Andrew Jankowski of Eater Portland and the Portland Mercury called the business a drag bar and gay club.[3][4] Conner Reed and Thom Hilton of Eater Portland described The Queen's Head as a queer bar and English pub inspired by the owner's time in London.[5] The owner said the space was inclusive and queer, not specifically gay or lesbian.[2]
The Calamity Jane was among the bar's "signature" cocktails.[6] According to Reed and Hilton, The Queen's Head offered the city's "most extensive" menu of non-alcoholic cocktails, which used ingredients such as peach turmeric tea and rose five-spice simple syrup.[5]
History
The bar's interior in 2022
Owner Daniel Bund opened The Queen's Head in November 2021,[1][7] during the COVID-19 pandemic. The business occupied the space which previously housed Berbati's Pan and Tryst. Bund saw the launch as an "overt return of the LGBTQ+ community to Ankeny Alley". Originally from Portland, he performed in drag on the East Coast and in the United Kingdom for two decades. Bund prefers theatrical drag performance, but generally let producers select the talent showcased at The Queen's Head.[1]
Antha Hansen served as chef in 2021.[1] The bar's first art exhibition, called Vulgaris (Latin for "common"), was held in February 2022. The event featured 40 works by Asa Metrik which "[explored] the sexuality and divinity of the self, and [were] made from portraits submitted by a nonbinary model". Sales benefitted the Center, described as a "queer charity".[8]
In March 2022, Bund sought funding to improve the bar, kitchen equipment, and outdoor seating.[9] In conjunction with Pride celebrations, The Queen's Head hosted events called "The QT (Queer Talent) Show", "(W)horror Show", and "High Tea with the Queens: A Royal Invasion" in June 2022.[10] In mid-2022, Eater Portland's Brooke Jackson-Glidden said The Queen's Head's "blend of drag shows and British pub fare is unique in the city".[11]
Transition to Pinq and closure
The Queen's Head closed in July 2022, and a worker-owned cooperative known as The Queen's Collective took over operations. The cooperative completed a rebrand, debuting the space as a queer cafe called Pinq (sometimes stylized as P¡nq) in September.[9][12] Pinq also took over the lease and ran a 501(c)(3) called Cqnnectiqn, which raised funds to help achieve Pinq's goals of "provocative artistic expression, rad economics, anti-oppression organizing and Queer culture keeping".[9] According to Jankowski, the cooperative opposed gentrification, oppression, and racism, and Pinq intended to fill a void left by The Roxy, an LGBT-friendly diner which operated during 1994–2022. The collective once had fifteen employees, but dwindled to three by the time Pinq opened. Staff included a general manager and a public relations and social media manager.[9]
The Queen's Collective worked with approximately 50 drag artists and event producers, and Pinq hosted "burlesque shows, open mics, makers markets, viewing parties for shows like The Boulet Brothers' Dragula, and even bake sales". Pinq sought to book trans and non-binaryperformers of color. The restaurant began serving Southern-style soul food such as chicken sandwiches, okra étouffée, and oxtails. Pinq acquired The Roxy's espresso machine. The business suffered a series of hardships, including a delayed opening, a refrigerator failure, a break-in, and event cancellations, before closing in November 2022. A post on Pinq's social media account said, "[People] didn't fuck with the vision, and those who did were too economically maligned to save us. Just regular failure under capitalism."[9]