Main Content Starts Here, tab to start navigating

Address and Hours

View The Black Cat at 3909 W Sunset Boulevard,
Los Angeles, CA 90029 on Google Maps

Call The Black Cat by phone at (323) 661-6369
info@theblackcatla.com

Get Directions to The Black Cat via Google Maps

We are a 21 & over establishment (no kittens please)

HOURS

Monday - Friday
4:00 PM - 2:00 AM

Saturday & Sunday
2:00 PM - 2:00 AM

Happy Hour from 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM on weekdays

Our kitchen is open until 11:00 PM nightly

Our patio is open until 10:30 PM nightly

Reservations are accepted but not required

For parties up to 12 guests please select the reservation button below

For parties of 13 or more please email:  reservation@theblackcatla.com 

E-Gift Card

Private Events

Book An Event

For event inquiries in our private event room, please fill out the form below and we’ll be in touch soon. For full venue buyouts and filming inquiries, please email here.

The White Room

The White Room at The Black Cat is a private dining and event space that can accommodate afternoon and evening dinner parties from 12 to 30 guests, and up to 45 guests for cocktail parties, receptions and screenings.

  • Capacity Up to 30 for dinner | up to 45 for receptions and screenings

History

an image of the California Landmark Plaque Black Cat

California Landmark Plaque

a sign on the side of a building

Black Cat Tavern 1967

a close up of a book

Historic Cultural Monument

text

-

Unto Mononen et al. posing for a photo in front of a newspaper

Images courtesy of ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries

a group of people standing in front of a store

Images courtesy of ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries

Art Bell, Mary Bell standing around a sign posing for the camera

Images courtesy of ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries

The Black Cat. A Brief History.

The Black Cat Tavern opened in October 1966 catering to a gay clientele. At that time, homosexuality was medically classified as a mental illness, same-sex relations were criminalized in California, and in Los Angeles, the LGBTQ community faced constant intimadation, harassment and violent oppression at the hands of the Los Angeles Police Department. 

On New Year’s Eve 1967, The Black Cat was targeted in an undercover police sting. As the crowd celebrated at midnight, a dozen plainclothes police officers began their raid on the unsuspecting revelers. The frightened patrons and staff fought back against the unannounced officers. It was a confusing scene that quickly devolved into chaos as all resistance was met with brutal police force. In all, fourteen people were beaten to the floor, dragged outside, and arrested on the sidewalk in front of the bar. Three weeks later, six of those detained were brought to trial by jury to face charges of lewd conduct. All six were found guilty of the act of same-sex kissing, a conviction that carried a penalty which required them to publicly register as sex offenders for life. 

In the wake of these unjust events, a coalition of LGBTQ community members joined forces with a burgeoning local activist organization named Personal Rights in Defense and Education (PRIDE) to plan a demonstration outside The Black Cat. Held on February 11, 1967, the event was attended by several hundred brave people. They were met on the street by squadrons of armed riot police officers. Despite this show of force, the disciplined demonstrators remained orderly. The protest unfolded tensely, but peacefully.

Predating the Stonewall uprising in New York by two full years, the 1967 Black Cat demonstration marks one of the first moments in US history that the LGBTQ community organized publicly to protest the harassment, brutality, and persecution they were suffering at the hands of the state for being queer. 

Soon after, Charles Talley and Benny Baker (two of the six men convicted of lewd conduct) would appeal their convictions to the United States Supreme Court. The high court declined to take up their appeal. Nonetheless, the case set a legal precedent that would transform the social, cultural, and political tenor of the LGBTQ civil rights movement from that moment on. Their appeal asserted (for the first time) that sexual orientation should not preclude someone from enjoying the same rights and equal protections guaranteed to all Americans under the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. 

In 2007, The Black Cat was recognized by the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission as Historic-Cultural Monument #939. A commemorative plaque on the façade of the building honors The Black Cat as the site of the first documented LGBTQ civil rights demonstration in the nation.

In 2022, the State of California designated The Black Cat Historical Landmark #1063, the first and only California Historical Landmark to recognize California's LGBTQ history. A commemorative plaque on the corner of Sunset and Hyperion marks the monumental civil and human rights history of the location.




Store

purchase e-gift card