The Purple Room is not merely a restaurant that references the past — it inhabits it with full conviction. Tucked inside the Club Trinidad Resort on East Palm Canyon Drive, this supper club has been in continuous operation since 1960, when Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, and the constellation of stars that defined the Rat Pack era made Palm Springs their playground. In those years, the Purple Room was the venue — the place where the performance continued after the lights went down, where the barrier between performer and audience dissolved over bourbon and steak, and where the desert night felt like it might never end.
Under Michael Holmes' stewardship, the room has been lovingly maintained rather than self-consciously preserved. The mid-century interior retains its original drama — curved banquettes, intimate lighting, a stage that frames the room rather than dominating it. Jazz entertainers perform Tuesday through Thursday with no cover, filling the room with the sound that Palm Springs was built around. On Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings, nationally-known entertainers take the stage for ticketed dinner-and-show events that sell out weeks in advance during peak season.
The menu is American supper club classicism executed with genuine care: filet mignon cooked to order, fresh seafood, classic sides, and a cocktail program that honours the era's spirit without descending into irony. The martinis are stiff and perfect. The service is warm and appropriately theatrical, trained to pace an evening around the performance as much as the food. TripAdvisor has ranked the Purple Room #1 in Palm Springs, and OpenTable placed it among the top 100 restaurants in the country — recognitions that reflect the room's unique ability to deliver an experience unavailable anywhere else in the desert.
What the Purple Room offers that no other Palm Springs restaurant can replicate is history in three dimensions. You are not eating in a space that evokes another era — you are eating in the exact room where that era happened. The stories the walls contain are not mythology. They are biography.