Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Pizza junkies to lose Tubby's
River Heights haunt closing after 45 years
Tubby's Pizza, the River Heights hangout of families and rock stars, will close later this month after 45 years in business.
Owner Charlie Clements has sold the building on the corner of Stafford Street and Grosvenor Avenue to another restaurateur.
"The time's right," said Clements, 72, with a shrug. "They made me an offer I couldn't refuse."
Tubby's, and the Charlie-O's lounge next door, will close April 21, but not after a week of reminiscing and a special gathering next Saturday.
"We'll just have some pizza and do what we do, stand around, have a few drinks," Clements said.
After that, Clements said he might travel a little or go work for friends to keep busy.
Clements, a Regina boy who worked the concession stand at Taylor Field while he was in grade school, came to Winnipeg in the early 1960s to open a coffee house on Pembina Highway. That's where he met the likes of comic George Carlin and folk icon Joni Mitchell and began his long association with some of the city's best-known rock stars.
Later, when Tubby's opened and expanded into an old soda shop and a corner store, it became a regular hangout for Burton Cummings and the Guess Who. They used to record in a studio down the street and would come in for a beer and hang out until the wee hours of the morning.
Another Tubby's regular, folk-rocker Neil Young, famously borrowed $40 for gas to get to a gig in northwestern Ontario that Clements had finagled for him.
Young never repaid the debt, which turned into one of Clements' well-known punchlines.
"His friendship was enough," Clements said.
A wall on the way into Tubby's is adorned with framed, signed pictures of famous patrons, everyone from sports stars to radio DJs to a trim Burton Cummings in a striped shirt. But Clements said it's the neighbourhood families that have been coming to Tubby's for generations that made the job fun.
The closure will affect about nine staffers, including Clements' daughter, who runs the day-to-day operations, and the chef, who has been Clements' pizza-maker for nearly 40 years.
Clements said the new owners plan to open a new restaurant, something a little higher-end than Tubby's famous comfy pink vinyl booths and homey ham-and-pinapple pies.
"It was a fun 45 years. I made a ton of friends," Clements said. "I might have made a few enemies, too, but I couldn't tell you their names."
maryagnes.welch@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition April 11, 2010 A10
History
Updated on Monday, April 12, 2010 at 12:20 PM CDT: Corrected detail.
More Local
- Back to Top
- Return to Local
Most Popular Local
- Cyclist killed on Higgins Avenue was passionate mentor, volunteer
- Man hit before fatal blow, friend testifies
- Katz ponders sanity of new rules
- Band, council defy feds on aid
- Police cadets to deal with drunks
- Thieves strip $20K worth of copper wiring from gravel pit
- Pukatawagan RCMP looking for two dangerous suspects
- Union Station to receive $6.5-million makeover
- Gang members get lengthy sentences for jailhouse beating
- Kelvin project lesson in sacrifice
- Bear pulls camper from outhouse, before being shot
- Cyclist killed in collision on Higgins identified
- Severe storm warning issued
- A SHED is not enough
- Cyclist killed on Higgins Avenue was passionate mentor, volunteer
- Football star's fatal punch probed at manslaughter trail
- Scientists lash Harper government for pulling plug on Experimental Lakes Area
- Cyclist killed in Higgins Avenue crash
- Sex-scandal inquiry to be heard in city
- Winnipeg man recovering after campground bear attack
- Boozy night out, lying cost city man big bucks
- Neighbours shaken by two deaths
- Teen hit by vehicle on Pembina
- Rapid buses rattling homes
- Severe storm warning issued
- Has Gimli gone to pot?
- Bear pulls camper from outhouse, before being shot
- Cyclist killed in collision on Higgins identified
- Dr. Seuss banned from B.C. classroom
- Triple whammy hits homes
- Diplomat saved thousands from Hitler
- His life made our world a better place
- Band, council defy feds on aid
- Cyclist killed on Higgins Avenue was passionate mentor, volunteer
- Cummings steps out of reunion for sick mom
- Katz ponders sanity of new rules
- Pukatawagan RCMP looking for two dangerous suspects
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- Kelvin project lesson in sacrifice
- Hydro headquarters named Canada's greenest office tower
- Bear pulls camper from outhouse, before being shot
- Pooch paradise, where champion beagles run free
- His life made our world a better place
- Scientists lash Harper government for pulling plug on Experimental Lakes Area
- Winnipeg man recovering after campground bear attack
- Weeding out the chemicals
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- Diplomat saved thousands from Hitler
- U of W rejects copyright deal as 'money grab'
- Chemicals not par for the course
- Bear pulls camper from outhouse, before being shot
- Has Gimli gone to pot?
- Pooch paradise, where champion beagles run free
- His life made our world a better place
- Scientists lash Harper government for pulling plug on Experimental Lakes Area
- RRC's old gem a beauty
- Attack on hockey ref nets jail time
- Osborne Village voted Canada's best neighbourhood
- Our Village is as good as it gets
- Judge faces second complaint
Ads by Google









You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.