Whenever we start reading about old-school joints such as Frankie and Johnnie's facing the wrecking ball, it makes us appreciate the city's remaining institutions even more. Places such as the Hotel Edison and its diner, Cafe Edison (you know, the Polish Tea Room) that Neil Simon and other Broadway types would frequent for its blintzes, borscht and goulash. The hotel, on West 47th Street next to the W smack in the middle of Times Square, was built in 1931, as its Web site trumpets, "in the same grand Art Deco style as Radio City Music Hall." Anecdotes abound about the Edison, like whether the scene in which Luca Brasi gets rubbed out in The Godfather was filmed here...or the Hotel St. George in Brooklyn Heights. Whatever. No matter how dusty around the corners this place is, it remains a treasure from the past.
I have a few more photos on my Flickr page.
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query edison cafe. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query edison cafe. Sort by date Show all posts
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Friday, December 26, 2014
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition
[Photo earlier this week on East 2nd Street by Bill Buchen]
A crime of passion from the 19th century that played out on East 13th Street and Avenue A (Ephemeral New York)
More details about DF Mavens, opening today on Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place (DNAinfo)
The Manhattan Borough President's Office now accepting applications for Community Board membership (DNAinfo)
Still time to see Art & Ephemera from 98 Bowery, 1969-89 (The Lodge Gallery)
Update on the new Dirt Candy on Allen Street (Eater)
The end of Cafe Edison (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Please do not push your sofa out a 6th-floor window (BoweryBoogie)
… Animals, the Wayland's sandwich shop on Avenue C and East Ninth Street, has started local delivery — Monday-Friday from Noon-6 p.m.
… and noted…
overheard in an #eastvillage cafe, "and by tinkerbell i mean cocaine."
— jdx (@jdx) December 24, 2014
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Ciao for Now closing West Village location
[Image of East 12th Street location via Facebook]
Amy Miceli, who has operated Ciao for Now in the East Village the past 14 years with her husband Kevin and three kids, passed along news that they are closing their West Village branch tomorrow.
The cafe at 523 E. 12th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B will continue on, she said.
"It is brutal running a business in the city," she said. "I love it and hate it every day."
Here's part of the closure notice for the space on West 10th Street between Sixth Avenue and Greenwich Avenue:
We would like to say thank you to all of the wonderful customers we have had over the past seven years. We have enjoyed serving you.
Kevin and I would like to let everyone know that we are NOT closing due to a huge rent increase from a greedy landlord. We are closing so that we can focus our energy on our family and our main location at 523 East 12th Street. In fact we have had a very reasonable landlord that has treated us with respect and patience throughout our seven years and many challenges.
Ciao moved into this beautiful spot in June of 2008. We managed to survive a Con Edison explosion that closed us down for three months in 2009, Hurricane Sandy that closed us down for a week, but destroyed our entire inventory at our main location in 2011. Those were some really tough times that took a lot of our resources and patience.
It has been the water main repair of 2014/2015 that has really put a strain on our business and ultimately caused us to say no more. We wish this was not the case. We love our west location and will miss it very much.
Friday, November 28, 2014
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition
[Photo by James and Karla Murray Photography]
Charges filed in fatal hit-and-run on the Bowery (BoweryBoogie)
Leadership changes at Community Board 3 (The Lo-Down)
Remembering Will Connell, Jr., "downtown’s unsung hero of Free Jazz" (All About Jazz)
East Village-based photographer Katrina del Mar is crowdfunding for her experimental documentary webseries (Kickstarter)
Reverend Billy And The Stop Shopping Gospel Choir held an Organic Thanksgiving on the front lawn of the Monsanto World Headquarters yesterday afternoon and rallied last night in Ferguson (Photos and videos are on the the Rev. Billy Facebook page)
100 Montaditos closing 2 months after opening on Ludlow Street (DNAinfo)
While the d.b.a. on First Avenue will remain open with new ownership, the Brooklyn location closes Sunday (Gothamist)
Thanksgiving with friends in Tompkins Square Park (Gog in NYC)
A visit to the Cafe Edison (Scouting NY)
A Hooters takes over the former Peep World on 33rd Street (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Part of Edith Wharton's childhood home on 23rd Street now features a Starbucks (Ephemeral New York)
Lorne Greene and Betty White hosted the 1964 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade (Bowery Boys)
This season's Christmas sweater from the Descendents (Dangerous Minds)
Friday, November 14, 2014
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition
[A Giuseppi Logan photo shoot in Tompkins Square Park the other day via Derek Berg]
Remembering The East Village Eye (Hyperallergic)
There's a newly restored version of this William Burroughs documentary playing through Nov. 19 (Anthology Film Archives)
The radical history of 110 Second Ave. (Ephemeral New York)
Listen to the demo recordings from The Ramones' debut album (Boing Boing)
Check out the new street photography blog by EV resident Adrianna Grezak (On Second Avenue)
RIP Big Bank Hank (Daily News)
Drunken driver wipes out Cemusa stand on Delancey (BoweryBoogie)
A visit to Makari on Third Avenue (Off the Grid)
Tenants who are fighting Steve Croman (The Villager)
Academy Records' Cory Felerman finds a rare Yoko Ono 45 good for $1,703.99 on First Avenue (The Village Voice)
Christo hanging out in Tompkins Square Park (Gog in NYC)
Some more Pussy Galore detective work (Flaming Pablum)
Celebrities visit Miss Lily's 7A (Page Six)
Appreciating Cafe Edison's interior (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Rethinking traffic on Canal (The Lo-Down)
Iggy Pop TV interview from a Cleveland TV station circa 1979 (Dangerous Minds)
...and if you need plans tonight that include gambling for a good cause (a fund-raiser for The Neighborhood School on East Third Street), then you in luck... tickets are available at the door...
Friday, November 7, 2014
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition
[Photo of the Williamsburg Bridge by Bobby Williams]
Victim of East 7th Street burglary discusses the incident (CBS 2)
More about "LES is More: Stories of Growing Up on the Lower East Side" happening tonight (DNAinfo)
Just a few more days to see the work of Richard Hambleton at Dorian Grey Gallery on East 9th Street (Dorian Grey)
At last, a hawk update from Tompkins Square Park (Gog in NYC)
Katz's unleashes the "Roast Beast Sandwich" (The Lo-Down)
New FDR overpass at East Houston Street (BoweryBoogie)
Tenement history at 342 E. 11th St. (Off the Grid)
Stories of drastic evolution in NYC neighborhoods includes short essays from Jeremiah Moss and EVG, among many others (Curbed)
Speaking of which: St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral School will go condo (Daily News)
The restaurant reviewer at The New York Times likes Tuome on East 5th Street (The New York Times)
Save Cafe Edison! (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Patti Smith and Jim Carroll at the gate (Flaming Pablum)
Why not?! Photos of a 12-year-old Christopher Walken dressed as a clown (Dangerous Minds)
And tomorrow night ... This local arts performance series is re-igniting again: The Spotlight Speakeasy at the Sanctuary on East Sixth Street from 9-11:30 p.m.
Artists performing:
YOKKO [Butoh dance]
TAMAR [Western Swing/Jazz]
VARYAMUSIC [Indie Rock]
BROOKLYN NOMADS [Arab Folk]
And FINALLY … an answer to a question that has been nagging at us over at 51 Astor Place…
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