressed, wearing a tie.

This attire requiremen­t was no small thing, Régine told a Miami Herald reporter inside Jimmy’z in 2000.

“One time at Regine’s in New York, the doorman turned down Mick Jagger because he wasn’t wearing a jacket,” she said. “He was in sneakers and jeans. He called me the next day, ‘Régine, I was turned down. I have a jacket now. Can I come?’ We were very good friends. I would have made an exception for Mick Jagger.”

Zarikian picks up his story.

“September 1986, on my first night at Régine’s, she looks at me and immediatel­y orders me, ‘Terrie, take good care of my club. You need to bring all the celebritie­s who are in town and show them how to party.’ She turned around and left me frozen by the tone of her voice.”

The club’s membership director Sheila Murray took a stunned Zarikian by the hand and filled the other with a martini. “Here, this will make you feel better,” she told him.

Minutes later, the grand dame asked that Zarikian join her at her table.

He was ready. He had a beautiful arrangemen­t of her favorite white flowers and a bottle of champagne.

He made the chocolate display pop like a firecracke­r and reveal dragée, the French version of Jordan almonds.

“Since that day, our relationsh­ip became solid,” Zarikian said.

Weekly themed parties had to top Régine’s opening night black tie affairs a few years earlier that saw Julio Iglesias, Gina Lollobrigi­da, Jackie Gleason and Ursula Andress drinking champagne from Moët & Chandon champagne coupes towers.

In 1986, Régine celebrated her 30 years in the nightclub business with “the most glamorous party Miami had ever seen,”

Zarikian said.

“Frédéric Chandon, the Count Chandon de Briailles, and his wife flew from Paris and joined Sharon Stone, who wasn’t famous then, but Régine asked me to, “Take care of her Terrie, she is going to be a BIG star!’ Régine’s secret plan was to introduce Stone to Iglesias. Sly Stallone came with Brigitte Nielsen, just before their separation, and the decor created by Erté, mysterious­ly disappeare­d.”

Zarikian surmises that the night cleaners mistakenly thought it was leftover decor that they could take home.

When Woody Weiser died in 2011, the Herald’s obituary noted that Régine’s was said to have sold more champagne than any other establishm­ent in the United States.

“I was a fan of Régine long before I met her having viewed her from afar in my youth when celebratin­g at Régine’s in New York and Jimmy’z in Monaco,” Malnik said in an email to the Miami Herald.

“Then one day she approached me to collaborat­e on opening Jimmy’z at the Forge. We negotiated and drafted a contract along with her then-husband, Roger, in one full day at her home in Harbor Island while she plied me with salami sandwiches on toasted French bread with French mustard made by her hand which we washed down with champagne. The rest was history, we had an eight-year run together bringing what only Régine could bring: her signature, world class, Parisian joie de vivre in Miami,” Malnik said.

Régine was born Rachelle Zylberberg in Etterbeek, Belgium, on Dec.

26, 1929, to Jewish emigrants from Poland during the Great Depression, according to the New York Times.

Régine was abandoned in infancy by her unwed mother, who departed for Argentina, and left alone at 12 when her father was arrested by the Nazis in France. She was hidden in a convent in Provence to escape the Holocaust.

After World War II, Régine sold bras in the streets of Paris. She “vowed to become rich and famous someday,” The Times noted.

Régine’s survivors include her granddaugh­ter Daphne Rotcage. She was predecease­d by her son Lionel Rotcage in 2006. A private funeral will be held Monday in Paris.

SAN DIEGO

Leonard Ignelzi, whose knack for being in the right place at the right time produced breathtaki­ng images of Hall of Fame sports figures, devastatin­g wildfires and other major news over 37 years as photograph­er for The Associated Press in San Diego, has died. He was 74.

Ignelzi died Friday in Las Vegas of cerebral amyloid angiopathy, a condition associated with frequent strokes and other neurologic­al issues, according to his wife, Bobbi.

Known as Lenny, he was a highly versatile photojourn­alist whose biggest passions were sports and breaking news. Few people, if any, have attended more Padres baseball or Chargers football games, yet he found fresh angles with each assignment until retiring in 2016.

Ignelzi hid in bushes during a gunman’s assault on a McDonald’s restaurant in San Diego that killed 21 people in 1984. His images of the U.S.Mexico border showed San Diego’s transforma­tion from dominant corridor for illegal crossings to fortress of razor-topped walls and stadium lights.

His indelible wildfire images include one of

 ?? LIONEL CIRONNEAU AP ?? In this 2013 file photo, legendary singer Régine arrives for the opening ceremony at the 39th American Film Festival.
LIONEL CIRONNEAU AP In this 2013 file photo, legendary singer Régine arrives for the opening ceremony at the 39th American Film Festival.

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