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📸 Suggest PhotosVoodoo Pub on Arthur Bunder Road in Colaba is not just a bar; it is a monument. This unassuming venue in the southern tip of Mumbai was gathering gay men and their allies through the decades when Section 377 made their very existence criminal, and it continued to do so with a quiet defiance that, in retrospect, says something profound about the resilience of community. Post-2018, it is more openly celebrated and better known than ever, and the weight of its history gives it a significance that newer, flashier venues cannot match. The interior is what it has always been: dark, warm, and unpretentious. Framed prints, low lighting, a bar that serves cold beer and straightforward cocktails at prices that remain among the most reasonable for any bar in Colaba. The music rotates through Bollywood classics, English pop, and occasional throwbacks to the 1990s and 2000s that are received by the crowd with a familiarity that comes from years of shared experience. On busy evenings ? weekends and the nights around Mumbai Pride in January ? the place fills to capacity and the atmosphere becomes genuinely electric. The crowd is mixed in the best possible way: regulars who have been coming since the venue opened, younger visitors discovering it for the first time, foreign travelers who found it in a guidebook or were tipped off by a hotel concierge, and local allies who drift in from the surrounding Colaba restaurant strip. The social temperature is warm and inclusive ? conversations start easily, and the kind of manufactured hierarchy that marks some gay venues is entirely absent. Voodoo's location in Colaba makes it the natural starting point for any exploration of Mumbai's gay scene. The Gateway of India and the Taj Mahal Palace hotel are a five-minute walk; the Leopold Caf?, a Colaba institution of its own, is around the corner. The neighborhood's density of accommodation options, restaurants, and bars makes an evening that starts at Voodoo and continues through the area entirely workable without needing a taxi. It is one of those places that every LGBTQ+ visitor to Mumbai should see at least once ? not for the drinks, which are fine but not exceptional, but for the sense of place and history that no other venue in India quite provides.
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