Sunday, November 12, 2017
Week in Grieview
[Photo yesterday on 3rd Avenue by Derek Berg]
Stories posted on EVG this past week included...
The end is nearing for the Sunshine Cinema (Friday)
Remembering Kate Millett (Friday)
Someone vandalized the entrance to the Chinese Hawaiian Kenpo Academy on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday)
Arrest made in Avenue D murder (Thursday)
Papaya King closes on St. Mark's Place ahead of new development (Monday)
The Continental says it will close late next summer (Tuesday)
The latest I Am a Rent-Stabilized Tenant (Friday)
Liberty Toye now lighting up Avenue B (Tuesday)
The Peter Stuyvesant-PO-replacing residential building tops out on 14th Street (Tuesday)
City Kids bringing the East Village Playhouse to long-empty storefront on 6th Street (Tuesday)
PS 122 returns to the East Village in January (Wednesday)
Judge dismisses Raphael Toledano suit over 97 2nd Ave. (Wednesday)
Landlord accused of tenant harassment in Chelsea new owner of 7th Street building (Thursday)
Old Monk offering a free meal this Thanksgiving (Friday)
Out and About with Margie Segal (Wednesday)
Meet Fresh bringing teas and taro balls to Cooper Square (Thursday)
Report: Part of a man's leg discovered along the East River (Thursday)
Wall 88 looks closed on 2nd Avenue (Monday)
[7th Street streetscene via Derek Berg]
There's a proposed addition for the recently landmarked 827-831 Broadway (Wednesday)
A quick look at the incoming Joe and Pat's (Monday)
The Good Santa-Bad Santa events taking place on Dec. 9 (Thursday)
The AltSchool's East Village location is closing (Monday)
Stuy Town to catch some major solar rays (Thursday)
Wise Men closes on the Bowery (Monday)
The Ainsworth neon arrives on 3rd Avenue (Monday)
... and in 14th Street salon/spa news from the past week... EVG 14th Street spa/salon correspondent Pinch notes that Hair Trendz between First Avenue and Second Avenue has closed ...
... with signage stating that they are opening across the street in the Perfect Glow space...
...and one block to the west, Spaology has given way to Morning Ritual...
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That First Breath of Air
That First Breath of Air
It is so unexpected when it comes,
That nights sleep once so familiar,
Deep and long, followed by another,
Dreams less torrid, if at all.
Waking refreshed, ready to saunter,
Through the crisp air of Fall.
•
peter radley
A haven for skateboarders in Tompkins Square Park
A post shared by Danny Weiss (@danielericweiss) on
Photographer Danny Weiss and writer Theodore Barrow team up for a photo essay in The New York Times today on the teen skateboarders who hang out on the baseball fields (the T.F.) in Tompkins Square Park.
An excerpt:
A lot has changed over 15 years. Skateboarding, like the neighborhood, has grown up and acquired a marketable sheen. It is difficult not to see in these kids, who now dress like the ones in the movie “Kids,” my contemporaries in the mid-’90s.
Who knows how long the park will be a haven for them, or what they will become? Small, seemingly insubstantial butterfly-wing youthful decisions can have life-changing consequences. Who knows how long skaters will be allowed to hang out at the T.F., considering the skyrocketing property values of real estate in the East Village?
Find the photos and essay here.
Sunday morning freebies
Spotted on Second Avenue on the steps of the former Church of the Nativity between Third Street and Second Street... hurry, because I'm going back as soon as I find a VCR.
Saturday, November 11, 2017
Noted
Friday, November 10, 2017
At the Scream Helplessly at the Sky event in Washington Square Park
Photos and text D. Task Efram
On Wednesday evening at Washington Square Park's new Ai Weiwei "Good Fences Make Good Neighbors" sculpture, many RefuseFascism.org resistors joined in the Scream Helplessly at the Sky event (one of many taking place nationwide), in dishonor of the one-year anniversary of the president and administration.
There was an air of satisfaction as nearly 150 people chanted, danced and screamed upward in a primal scream, hoping to alleviate the year's worth of destructive administration actions, media and science censorship, predatory denial and encouragement. Many found great relief in joining with their fellow humans in a primal action as well as to celebrate some long-awaited positive resistance voting from Tuesday's elections.
There were approximately 10 disruptors who were pleased to give support to the current administration as well as throw shade on the RefuseFascism ralliers. Many actively disrupted and screamed at peaceful participants; anxiously sharing their facetious claims to any camera or microphone pointed in their general direction.
King Trump (played by the ubiquitous puppeteer/activist Elliot Crown) made an appearance. Dressed in a tattered suit, The King seemed to be in no condition to stand and defend himself.
Everything under the 'Son'
If you have 9:10 to spare... Brian Eno teamed up with Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine on an expansive soundscape for Adult Swim Singles titled "Only Once Away My Son."
I Am a Rent-Stabilized Tenant
East Village resident Susan Schiffman has been photographing the apartments of rent-stabilized tenants living in the East Village for her Instagram account, I Am a Rent Stabilized Tenant. She will share some of the photos here for this ongoing EVG feature.
Photos and text by Susan Schiffman
Tenant: Raquel S., since 1983
When my parents came for the first visit, before I did all the renovations here, when the apartment still looked like hell, my father sat on the futon on the floor with tears streaming down his face and he said, You moved to America to live like a Bedouin?
When I picked them up at the airport I had to tell them that I had a bathtub in the kitchen. So I said, In America you can make coffee and take a shower at the same time. That is basically my story.
Why did you move to NYC?
I didn’t know the East Village existed. I came from a kibbutz in Israel. I just felt suffocated both in the kibbutz and in Israel. I used to be a dancer and I wanted to study acting and mime, and more dance.
I did do theater here. Mostly in the EV. I acted, directed and produced. I even had a theater for 5 minutes. On Ninth Street in 1986. The New York Theater Asylum with a partner Tri Garrity.
Immediately when I arrived to New York, the East Village became my place. It was an instant attraction. Why? Maybe because I was a bit marginal? And most everyone else seemed a bit marginal. I loved all the colorful people here.
I met my husband about a year and a half after I got here. We were married for 36 years till his death, last year. My beautiful gay husband.
I got the apartment through a friend. One day the landlord knocked on my door and asked me if I wanted the lease. First I thought it was a trick, but then I realized he was serious. He always treated me nicely. Though the building suffered — years and years without heat.
I love the East Village — the community, it is still a lovely community, and it was affordable.
What do you love about your apartment?
Well, at the end of the day, my apartment is my temple. I made it so. Before the renovations, you have no clue what it looked like. It was disgusting. And the roaches. The first time my parents came to visit, one night I came in at 11 and saw my parents on all fours chasing roaches. I told myself, That’s it, I’m gonna win the war.
And I did. But as I’m growing older, I want a real kitchen, a real bathroom, and a real bedroom. I really do want it.
If you're interested in inviting Susan in to photograph your apartment for an upcoming post, then you may contact her via this email.
Photos and text by Susan Schiffman
Tenant: Raquel S., since 1983
When my parents came for the first visit, before I did all the renovations here, when the apartment still looked like hell, my father sat on the futon on the floor with tears streaming down his face and he said, You moved to America to live like a Bedouin?
When I picked them up at the airport I had to tell them that I had a bathtub in the kitchen. So I said, In America you can make coffee and take a shower at the same time. That is basically my story.
Why did you move to NYC?
I didn’t know the East Village existed. I came from a kibbutz in Israel. I just felt suffocated both in the kibbutz and in Israel. I used to be a dancer and I wanted to study acting and mime, and more dance.
I did do theater here. Mostly in the EV. I acted, directed and produced. I even had a theater for 5 minutes. On Ninth Street in 1986. The New York Theater Asylum with a partner Tri Garrity.
Immediately when I arrived to New York, the East Village became my place. It was an instant attraction. Why? Maybe because I was a bit marginal? And most everyone else seemed a bit marginal. I loved all the colorful people here.
I met my husband about a year and a half after I got here. We were married for 36 years till his death, last year. My beautiful gay husband.
I got the apartment through a friend. One day the landlord knocked on my door and asked me if I wanted the lease. First I thought it was a trick, but then I realized he was serious. He always treated me nicely. Though the building suffered — years and years without heat.
I love the East Village — the community, it is still a lovely community, and it was affordable.
What do you love about your apartment?
Well, at the end of the day, my apartment is my temple. I made it so. Before the renovations, you have no clue what it looked like. It was disgusting. And the roaches. The first time my parents came to visit, one night I came in at 11 and saw my parents on all fours chasing roaches. I told myself, That’s it, I’m gonna win the war.
And I did. But as I’m growing older, I want a real kitchen, a real bathroom, and a real bedroom. I really do want it.
If you're interested in inviting Susan in to photograph your apartment for an upcoming post, then you may contact her via this email.
The end is nearing for the Sunshine Cinema
[EVG photo from August]
It's getting closer for the end credits to roll at the Landmark Sunshine Cinema on East Houston.
As The Lo-Down first reported yesterday, the new owners of the building housing the theater have filed demolition permits to take down the three-level structure here between Eldridge and Forsyth.
Back in May, the Post reported that East End Capital and K Property Group bought the building for $31.5 million with plans to convert it to a mixed-use development with retail and upstairs office space. The site includes 20,000 square feet of air rights.
First sign of the impending new development came in August when workers were taking soil samples...
[EVG photo from Aug. 10]
Landmark reportedly had the opportunity to buy the property, but decided against it after CB3 voted down a proposal for a full liquor license for a cafe in the theater in 2012 for pre- and post-movie drinks and dinner.
Landmark instead decided to invest in a state-of-the-art theater (with an adjoining bar-cafe) that recently opened on West 57th Street.
The Sunshine is expected to close in early 2018. No date has been set. As of now, the Sunshine website lists midnight movies scheduled through Jan. 27 with a possible grand finale of "Dog Day Afternoon."
And a little history of the theater/building, via its website:
Opened December 21, 2001. Built in 1898, the Sunshine Cinema building was formerly the Houston Hippodrome motion picture theatre and a Yiddish vaudeville house but for over 50 years it had been shuttered serving as a hardware warehouse. Landmark has restored the theatre back to its artistic roots and now offers the art-house film lover five state-of-the-art screens dedicated to first-run independent and foreign film as well as non-traditional studio programming...
Given the numerous alterations through the years, the building was never deemed landmark-worthy by the city.
Anyway, I've been taking a few photos each time that I visited the theater in recent months, such as when I was the only person in the auditorium for a screening of "Wetlands" in September...
... and one day maybe...
[East End Capital]
The East End Capital website states that "ground breaking is expected in the second quarter of 2018."
For what?
While pursuing tenants interested in utilizing the structure in its current form, work is also underway for a new, best-in-class office building with retail at the base – a first in the rapidly evolving Lower East Side.
Remembering Kate Millett
Friends gathered yesterday afternoon at the Unitarian Universal Church on Central Park West to celebrate the life of Kate Millett, the pioneering feminist author who died on Sept. 6. She was 82.
Per PBS:
The Bowery Alliance of Neighbors shared the following yesterday via email:
Per PBS:
Millett championed the causes of feminism and mental health across a lifetime of work, and helped pioneer the field of gender studies and contemporary American conceptions of sexual freedom.
The Bowery Alliance of Neighbors shared the following yesterday via email:
Ms. Millett was also a long-time resident of the Bowery, residing at 295 Bowery, a building that had once housed the notorious McGurk's Suicide Hall, site of multiple suicides carried out by young female prostitutes.
Upon learning that the building was to be demolished, Millett led a valiant effort to have the building declared a NYC Landmark, and hoped to establish a museum memorial to women who had died there. Sadly, these efforts were unsuccessful, and the building was demolished.
When we were preparing an historic signage poster about 295 Bowery (see below), Kate was a very helpful adviser.
In 2004, the Cooper Square Mutual Housing Association helped Kate Millett and her spouse Sophie Keir relocate to a nearby spot just east of the Bowery.
A wonderful neighbor on many levels, Kate will be missed.
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