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Hungry Memphis

Cameo Owners Opening New Spots in Former Knifebird and The Public Bistro Spaces

Paul Gilliam and Mary Oglesby, owners of Cameo and Mary’s Bar of Tropical Escapism, are the new owners of the spaces formerly occupied by Knifebird Wine Bar and The Public Bistro.

“We did not buy their businesses,” Gilliam says. “We are opening new businesses in their spaces.”

Where Knifebird was located at 2155 Central Avenue will now be home to an establishment to be called “No Comment.” — with a period.

Why that name? “We thought it was fun. Kind of sassy. We like fun stuff,” Gilliam says. “Knifebird was a wine bar. And we are going to keep that space a wine bar.”

“The changes will mostly be vibe based and cosmetic,” Oglesby says. 

“Fawn” will be the name of the restaurant in the space formerly occupied by The Public Bistro at 937 Cooper Street. Gilliam says they just liked the name.  “It sounded warm and cozy.”

“We thought it would fit the vibe of what we’re doing,” Oglesby adds. “We’re very vibe oriented.”

Fawn will be the pair’s first restaurant. “Mary and I are both bartenders, so the places we have opened in the past  have been very bar-driven businesses,” Gilliam says. “And this will be a very chef-driven business.”Asked when they will open, Gilliam says, “I would say first half of  2025.”

Oglesby says, “We are aiming for the first half of 2025, but all of that is alway up to licensing and all of that. So, a lot of that is out of our control. So, we just wait on when we’re told by the state that we can open.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Cameo Slated to Open in Early 2022 at The Citizen

It took three bartenders to come up with the idea of creating a place where food caters to the cocktails instead of the other way around.

Meet Cameo, a bar owned by veteran bartenders Paul Gilliam, 34, Mary Oglesby, 38, and McKenzie Nelson, 29, that’s slated to open in early 2022 in The Citizen apartments in Midtown.

“Chef driven/chef owned” is a popular business model, Oglesby says. “We want to turn that on its head as a bartender owned, cocktail-driven place, where food is excellent, but it’s there to highlight and support the cocktails as opposed to the inverse, where the cocktail is there to support chef-driven food.”

They take the food-is-king idea “and turn it around. You can come in this place where the focus is on cool cocktails, great wine, things like that. And also have exceptional food that is there to go with that.”

Their theme is “Fancy Drinks Party Time (FDPT),” Gilliam says. “We’re creating a space where you can enjoy the kinds of drinks you want.”

And, he adds, “What great time you think is great in this space.”

They want customers to have “well-plated, well-crafted drinks and snacks in an atmosphere that is not stuffy, that is fun and energetic. Just an all-around good time.”

You can get good drinks in a space “that is less fun.” But, Gilliam adds, “We don’t feel those two things are mutually exclusive. It is very easy to have both.”

Everyone has a favorite drink, Oglesby says. They want to make “the drink that’s going to make you the most happy ‘cause you’re the one designing it. We plan on having a vast menu of cocktails that we can make for people. From your very serious whisky drinker who wants to taste the nuances of their spirit to the person who wants a kitschy 12-ingredient tropical drink, to the person who wants to enjoy a cocktail with no alcohol in it. And everything in between.”

They currently are in the “research and development” stage in their search for a chef, Gilliam says.

“The same creative freedom we have, they will have as well,” Nelson says. “It will be more tapas, small-plate style, but I would say it’ll be pretty creative.”

All three owners have worked in various restaurants. “We all three bartended,” Oglesby says. “That’s how we all met and know each other.”

“We’ve all kind of met and grown through bartending,” Gilliam says. “We have all been creatively collaborating for years now. And it’s something we love and we’re really good at. And that we want to continue to do.”

“We’ve always talked about the bar that we would want to go to,” Nelson says. “That has all these type points as being someplace fun where I can get any kind of drink. And we kind of paused when Covid hit.”

But, she says, “We all have the same vision when it comes to the bar we want to hang out in.”

So, they got busy when things began to open back up. “We were going through all the things we need to make this possible. And it’s snowballed.”

Their broker found them their location at The Citizen, Gilliam says. “It’s a 1,400 square-foot shotgun space. It’s intimate. I would not say it’s small, but it’s just as we needed it to be. Nice, cozy, intimate. It’s a 50-seat space, 14 seats to the bar, 36 at a very long banquette.”

Explaining the name “Cameo,” Oglesby says, “We wanted to make use of this brick and mortar to highlight and collaborate with other people with the same passion in art, music, food.”

They want to showcase artists and people who cook with charity events or other functions. “Use our space to, hopefully, showcase and give a name to people who have the same passion as ours. And share that with the city.”

As for the interior colors, Gilliam says, “Opulent greens and dark moody crystal. A complete desecration of your grandma’s parlor. Taxidermy. Disco balls. Rustic glam.”

 “We are going to have something there for everyone,” Oglesby says. “This is going to be a very inclusive space where I think anybody will feel comfortable. As long as they’re there to have a good time.”

For more information go to cameomemphis.com. Instagram is @cameo_mem

Cameo is at 1835 Union Avenue, Suite Three, in The Citizen apartments.