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The city’s most exclusive private clubs remain a mystery to everyday Melburnians. In this series, The Age uncovers the secrets and politics unfolding behind closed doors and the moment of reckoning these institutions are facing.

7 stories
The Melbourne Club on Collins Street.

No phones, women or business talk: What it’s like inside Melbourne’s most prestigious club

Behind an imposing facade is the granddaddy of Melbourne’s private clubs – an exclusive and privileged all-male, old-world institution.

  • by Michael Bachelard
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Melbourne’s Savage Club.

The savage reckoning unfolding at Melbourne’s bohemian bolthole

Melbourne’s Savage Club has been a haven for bohemians, politicians and corporate titans for 130 years, but its conservative members face a battle for relevance.

  • by Cameron Houston
The Alexandra Club shares its premises with Prada.

The unlikely source of income for Melbourne’s most exclusive women’s club

Melbourne’s wealthiest women control who is allowed through the clubhouse’s gilded doors, where a seat at the table is seen as a chance to rub shoulders with women of influence.

  • by Alex Crowe
The Athenaeum Club in Collins Street.

A bloodless coup and secret lunch club: The men-only clubhouse where conservatives ate, drank and plotted

Inside this six-storey club, behind an unmarked and discreet entrance, political power players would meet with titans of industry, media barons, judges and police commissioners.

  • by Liam Mannix
The Australian CLub’s grand facade.

This has been an exclusive men-only club for 146 years. But tensions are emerging

As the Australian Club tussles between tradition and modernity, members were recently given a dressing-down for a simple act.

  • by Stephen Brook
The Lyceum CLub got the last laugh at its neighbour, the men-only Melbourne Club.

How a women’s club got the last laugh on exclusive men-only bolthole

Across a laneway, the women-only clubhouse was renovated to look down on an area that’s determined to keep them out.

  • by Cara Waters
Miss Pearls, secretary and manager of the Kelvin Club.

Miss Pearls had just shuttered Madame Brussels. Then a world behind closed doors beckoned

The smoke-cured laugh of Paula Scholes, aka Miss Pearls, can be heard day and night within the wood-panelled walls of the Kelvin Club.

  • by Chip Le Grand
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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/members-only-20241216-p5kyq1.html