The Dangle Lounge
110 E. Main St.
As the dominant purveyors of nude entertainment in Madison since the mid-1960s, brothers
Alphonse and Tom Reichenberger have pretty much seen it all. They took over a failing piano
lounge in the mid-1960s, turned into a go-go club and operated the Dangle Lounge just off the
Capitol Square until 1981. They have also run Visions, on East Washington Avenue, since 1978.
The Reichenbergers overcame arson, city ordinance fights, loss of liquor licenses and myriad
other obstacles to keep Visions open and successful.
In 1981, they agreed to a deal that closed the Dangle and was supposed to terminate adult
entertainment at Visions, by 1986. But in 1986 the Reichenbergers changed the entertainment at
the club to avoid "excessive emphasis on the breasts" of the dancers, in compliance with a city
ordinance that does not ban all nudity.
"Every kind of entertainment is attractive to somebody," Tom Reichenberger said in 1997. "We
happen to have burlesque entertainment."
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Attorney Eddie Ben Elson announced his candidacy for Dane County district attorney while nude
on the stage of the Dangle.
"What's your platform?" someone yelled.
"Only obey good laws," Eddie replied.
Speaking of Eddie, On the shore of Lake Monona where Eddie and his faithful waited for the
Comet Kohoutek to land in 1973. Asked why the comet failed to materialize, Eddie said,
"What comet?"