When
John Wehner launched his nightclub at The
Village of Baytowne Wharf at Sandestin
Golf and Beach Resort, he brought a decade’s worth of
experience operating the hottest spot on New Orleans' Bourbon Street.
After taking control of Louis Karno's failing Famous Door Dixieland
Club the 29-year-old visionary renamed the place John Wehner's Famous
Door and with that Wehner's total entertainment concept was born.
Although the building had been in place since 1934, business was
at an all-time low when Wehner took over in August 1992. Wehner's
first move was to build a new stage and bring the musicians back
to Bourbon Street. Next he installed a DJ sound booth and completely
overhauled the antiquated sound and light systems.
The
Famous Door was the first live music club on Bourbon Street to use
subwoofers, contributing to the "ferocious sound." "We
had all the dancers all night, every night," Wehner says. "Once
we had everybody dancing, everyone walking by on Bourbon Street
would come in and dance and party.
I always made the bands sound
like the records the DJ would play. That¹s the real secret
to our success. After a year or two, all the clubs started buying
subwoofers."
Wehner has a background as a musician and has played the drums
since age 11 and spent a decade playing up and down Bourbon Street
which enabled him to put together some celebrated house bands. The
first of these was Groove Tube, "That band set the tone for
the future of the club; I worked all day, doing daytime duties and
then played on stage six hours a day, six nights a week and I would
manage the club from the stage." In 1996, he created the Dream
Band, a dynamic show band with a horn section that could rival Chicago
and Earth, Wind and Fire. When he brought his Famous Door concept
to Sandestin, the band came along and remained the house band until
2003.
At the height of the Famous Door¹s success, up to three bands
a day would play on Wehner’s stage. After 9-11, the tourism
industry suffered an 85 percent decline in sales but the Famous
Door lost only one of it’s over 50 employees, as the staff
sacrificed. It took months to build the business back, but it was
never the same after that.
In
November 2002 Wehner was featured on the cover of Nightclub and
Bar magazine. He also operated his own professional recording studio
and a production company, Door Productions. The first CD he produced
was Jeff Chaz’ Give Me My Guitar--Wehner describes Chaz’
music as "funky blues with killer horns and a smokin¹
rhythm section. "Other releases included Tomato’s Jump
Into My Fire and the Dream Band’s...First Contact.
In 2000, representatives from Sandestin¹s Intrawest spent three nights at the Famous Door in New Orleans. About a month
later, Wehner signed a letter of intent and the Sandestin version
of John Wehner’s Famous Door was born. Since opening in August
2002, the club has since changed its name to John Wehner’s
Village Door--Wehner has left his New Orleans interests behind,
focusing completely on his future in Sandestin. A future that he
says is looking great.
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