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Inside Room for Milly, a new high-design cocktail bar by the owners of Queen's Eleven and Blue Sparrow Coffee.
Provided by Room for Milly
Inside Room for Milly, a new high-design cocktail bar by the owners of Queen’s Eleven and Blue Sparrow Coffee.
Restaurant reporter Josie Sexton.The Know is The Denver Post's new entertainment site.
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Until recently in Denver, a bar or restaurant was just that — a place to grab a bite, somewhere to have a drink, a space for diners and drinkers to pile in and hopefully enjoy a little something.

For me, that began to change about a year ago.

With the 2018 opening of Beckon, a dinnertime chef’s table thatap more experience than meal, customers don’t so much start a conversation when sitting down to eat as they do become part of one already running. The story is built in — to the service, the menu and the room around them.

Last week, while at an opening party for Room for Milly, a new cocktail bar and small plates destination on Platte Street, I experienced the same feelings that Beckon,Somebody People and few other spotshave managed to elicit.

Like live music and theater shows before them, restaurants and bars are starting to become a performance in and of themselves. I’m not talking about a theme; the 20th Century can keep that trend. No, the change thatap happening now is more akin to artwork.

Here’s the first clue at Room for Milly: The newbar is based on a fictional character who hailed from the East Coast and traveled the globe100 years ago. (Whatap your backstory, Red Lobster?)

With Milly’s eclectic (but, letap not forget, privileged) persona and travels as inspiration, Room for Milly aspires to some very specific world-building inside its 30-seat quarters.

From start to finish — from the velvet-curtained entryway to the powder room-style toilets — everything of Milly’s evokes a fully reimagined, jazz-age New York setting.

Drinkers can view , photos and sculptures along the walls. You can perch with your Le Hotel Bristol collins at the brass bar rail, or sit with a petite beef Wellington and Waldorf salad in the salon area.

With design led by Fiona Arnold’s team at , Room for Milly never shies away from its feminine touches. One section of the drink menu is dedicated to Milly’s conquests; put another way, “where romance was a part of the journey.” See cocktails named after men: Ishan, My Dearest Pike and Mururi.

On that note, if I have one early complaint about Milly, itap that she can boast progressively about her sexual exploits while also leaning in a little too hard to her imperialist upbringing.

A beautiful but head-tilting mural behind the bar recalls period views of the Orient, while certain romantic but dated menu language employs phrases like “…exploration of foreign lands and curiosities.”

Because, along with restaurants and bars becoming experiential destinations, another change we’ve seen in them, thankfully, is the idea that international is no longer foreign — and that curious can be, for many, just the new normal.

If you go: 1615 Platte St., at the base of the Circa Building, 720-630-7020, 3 p.m.-midnight Sunday through Thursday and until “later” Friday and Saturday,

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