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Museum Musings: Lounging in Whistler

'In its first year, JB’s Dining Lounge featured some familiar faces in the area, as well as some new ones'
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Michael d’Artois, Laura McGuffin, Rod MacLeod and Mark Sadler entertain at the Alta Lake Community Club’s Children’s Christmas Party at the Keg.

Jack Bright first arrived in the Whistler area with his wife Ann in 1967 as the new ski area manager, responsible for everything for the lift company that didn’t move (mountain manager Dave Mathews was responsible for the things that did move, such as lifts). In 1975, while Bright was still working for Garibaldi Lifts Ltd., the couple opened the Whistler Inn, described in its first season as “ultra modern yet rustic accommodation,” right near the shores of Nita Lake within walking distance to the lifts. After a seemingly successful first season, a restaurant and cocktail lounge was added onto the Inn in preparation for the winter of 1976-77.

In its first year, JB’s Dining Lounge featured some familiar faces in the area, as well as some new ones. Roger Systad, who had previously worked at the Brandywine Falls Restaurant, the Cheakamus Inn and L’Apres, was hired as the head chef, and John Reynolds, manager, barman, and fixture of the Cheakamus Inn, returned to Whistler as the barman at the Whistler Inn. A few months after opening, JB’s also hired Michael d’Artois who, though he had been visiting the area to ski for years, was at Whistler for his first season as a full-time resident.

D’Artois had previously worked in the front office at Chateau Lake Louise until the general manager heard him singing and playing guitar at a staff contest. He was hired as a resident entertainer at the hotel for the next winter, playing in various spaces throughout the day. In the fall of 1976, when he decided to move up to Whistler, d’Artois left a demo tape at the Keg restaurant at Alta Lake and then returned to Vancouver. When he returned to Whistler, the Keg asked him, “Where have you been? You’re hired.” Although the Keg was known as the place to go for disco, apparently the staff were not disappointed to come in and find d’Artois playing folk music for a change.

The early winter of 1976-77 is still talked about today as very dry and cold, with little snow. D’Artois played at the Keg while Whistler Mountain was operating through the holidays and the beginning of 1977, but the lack of snow forced the lift company to close down in January. With no skiing, not many visitors were coming to Whistler, though residents embraced activities offered by the frozen lakes.

When it had finally snowed enough for the mountain to reopen in February, d’Artois was hired by Bright to perform at JB’s, similar to the position he held in Lake Louise. He played three 45-minute sets between 9 p.m. and midnight, mostly to a local crowd who soon knew his repertoire and were happy to put in requests. According to d’Artois, “not infrequently, Jack would call last call [and] people would leave, except those people that knew they didn’t have to leave.” They would have one last drink and d’Artois would play one last set.

Not wanting to work late nights again the next winter, d’Artois opened the Valley Inn in a building on Nesters Road he rented from Rudy Hofmann. He stayed in the hotel business for a few years, even living onsite in Whistler Village while still under construction, before getting his real estate licence and starting a long career in
real estate.

The Whistler Inn and JB’s are still standing in Creekside today, though they have changed some over the past five decades. The Whistler Inn is today known as the Whistler Resort & Club and JB’s has changed names a few times. The space became Hoz’s Pub under Ron Hosner in the 1980s and Karen Roland began working there in the 1990s. She took over the space in 2008 and today JB’s restaurant area houses Roland’s Pub while JB’s bar area has been transformed into the Red Door Bistro.