Burlesque and The Bowery – Uniquely NYC

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Friday night, I went to check out a fantastic restaurant and night club some very good friends of mine own and operate called Duane Park which had just relocated from the trendy and pricey neighborhood of TriBeCa on Duane Street to the legendary Bowery Poetry Club space in the once again fashionable Bowery area. For close to century the Bowery was anything but fashionable or trendy but rather a dangerous run down district of brothels and bars.  But in fact, during the early part of the 19th century it was quite elegant with its large mansions and a very vibrant and respectable theater scene.  It was the installation of the elevated trains which covered the streets in darkness that changed the neighborhood and trasnsformed it to a place for low rents and cheap drinks. That’s why it’s been so amazing to witness what’s transpired in the Bowery of late which now features trendy hotels like The Bowery Hotel where celebrities can often be spotted, new developments such as The Avalon Bowery Place and elegant spots like Duane Park with its incredibe food, music and Burlesque dance and jazz shows.

As a filmmaker and fan of documentaries, when the Bowery is mentioned, I must bring attention to a film considered by many to be among the most important films from the post-war American independent scene which I’d like to share with you – Lionel Rogosin’s On the Bowery which documents a bygone era that still resonates today. His style as an independent filmmaker was straightforward and compassionate. His films, made “from the inside” showed the subjects he chose in their normal surroundings and allowed them to speak in their own words. By choosing ordinary people caught up in universal problems — homelessness, racial discrimination, war and peace, labor relations, and poverty — Rogosin made his point poignantly. The Oscar®-nominated On the Bowery is a masterpiece of the American blend of documentary/fiction.  

Each neighborhood in New York City has so many stories, steeped in history, full of life and the Bowery’s history is most dramatic.  It’s exciting to see the rennassaince occuring there now.  It’s accessible, it’s fun, and uniqely New York.

Take a look at some of the clips and photos here.  When you’re looking for a uniquely New York night out on the town, check out Duane Park, located at 308 Bowery at East 1st St just above Houston.  When you make your reservation, be sure tell them Sal from Fenwick Keats Real Estate sent you! 

[ Link to Urbandaddy Story on Duane Park ]

[ Link to New York Times ]

[ Link to On The Bowery Trailer ]


New York Already Has a Pope

Today, the Cardinals at the Vatican selected a new Pope. Jorge Mario Bergoglio (76) (pronounced Ber-GOAL-io) and he is to be called Francis, the 266th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church and the first non-European leader of the church in more than 1,000 years. For a time and with much love the from the Italian press, there was a lot of buzz about New York’s Cardinal Dolan as the favorite to become the first non-European Pope in more than a 1,000 years. Wow! A Pope from New York City. But, people are forgetting, New Yorker’s have had a Pope (well, of sorts) since 1984. OK, yeah, no puff of white smoke (well, not out of a chiminy over the Vatican anyway), no bells ringing in St. Peter’s Square but rather sirens from a squad car, but we got a Pope nonetheless, OK? And, he happens to be the Pope from one of my favorite New York City neighborhoods, and one of the most desirable neighborhoods to own an apartment or townhouse in all the world. Take a look at this great trailer from one of my favorite New York City neighborhood films shot in one of my favorite neighborhoods in New York City, “The Pope of Greenwich Village” – and be sure to check out Carbone  on Thompson Street where they make big old fashioned Italian meatballs Paulie would surely eat a couple of plates of.