Skip to content

Key Players: Seattle’s Piano-Bar Pros

Seattle’s longstanding lounge pianists make the holidays special

By Seattle Mag November 19, 2013

1213pianoplayers

This article originally appeared in the December 2013 issue of Seattle magazine.

!–paging_filter–pGiven the tendency of bars and restaurants to rely on Pandora Internet radio or iPod playlists to provide background music, it’s a rare and genuine thrill to walk into a joint and discover someone tickling the ivories on a real piano. That’s especially the case when you encounter one of Seattle’s longstanding piano-bar pros, such as Ruby Bishop, Jerry Zimmerman or June Tonkin. With a combined 252 years of life experience, the city’s most seasoned lounge pianists add instant atmosphere wherever they play. brbrBishop, 94, grew up on a farm in southeastern Washington and began performing as a young girl at fairs in the Centralia-Chehalis area. She went on to become an acclaimed jazz and ragtime pianist who traveled to Vietnam to entertain the troops and knew Louis Armstrong well enough to drink Courvoisier with him. Zimmerman, who just turned 80, attended O’Dea High School, Seattle University and Cornish, and eventually became a house player at Canlis restaurant—a gig that lasted some 40 years. Tonkin, 78, graduated from Edmonds High School and worked as a Boeing secretary until 1958, when she was hired as the pianist at the original a href=”http://\/\/seattlemag.com/el-gaucho” target=”_blank”El Gaucho/a (at Seventh and Olive in downtown Seattle). By that point she had already memorized 1,000 popular tunes, and she’s since added at least 2,000 more to that repertoire. brbrAll three expertly take requests (preferring the Great American Songbook to the Rolling Stones) and look forward to playing their seasonal favorites at this time of year: Tonkin never tires of “The Christmas Song” (aka “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire”), Bishop loves “Walking in a Winter Wonderland” and Zimmerman enjoys the rollicking “Sleigh Ride.” None plans to retire any time soon. As Tonkin says, quoting the old adage, “If you do something you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.”brstrongnbsp;/strong/p
hr
pstrongbrHave a drink, hear them play:/strongbrstrongJune Tonkin/strong plays Tuesdays–Saturdays starting at 6 p.m. at El Gaucho in Bellevue (a href=”http://www.elgaucho.com” target=”_blank”elgaucho.com/a). brstrongRuby Bishop/strong plays Sundays starting at 6 p.m. at Vito’s on First Hill (a href=”http://www.vitosseattle.com” target=”_blank”vitosseattle.com/a). brstrongJerry Zimmerman/strong plays every second Wednesday at Vito’s, starting at 8 p.m./p

 

Follow Us

Studio Sessions: Jo Cosme

Studio Sessions: Jo Cosme

The Seattle-based multimedia artist and 2026 Neddy Award winner challenges the postcard version of Puerto Rico and centers the persistence of its people.

Jo Cosme knows how seductive a postcard can be. The Seattle-based Boricua (Puerto Rican) multimedia artist works across photography, installation, video, sound, and interactive elements to examine and pull apart how Puerto Rico is seen, sold, and misunderstood from the outside. Trained in photojournalism, with a BFA in photography from Puerto Rico School of Fine…

Seattle's Drag Brunch Has History

Seattle’s Drag Brunch Has History

The city’s Sunday shows started long before the mimosas got bottomless.

There was a time not too long ago, when drag performances—now a mainstay of Seattle’s queer scene—were kept under wraps. And when brunches, complete with singing and dancing queens dressed in dazzling drag as you sipped mimosas, weren’t a Sunday staple.  During the 1940s and ‘50s, an era largely shaped by restrictive laws and bias…

Studio Sessions: Sangram Majumdar

Studio Sessions: Sangram Majumdar

Working at the confluence of history, culture, and various painting traditions, UW associate professor Sangram Majumdar is one of this year’s Neddy Artist Award winners.

Discover the art of UW professor Sangram Majumdar, a 2026 Neddy Artist Award winner. Learn about his inspiration and upcoming Seattle exhibition at Cornish.

Rearview Mirror: A Georgian Dinner, Sidewalk Sips, and One-of-a-Kind Clothing

Rearview Mirror: A Georgian Dinner, Sidewalk Sips, and One-of-a-Kind Clothing

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

A new life for old clothes To celebrate one year in its current studio, the FXRY—a clothing repair service available via in-person appointments, home pickup, or mail-in drop off—is dropping its first collection. A small batch of reworked pieces, Second Mark will feature 13 vintage barn jackets, cropped, chain-stitched, and renewed into a completely unique, one-of-one…