Showing posts with label Sweet Smell of Success. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweet Smell of Success. Show all posts
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Tony Curtis, 85
Tony Curtis, born Bernard Schwartz in the Bronx, died just after midnight. Read the Times obit here.
Curtis, as press agent Sidney Falco in EV Grieve favorite "Sweet Smell of Success," at Elpine Drinks at 46th Street and Seventh Avenue. (Read more on this at Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
[Top photo via]
Friday, September 12, 2008
Sweetness
Hunter-Gatherer takes a look at "21" via one of my all-time favorites, Sweet Smell of Success.
As he notes:
This movie is a must see for film buffs (especially NYC ones) but what struck me, while reviewing the film for the first time in a decade, is the ever-so-timely portrayal of media corruption.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
A sleek new bar at "21"
Change at the "21" Club! As the City Room reports this afternoon:
There are few entries in the annals of New York alcoholism to rival the bar at the “21” Club in Midtown Manhattan. The broad, mahogany bar stood since the 1940s in the center of the first floor. Drinks were had there by the likes of Humphrey Bogart and Ernest Hemingway.
With its celebrity patrons and speakeasy heritage, it was the subject of paintings by artists like Leroy Neiman and immortalized in films, notably “The Sweet Smell of Success.”
But now in the celebrated dining room of “21,” which reopened this month at “21” West 52nd Street after renovation, there is only the sweet smell of shellac, given off by — egads — a sleek new bar, freshly varnished.
It resembles the old bar, down to the brass foot rail, but there are differences. It is much narrower (about half as wide as the four-foot-wide old one), and shorter (by about 12 feet), leaving more space in the dining room for tables. And there are no spittoons.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)