Right in front of you stands what was once the pulsing heart of Atlanta’s nightlife - Opera Nightclub. But before all the techno beats and disco lights, this building actually began with a completely different kind of drama. Picture its earlier life in the 1920s as a real opera house, part of the Atlanta Woman’s Club, where elegant ladies in pearls and gloves once traded stories in the lobby instead of dance moves on the floor. The stage shifted in the 1970s, when it became the Peachtree Playhouse and then the (infamous) Petrus nightclub, each adding their own splash of color to the building’s ever-changing personality. Through the late ‘90s and early 2000s, the space was transformed again - this time to actually look like an opera house inside, and dubbed Eleven 50. But it was Opera Nightclub, from 2008 onward, that really hit the high notes.
Opera was much more than a place to dance; it was Atlanta’s superstar hotspot, regularly landing among America’s top 50 clubs and even nominated one of the nation’s top three. On the weekends here, you might have spotted rappers, movie icons like Clint Eastwood, or someone from Jersey Shore nursing a carefully mixed drink. The club saw performances from massive international DJs like Armin van Buuren, Tiesto, and David Guetta, and even, back in the Eleven 50 days, the legendary Prince.
Opera had more rooms than a reality TV mansion: a huge dance floor, plush VIP balconies, a gallery, and an outdoor patio for those who wanted a break from all the glitz. It even sparked a little legal drama in 2011 when LeBron James skipped out on a paid appearance and got sued - but the case vanished faster than a free drink at last call.
Though Opera closed in 2019, and a new venue moved in, if nightclubs had a Walk of Fame, this spot would have a golden star right out front.



