Robert Whiting's Japan

Robert Whiting's Japan

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Robert Whiting's Japan
Robert Whiting's Japan
A vivacious Australian named Maggie once shook up Tokyo's club scene

A vivacious Australian named Maggie once shook up Tokyo's club scene

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Robert Whiting
Jun 08, 2025
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Robert Whiting's Japan
Robert Whiting's Japan
A vivacious Australian named Maggie once shook up Tokyo's club scene
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(First published on April 8, 2022)

Second in a five-part series

TOKYO — There were other ways for foreign women to make in the mizu shobaibesides hostessing, as an ebullient, auburn-haired Australian known as Maggie ably demonstrated. Maggie had come to Japan in the late 1970s at a very young age after her boyfriend, a Melbourne underworld figure, was sent to prison. It wasn't long before she took Roppongi by storm and wrote her own colorful chapter in the history of the quarter.

Although Maggie not surprisingly lacked the subtlety of temperament required to be a good Ginza hostess — a job she initially tried her hand at — she displayed great networking skills long before the term became popular and had a knack for making friends across a broad spectrum of society, from the underworld to the diplomatic community. She also knew how to have fun, holding loud rollicking parties that people talked about for weeks afterward. Those talents landed her a job as a greeting hostess and floor manager of "Chaps" — a country and western bar that opened up in Roppongi on the edge of its famous cemetery in 1982.

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