Inside the Aztec Theatre — built 1926, still hiding something new. Leather. Candlelight. Slow bourbon. No tourist traffic.
Inside the Aztec Theatre — built 1926, still hiding something new. Leather. Candlelight. Slow bourbon. No tourist traffic.
Charter is reserved for the first one hundred through the door. Lifetime price lock, engraved name plate, priority booking, and the first invitations to everything we do. Closes at one hundred. Full membership capped at three hundred.
The Aztec Theatre opened on June 4, 1926 — a Mesoamerican movie palace dropped into the middle of a Texas downtown. In the basement was a café called Old South. Southern-style home cooking. Ten tables. A back door onto Commerce Street.
Nobody wrote it down, but Prohibition lasted until December of 1933 — and for seven of those years, the Old South served a lot more than coffee.
A hundred years later we're upstairs, on the second floor overlooking the Riverwalk. Same building. Same bricks. Better bourbon. The door still doesn't have our name on it.
If you know, you know.
Charter closes at one hundred. Full membership caps at three hundred. We'll be in touch before the soft opening.