

The new venue will be on the metaverse to allow people to experience Boujis online and a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II sits at the club's entrance. Kate leaving the nightclub in London in 2007. The new venue will be on the metaverse to allow people to experience Boujis online and a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II sits at the club's entrance 'It was a constant juggling act of which calls you picked up and you didn’t', admitted Mr Carello. However, not everyone could get into the club, with Kate's brother James Middleton allegedly among the clubbers who were regularly rejected.

He recalled Lady Gaga arriving at the venue in a white leotard before asking if she could perform. It’s probably the most special club for me that I’ve had anything to do with.' The club's website reportedly had 40,000 hits within 24 hours of the B London's opening being announced.īut Mr Carello suggested he isn't surprised guests are keen to relive their glory days at the club, saying: 'It was the epitome of London nightlife. You could go there any night and some magic would happen.' The club, which opened 20 years ago, will have an identical cocktail and clientele list and initially be called B London, with the aim to use the Boujis name after legal action with another former owner this summer, reported The Mail On Sunday.ī London co-owner Carlo Carello, who was an employee at the original club, recalled to The Times: 'It was a time when the rock-star lifestyle was still going ahead. Prince Harry infamously hit the front pages by landing in the gutter in 2007, in the days when it was a regular occurrence to find the royal stumbling on to the street after a night quaffing Crack Baby shots – the club's blend of vodka, passion fruit puree, Chambord and champagne. With such a star-studded guest list, perhaps it was no surprise that the club, Boujis (pictured), became so raucous it ended up breaching licensing conditions and it was shut by Kensington and Chelsea Council in 2014
