Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Camp classics: Catch rare screenings of 'The Brenda and Glennda Show' on Saturday

Longtime East Village resident Glenn Belverio will be part of a screening and performance event this Saturday afternoon at Coney Island's Sideshow theater. 

The event features two rare screenings of Belverio's 1990s public-access program "The Brenda and Glennda Show," which blended drag, political action and camp humor in downtown NYC. 

The screenings include an early 1990 episode, "Takeover of the Empire State Building," featuring a guerrilla-style rooftop talk show staged by drag performers and ACT UP activists, as well as "Target Bush/Wigstock 1991," which documents the march on President George Bush's summer house in Kennebunkport, Maine, and Brenda and Glennda rallying for National Health Care at Wigstock in Union Square. 

Belverio will be interviewed onstage by author and New Yorker writer John Colapinto, followed by an audience Q&A and live performances by Brooklyn-based drag artists Nancy Nogood, Reina NoBuena and Oliver Herface. 

Find ticket info here.

Residents question city’s plan to shift shelter intake to the East Village

Above: Project Renewal, 8 E. 3rd St.

City officials and local residents packed a meeting last Tuesday (April 7) evening to discuss the planned closure of the Bellevue men's shelter and the relocation of intake services to the East Village.

As previously reported, the city — via an "emergency executive order" from Mayor Mamdani on March 5— said it will close the longtime Bellevue facility on 30th Street by the end of April, citing deterioration of the building. 

Beginning May 1, adult men seeking shelter would be directed to Project Renewal's facility at 8 E. Third St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery, while intake for adult families (without minor children) would move to 333 Bowery between Second Street and Third Street.
The proposal drew criticism for what several elected officials and residents described as a rushed and non-transparent process. 

Local City Councilmember Harvey Epstein questioned why the decision was presented as a done deal with little advance notice or community input. 

Assemblymember Grace Lee also spoke, raising concerns about the neighborhood impact beyond the East Village into her 65th District, the Lower East Side and Chinatown; the lack of advance notice; and the absence of a clear operational plan for how the intake site would function day to day.

A central theme throughout the evening was the distinction between an existing shelter and an intake facility. While residents said they were generally supportive of Project Renewal and familiar with the current shelter operations, several speakers emphasized that intake sites function differently — with a higher volume of people coming and going, often in crisis. 

Representatives from the Department of Homeless Services (DHS), including Commissioner Erin Dalton, said the site would have a limited number of beds and that people would be processed indoors rather than lining up outside. 

Still, many attendees expressed skepticism that activity would remain contained or limited to a steady flow. One official described arrivals as a "trickle" throughout the day — a characterization several neighbors challenged as unrealistic.

Several residents raised quality-of-life concerns, including potential increases in drug activity, theft, public urination and emergency vehicle traffic.

Others focused less on the use itself and more on how the city handled the rollout. Some opponents also circulated materials ahead of the meeting, raising additional concerns about zoning and safety — including whether a citywide intake operation is appropriate for a residential block and whether the change would trigger a "fair share" or environmental review.

That question came up during the meeting as well. DHS officials said a fair-share analysis was not required because a shelter already exists at the site. However, some attendees argued that converting it to an intake facility constitutes a different use. 

DHS officials said they would continue working with the NYPD and local stakeholders on a safety and operations plan, though details remain limited with the May 1 start date approaching.

A Mamdani administration official told the Post the East Village intake sites would be temporary until a permanent location is developed elsewhere, a process expected to take years.

Meanwhile, some Third Street residents say they are planning to file a lawsuit to block the relocation.
For now, the plan remains in place, with intake services set to shift to Third Street next month.

An EVG reader on Second Street attended the meeting and shared notes; other residents also contributed insights.

Signage alert: Nuts Factory on 3rd Avenue

We're officially on nuts watch on the NW corner of Third Avenue and Nnth Street. 

Signage arrived yesterday for Nuts Factory, aka, "your nuts and candies neighborhood shop." (Photo below by Steven.)
This will be the 11th NYC outpost for the brand, with locations in New Jersey and Massachusetts as well.

Vivi Bubble Tea closed here early last fall, after its 10-year lease expired.

Closures: Cosmic Cat Cafe on 2nd Street

Photos by Stacie Joy 

A for-rent sign hangs in the window at 170 E. Second St. between Avenue A and Avenue B... bringing an official end to the Cosmic Cat Cafe here. 

On Feb. 9, two notices appeared on the front door: a closure notice from the Department of Health and a letter from the landlord.
According to the landlord, due to the "extreme weather," a cold-water pipe broke in the building "and created a leak that found its way into the cafe." 

Meanwhile, the DOH apparently visited that day, which seems odd if the place was closed... they handed out 71 violation points, per public records, including: 
• Food Protection Certificate (FPC) not held by manager or supervisor of food operations. 
• Food preparation area, food storage area, or other area used by employees or patrons, contaminated by sewage or liquid waste.
• No hand washing facility in or adjacent to toilet room or within 25 feet of a food preparation, food service or ware washing area. Hand-washing facility not accessible, obstructed, or used for non-hand-washing purposes. No hot and cold running water or water at inadequate pressure. No soap or acceptable hand-drying device. 
And the cafe never reopened. There hasn't been any notice about a closure — temporary or permanent — on the cafe's Instagram account

A first-time cat owner opened the space in September 2022.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Monday's parting shot

Early this evening on Fifth Street and Avenue B, as captured by Kerry McKay.

Phil Hartman on 'No Picnic' and capturing a vanishing East Village in the 1980s

Photos and interview by Stacie Joy

A restored slice of pre-gentrification East Village life is returning to the big screen this month. 

Phil Hartman's "No Picnic" — a black-and-white, downtown-set neo-noir from 1986 — runs in a new 4K restoration for a week at the Film Forum starting on Friday. 

Hartman wrote the script and directed; Doris Kornish produced; and Wim Wenders' company, Grey City, served as executive producers. 

The film premiered at the 1986 Sundance Film Festival, where Peter Hutton won the Best Cinematography award. 

"No Picnic" follows down-and-out jukebox operator Macabee Cohn (David Brisbin), who drifts through tenements, dive bars and derelict East Village streets in search of a mysterious woman in a striped dress. 

The cast also includes Myoshin, Anne D'Agnillo and Luis Guzmán, with appearances by Steve Buscemi, Richard Hell and other downtown fixtures. 

The film screened at Anthology Film Archives in 1990 but was largely unseen until a new restoration debuted earlier this year at MoMA's To Save and Project festival. 

We caught up with Hartman, the co-founder of the Two Boots Pizza empire, to talk about the film, the era it captured, and what it's like to see it resurface nearly 40 years later.
You've said you were trying to capture places that were "vanishing before your eyes." Did you have a sense in 1985 of just how much would disappear? 

Yes! Some of my fave places were already in danger of extinction, like the Orchidia, Hy and Lil's, Kiev Restaurant; plus El Bohio [CHARAS] — our home base — was already feeling threatened. New "hot spots" were starting to appear, but we always loved the places that were not hot, like Pete's Bar on East 5th, which no one but a few cops went to. 

And I still mourn the loss of the hoop courts in the NW corner of Tompkins Square Park, where once upon a time, my friends and I whupped [Jim] Jarmusch, [Richard] Edson and [John] Lurie in 3-on-3!
David Brisbin in "No Picnic"

Were you following any particular indie formula when you set out to make it? 

The standard formula for a low-budget indie is to pick an insular location, like a house ("Return of the Secaucus 7") or a bar ("Last Night at the Alamo"), and invite a group of actor friends to hang out for a few long weekends. 

But "No Picnic" has 100-plus characters and 100-plus locations, because we didn't want to miss anyone or anything. That required not just an amazing cast and crew, but the buy-in of the community, who not only tolerated us running around with our 16mm camera but also actively participated, like the kids with the sparklers, the lady with her chihuahua, and the amazing meringue band at the street fair. 

We were truly blessed to capture a time and place that deserve to be celebrated, not forgotten. 

When you watch "No Picnic" now, what details of the neighborhood jump out most, the ones people today might not even notice? 

Well, the "bones" of the neighborhood are intact — the five-story tenements with gorgeous cornices and window pediments so intricate you can't believe they were put on poor people's houses. I've also been noticing how important fire escapes are in "No Picnic" — reflecting how important they've always been in the East Village: a place to hang out when it's hot, to go visit your neighbors, to decorate with rocking horses or houseplants, and to hang a banner, whether it's "rent strike," "speculators beware!" or "Black Lives Matter!"

There's clearly a strong interest in the film — the MoMA screening sold out this past January. Why do you think this moment in the neighborhood is resonating today? 

I think the bad old days of the East Village represent a time of authenticity and affordability, but let's not forget it was also dangerous and dirty, and you had to stop your toddler from picking up hypodermic needles in the park. 

However, the creative energy was amazing — especially the music: seven or eight times in "No Picnic" characters break into song ... melodies seemed to be in the air back then!

Does the film feel like a time capsule to you, or something more immediate? 

Well, some of the most colorful folks in the film are gone — Princess Pamela, Rafik, Santa Claus, Pete Rose; and some of the most iconic places are, too — Adam Purple's garden, St. Marks Cinema, CHARAS, Shea Stadium, etc. — all thankfully immortalized. 

But I still love the East Village, no matter how much it's changed, because giants walked these streets: [Allen] Ginsberg, [Carolee] Schneemann, [Ed] Sanders, [Jonas] Mekas, Lady Bunny, Hettie Jones ... and their spirit forever fills the air for me! 

Check out the trailer below...

 

On tonight’s CB3-SLA docket: Recente, Wine Art Laboratory and more

Here are a few items of interest on tonight's CB3-SLA committee docket... 

New Liquor License Applications 

• Recente (LW Restaurant Projects LLC), 182 2nd Ave (op) (restaurant) 

A restaurant called Recente, featuring an "upscale Italian menu," is seeking a full on-premises liquor license for 182 Second Ave. between 11th Street and 12th Street. 

The operators are hospitality vets Willem Hock and Lukas Canan. Hock previously served as general manager at Dante NYC (2017-2021) and later as director of guest relations for Golden Age Hospitality, overseeing venues including The Nines, Bar Bianchi and Le Dive. Canan worked as a bartender at Dante NYC (2017-19), was beverage director at Sovereign Remedies in North Carolina, and later bar manager at the Freehand Hotel in Manhattan. 

Recente would replace the 22-year-old tenant, Cacio e Pepe. 
Photo by Stacie Joy 

• Wine Art Laboratory Inc, 40 Ave B (op) (bar/tavern) 

We mentioned this one a few weeks ago... Wine Art Laboratory is in the works for 40 Avenue B between Third and Fourth Streets. 

Per the questionnaire on file with CB3, this will be a Georgian-style restaurant with a wine bar... with daily hours of noon to 2 a.m. 

Residents may still have some lingering concerns from previous tenants. El Carnaval, a Panamanian restaurant and bar, drew noise complaints and was accused of serving liquor without a license in the summer of 2021. Dora's Restaurant followed, facing similar issues — along with DJs playing to largely empty rooms.
Photo by Stacie Joy 

• B Scene (B Scene Corp), 50 Ave B (op) (bar/tavern) 

Abby Ehmann, who also owns two other Avenue B establishments, Lucky Bar and the sober Hekate Café & Elixir Lounge, is back with an application for 50 Avenue B between Third Street and Fourth Street.

After a lengthy discussion during last month's SLA committee meeting, Ehmann withdrew her application for the two-level space. 

This month, she has dropped the "nightclub" ask for a bar/tavern license. You can read the questionnaire here. And our Q&A with Ehmann here.
• Forsythia NYC (JDS Restaurant 2 LLC), 32 E 1st St (op) (restaurant) 

The owners of Forsythia on Stanton Street plan to open an events space in a storefront within the condoplex at the NE corner of Second Avenue and First Street. 

The space will be closed to the public, available to host events as well as weekly cooking classes. 

Forsythia, which serves Roman-inspired pastas from chefs Jacob Siwak and Mark Coleman, opened in 2020 between the Bowery and Chrystie. 

Questionnaire here.
Photo by Stacie Joy

• SKWR (Stuffed Ice Cream LLC), 139 1st Ave (wb) (restaurant) 

SKWR, the quick-serve space selling a variety of skewers, recently opened at 139 First Ave. between St. Mark's Place and Ninth Street. 

They are looking to add a beer and wine service for the 16-seat establishment. 

Questionnaire here.

• Sous Vide Panda LLC, 218 E 10th St (op) (restaurant) 

Kuro Neko is the proposed new Japanese restaurant for 218 E. 10th St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue — the former Rai Rai Ken space. 

According to the questionnaire, the space will include eight tables with 16 seats, a counter/bar with five seats, and a private dining area for six to eight guests. Background recorded music is planned, with no outdoor seating. Proposed hours are 11 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Wednesday, and 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Thursday through Saturday. 

Rai Rai Ken closed in December 2024 after 24 years in service. 

------

CB3's SLA meeting is tonight at 6:30. The Zoom link is here. This is a hybrid meeting, and limited public seating is available. The first 15 people who show up at the Community Board 3 Office, 59 E. Fourth St., between Second Avenue and the Bowery, will be accommodated.

Signage alert: Fifth Square on 5th Street

The former Noona's Ice Cream & Bakeshop at 304 E. Fifth St. won't stay vacant long. 

Signage is up now for Fifth Square, which will serve coffee and waffles.
You can follow the build-out on Instagram with the husband-and-wife team behind the venture. 

Noona's closed here at the end of March after 16 months. Owner Hannah Bae plans to reboot her ice cream business.

Signage alert: House of Shawarma on 2nd Avenue

Photo by Steven

House of Shawarma is the next tenant at 153 Second Ave. between Ninth Street and 10th Street. 

One EVG reader at first thought the new name is Nar... the Turkish word for pomegranate, symbolizing something rare and precious, per the Internet. 

If you're on Instagram, you can follow House of Shawarma here

The previous business at No. 153, 16 Handles, closed in January after 15 years of FroYo service. A new outpost is expected to open a few blocks south on Second Avenue.

Sanwits replacing Rowdy Rooster on 1st Avenue

Photo by William Klayer 

Signage arrived on March 31 for Sanwits at 149 First Ave., between Ninth Street and 10th Street. 

This is being billed as a Filipino sandwich shop. (Photo below by EVG reader Wes.)
The previous tenant, Rowdy Rooster, had been "temporarily closed" here since the fall, with a note on the door promising that "new things are coming." 

That appears to be Sanwits.

The Rowdy Rooster signage disappeared in January (photo by Steven).
The new venture looks to be from the Unapologetic Foods team — the same group behind Rowdy Rooster. (Unapologetic Foods is currently the only account following Sanwits' placeholder Instagram.) 

We've reached out to an Unapologetic Foods rep for more details. 

Rowdy Rooster, which offers spicy Indian fried chicken, opened in February 2022. It proved popular enough to try an outpost near Penn Station in 2023.

Signage alert: Conall's Public House on 1st Avenue

Photo by Stacie Joy

The lettered Conall's Public House signage went up on Friday at 51 First Ave. between Third Street and Fourth Street. 

As we mentioned on March 31, Conall's — per its website — "serves hearty, made-from-scratch Irish dishes, hosts lively nights of live music, and pours the finest drinks inspired by the Emerald Isle." 

Expected to open SOON. Follow Conall's on Instagram for updates.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Sunday's parting shot

By Stacie Joy 

Today in trying to go viral: eating a 10-pound Costco chocolate Easter bunny in Tompkins Square Park... 

Since Easter was last week, maybe they got a deal on the chocolate Easter bunny?

Sunday's parting headshots

Photo by Steven 

As seen on Ninth Street between A and First today...

Wall prep on 6th and C

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Work continues on the SW corner of Avenue C and Sixth Street, where the wall is being prepped for a new mural by Thrive Collective's Marissa Molina — described as a "celebration of the neighborhood," per Jonathan Neville (below) of First Street Green Art Park.
He was joined by NYC-based artist OuterSource...
The wall previously featured the long-running "Alphabet City" mural, which lasted nearly 11 years before falling into disrepair and being relentlessly tagged. It was painted over last summer.
This one-story windowless structure — as mysterious as it is nondescript — is said to be used now by Astound Broadband, an American telecommunications holding company.

Noted

An EVG reader shared this photo from 6:30 this morning... as seen on the corner of Clinton and Houston — a green cab atop a safety bollard... did the driver confuse the accelerator with the brake? 

There weren't any reports of injuries.

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a walk along Cooper Union)...
Never miss an EVG post with the weekly EVG newsletter. Free right here. 

• Veselka will once again be open around the clock on Fridays and Saturdays (April 9) 

• A look at Cô Lạc, now open at 234 E. Fourth St. (April 9) 

• It's wisteria time on Stuyvesant Street (April 7) 

• Paulie Gee's East Village Slice Shop update: ovens arriving, May opening eyed (April 6) 

• One of the Bowery's most unique storefronts moves to a less-unique space (April 7) 

• 3 music-related books this spring for East Village readers (April 8) 

• A good Friday with Surfbort (April 5) 

• Spring progress in Tompkins (April 10) 

• Xi'an Famous Foods returning to the heart of the East Village (April 6) 

• The fruit vendor of 1st Avenue (and 6th Street) is back (April 8) 

• Signs of the times (and more signs) at 9 Bleecker (April 9) 

• At the opening night of 'Arturo Vega: the merch master' (April 11) 

• Noona’s Ice Cream & Bakeshop has closed on 5th Street (April 8) 

• Proletariat is closing for now on 7th Street (April 7)

• A Sunday shutter for Dim Sum Palace on 2nd Avenue (April 7)
 
• A bad sign at Chef Tan (April 7) 

• Signage alert: Ngon Vietnamese Kitchen NYC on 2nd Avenue (April 8) 

• Openings: Thum Wellness and Spa on 14th Street (April 6) 

• Report: What's next for the office building at 1 St. Mark's Place? (April 5) 

• Another great song from Genre is Death (April 10

And thank you to Pat Arnow for this photo — three ospreys perched above their nest across the river from East River Park's amphitheater (usually it's just one or two).

Participatory Budgeting vote underway in Council District 2

Participatory Budgeting vote week is underway. 

Through April 19, New Yorkers age 11 and up can vote — online or in person — on how city funding will be spent on local projects via City Councilmember Harvey Epstein's office. 

In Council District 2, residents can vote on up to three of eight proposals. Projects focus on nonprofit organizations providing arts, culture, accessibility and ecology-focused programming. 

Voting is available online at vote.pbnyc.org, at poll sites across the district, and at the temporary district office at 254 E. Fourth St. between Avenue B and Avenue C on weekdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Participating organizations on the ballot feature Pioneers Go East Collective, NYC H2O, Fourth Arts Block (FABnyc), Frigid NYC, Latinas on the Verge of Excellence, Chickenshed NYC, EVLovesNYC and NYC Belongs.

A view to a kill

EVG reader Bettina shared the above photo from last Sunday... a look to the north from the Williamsburg Bridge. 

In view is East River Park, currently getting gutted in what looks like a construction company parking lot. No grass. No trees. No life.

The latest in the Phase 2 construction, which began last September, required the closure of the northern section of East River Park — basically everything above Houston Street to 15th Street, including the three East Village access points over the FDR, track and field area, and the esplanade. 

The timeline for completing this northern section of East River Park was pushed back by a year to the end of 2027, as we first reported here

The "phased work operations" in East River Park started in November 2021 as part of a billion-plus-dollar East Side Coastal Resiliency project to elevate large sections of the Park by 8 to 10 feet above sea level, aiming to protect the neighborhood from future storm surges. 

I was trying to find a pre-construction photo to compare the views... instead, here's a look from 1937 at what would be the FDR Drive and East River Park... before the arrival of the FDR (final section from 14th to 42nd completed in 1966) and Park (opened 1939).
We lost many good slaughterhouses.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Saturday's parting shots

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Spring Saturday street scenes from Avenue B (above) and Seventh Street...
... and Santo over on Ninth Street...

Streeeeeeet fair!

Happening now, today (Saturday) on Second Avenue from 14th Street south to Cape May County

And it's better than the usual beard oil, perfume ("$30 and up") and Jimi Hendrix tapestry banners (though all that is available).