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Route 1 via I-10 W and LA-367: 49.9 Miles | 57 Minutes
Route 2 via I-49 & US-190 W: 50.7 Miles | 57 Minutes
Route 3 via LA-95 N: 47.1 Miles | 59 Minutes
Open only on Saturdays, Fred's is a once in a lifetime experience.
By: Gerald McCleod via Austin Chronicles
Fred's Lounge in Mamou is more than the Cajun Music Capital of the World. The village on the Louisiana prairie is the spiritual center of the universe for anyone who loves the foot-tapping tunes played by bands built around an accordion and fiddle player and Fred's is the epicenter.
On the surface, Fred's place looks like any ordinary red brick beer joint. But promptly at 9:15 on Saturday mornings when announcer Mark Lane steps to the microphone on the makeshift stage roped out of the center of the dance floor, Fred's Lounge becomes the most beautiful place in the world. With a hearty laissez les bon temps roulez, Lane ignites a two-hour radio tradition that has played on KVPI (1050AM) out of Ville Platte for more than 55 years.
Fred's Lounge rarely advertises, yet the pub that is open only on Saturday mornings is known worldwide.
The history of Fred's Lounge is intertwined with the story of Evangeline Parish. After World War II, the Cajun culture that had been an important part of the farming communities of south central Louisiana was quietly fading. It was hard to keep the former soldiers on the farm once they saw Paris.
One of those returning to the village of Mamou was Alfred "Fred" Tate. On November 20, 1946, he purchased the old bar on Main Street in the middle of town. It was nearly an instant success. It was at Fred's bar that the Courir de Mardi Gras was revived by Fred, Revon Reed, and Paul Tate.
Mardi Gras weekend leading up to Fat Tuesday is the only time that Fred's Lounge is open Friday and Saturday nights. It wasn't always so. When Fred Tate ran the joint it was open seven days a week. The late Revon Reed, a regional author and celebrity, started the live radio show in 1962. As his health began to fail, Fred kept the lounge open with the help of his ex-wife Sue on Saturday mornings to honor his commitment to the radio program.
When Fred passed away in 1992, Sue continued the tradition while working as a legal secretary. At 70 years old, Sue Vasseur is known worldwide as Tante Sue de Mamou and continues to manage Fred's Lounge. It is hard to imagine Mamou or Fred's without the white-haired grandmother with a soft accent and a friendly smile who has never met a stranger. Last year Mamou held "Tante (pronounced tantu) Day" in her honor.
Libby and David Gillory purchased the lounge from Fred's two daughters in 1996. Tante Sue came with the deal, and they're glad she did. Both have day jobs, she's a teacher and he's a construction consultant. Fred's is their retirement plan.
Although you can hear local music programs across the radio dial in southern Louisiana, Fred's Lounge is unique in many ways. "For one thing we serve alcohol at eight in the morning. Even for us Cajuns that unique," Libby says with a laugh. She recommends starting with a spicy Bloody Mary. "That's our breakfast. We call it 'Fred's omelet.'"
Fred's is open only on Saturdays from 8am to 2pm with the music happening from 9am to 1:30pm.