Mid-Manhattan Branch of NYPL to Read Parker Fiction
The Dorothy Parker Society is a major fan of the New York Public Library. We have to say that no other library system in the world can touch it.
We have two favorite branches: The Mid-Manhattan Branch, which houses the largest circulating collections of the entire NYPL, and the 1902 Yorkville Branch, which is the first Andrew Carnegie funded library in the city. (OK, we also love the NYPL For the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center, but it doesn’t have the charm of the other two).
We got word at DPS HQ that March is going to make short story fans happy at Mid-Manhattan, located at 455 Fifth Avenue at 39th Street. “Mixed Bag: Story Time for Grown-Ups” a program every other Wednesday, will be devoted to Parker short fiction classics. Mark your calendar:
Wednesday, March 7, 1:00-1:45 pm
Wednesday, March 21, 1:00-1:45 pm
The library encourages you to bring your lunch (or your knitting) and a friend.
Lois Moore, senior librarian, reads the stories to an appreciative crowd of adults. (You have to appreciate the synchronicity: the January theme was dogs and a February reading of Zora Neale Hurston, both dear to Mrs. Parker). We know the lineup: you will love each one.
The library is wheelchair accessible and the program is free and open to the public. It is on Twitter @midmanhattanlib and has a fantastic blog. Don’t miss the entry about the Mad Men mystery. Check out the calendar for all the events at Mid-Manhattan, which has one of the busiest schedules in the city. If you are visiting from out of town, pay a visit, you'll be knocked out.
Joyce Carol Oates Beats Dorothy Parker Out of NJ Hall of Fame
[caption id="attachment_716" align="alignright" width="205" caption="Joyce Carol Oates (elle.com image)"]
[/caption]On February 10, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced the 11 new members of the state hall of fame and once again Dorothy Parker was passed over. The class of 2012 nominees had Parker running in the “general” category among nine others. Author Joyce Carol Oates, winner of the National Book Award and two O. Henry prizes, was elected in the category.
The general category, according to the hall of fame, is the “catchall category for educators, military leaders, writers, poets, scholars, artists and others.” Of the 10 names, every nominee is dead except for Oates and Tom Kean, the former governor. Oates edged out other “general” state heroes sculptor Alexander Calder, photography pioneer Alfred Stieglitz, cartoonist Charles Addams, heiress Doris Duke, scholar Dorothy Porter Wesley, economist Milton Friedman and cartoonist Thomas Nast. So Parker was in good company.
Oates, a popular writer who has taught at Princeton since 1978, is also being admitted to the New York State Writers Hall of Fame in June, an honor that Parker earned last year. Oates was born in western New York. The complete list of nominees is here.
Parker, born in Long Branch, is the only New Jersey-born female author to be honored with a U.S. postage stamp, and Parker is the only New Jersey-born author who’s birthplace is a National Literary Landmark. She also won the O. Henry Award, was a two-time Academy Award nominee, the National Institute of Arts and Letters awarded Parker the Marjorie Peabody Waite Award for her contribution to American Literature and in 1959 she was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters.
Of the New Jersey Hall of Fame Class of 2012, it looks like of the 11, only five are still breathing and can attend the induction ceremony (not counting the E Street Band, which is down one member already).
The group that Parker isn’t joining this year:
Arts & Entertainment
• Actor Michael Douglas
• The E Street Band (Bruce Springsteen already made it in, naturally)
• Actor Christopher Reeve (1952-2004)
• Vocalist Sarah Vaughn (1924-1990)
Enterprise
• Chemist John Dorrance (1873-1930, never heard of him? He invented condensed soup for Campbell’s)
• Publisher S.I. Newhouse (1895-1979, kind of a Parker connection, he bought The New Yorker and owned Vogue and Vanity Fair)
Sports
• Coach Bob Hurley (high school basketball coach)
• Olympic track star Milt Campbell (won a gold medal in the decathlon in 1956)
• Millionaire Wellington T. Mara (1916-2005), owned the NFL’s New York Giants
History
• Sharpshooter & Western star Annie Oakley (1860-1926)
General
• Author Joyce Carol Oates
They are to be inducted in a gala in Newark in June. This class joins previous Garden State connections such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jon Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen and Bruce Willis.
Parker can be nominated again. Another notable woman born in New Jersey who isn’t in the hall is Whitney Houston.
[/caption]On February 10, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced the 11 new members of the state hall of fame and once again Dorothy Parker was passed over. The class of 2012 nominees had Parker running in the “general” category among nine others. Author Joyce Carol Oates, winner of the National Book Award and two O. Henry prizes, was elected in the category.
The general category, according to the hall of fame, is the “catchall category for educators, military leaders, writers, poets, scholars, artists and others.” Of the 10 names, every nominee is dead except for Oates and Tom Kean, the former governor. Oates edged out other “general” state heroes sculptor Alexander Calder, photography pioneer Alfred Stieglitz, cartoonist Charles Addams, heiress Doris Duke, scholar Dorothy Porter Wesley, economist Milton Friedman and cartoonist Thomas Nast. So Parker was in good company.
Oates, a popular writer who has taught at Princeton since 1978, is also being admitted to the New York State Writers Hall of Fame in June, an honor that Parker earned last year. Oates was born in western New York. The complete list of nominees is here.
Parker, born in Long Branch, is the only New Jersey-born female author to be honored with a U.S. postage stamp, and Parker is the only New Jersey-born author who’s birthplace is a National Literary Landmark. She also won the O. Henry Award, was a two-time Academy Award nominee, the National Institute of Arts and Letters awarded Parker the Marjorie Peabody Waite Award for her contribution to American Literature and in 1959 she was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters.
Of the New Jersey Hall of Fame Class of 2012, it looks like of the 11, only five are still breathing and can attend the induction ceremony (not counting the E Street Band, which is down one member already).
The group that Parker isn’t joining this year:
Arts & Entertainment
• Actor Michael Douglas
• The E Street Band (Bruce Springsteen already made it in, naturally)
• Actor Christopher Reeve (1952-2004)
• Vocalist Sarah Vaughn (1924-1990)
Enterprise
• Chemist John Dorrance (1873-1930, never heard of him? He invented condensed soup for Campbell’s)
• Publisher S.I. Newhouse (1895-1979, kind of a Parker connection, he bought The New Yorker and owned Vogue and Vanity Fair)
Sports
• Coach Bob Hurley (high school basketball coach)
• Olympic track star Milt Campbell (won a gold medal in the decathlon in 1956)
• Millionaire Wellington T. Mara (1916-2005), owned the NFL’s New York Giants
History
• Sharpshooter & Western star Annie Oakley (1860-1926)
General
• Author Joyce Carol Oates
They are to be inducted in a gala in Newark in June. This class joins previous Garden State connections such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jon Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen and Bruce Willis.
Parker can be nominated again. Another notable woman born in New Jersey who isn’t in the hall is Whitney Houston. Monthly Wit’s End Party Feb. 25 with The Hot Sardines
Wit’s End and the Dorothy Parker Society invite you to celebrate the Social Life of the Jazz Age with Hot Jazz from The Hot Sardines!
Saturday, Feb. 25, 7pm-Midnight
Flute Midtown, 205 West 54th Street, near Broadway
Come in your finest 1920s & 1930s vintage or vintage inspired evening attire and celebrate in style with live hot jazz, vintage cocktails and good times!
Toast the 3rd Anniversary of Wit’s End with a Gin Tasting and the Manhattan Debut of Dorothy Parker American Gin, from the New York Distilling Company! The new Brooklyn distillery will be bringing in the “first batch” to Wit’s End! Enjoy your favorite gin cocktails tonight…
**Vintage attire required**
Free dance lesson at 8:30 pm from Jeri Lynn Astra Herbert & Neal Groothuis. Learn the steps that your great-grandparents knew so well. Live music to follow.
Tickets are $12 each and can be purchased at the door or in advance online via TicketWeb.com.
Table reservations are available and encouraged; telephone Flute Midtown reservation line at 212.265.5169 to reserve a table.
Posted in events
Tagged Dorothy Parker Society, drinking, events, music, Vintage, Wits End
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Ten Year Lunch Screens with Director at MoMa
Every February, The Museum of Modern Art presents Oscar's Docs, an annual collaboration between the Academy Film Archive and MoMA’s Department of Film Oscar winners in the categories of Best Documentary Feature and Best Documentary Short Subject.
This February, they will screen Aviva Slesin's Academy Award winning documentary, The Ten Year Lunch: The Wit and Legend of the Algonquin Round Table (1987) along with Saul Bass's, Why Man Creates (1968) on Sunday, February 5, 2:00; and Friday, February 10, 7:00. Aviva will do a Q & A after each showing.
The Ten-Year-Lunch celebrates the legendary wits who lunched daily at the Algonquin Hotel in New York City during the 1920s. The core of the Round Table group included short story and verse writer Dorothy Parker, ("I require three things In a man: he must be handsome. ruthless and stupid."); comic actor and writer Robert Benchley, (''I've got to get out of these wet clothes and into a dry martini."); The New Yorker founder Harold Ross; columnist and social reformer Heywood Broun; critic Alexander Woollcott; and playwrights George S. Kaufman, Marc Connelly, Edna Ferber and Robert Sherwood.
The film introduces the 'Round Tablers' as young hopefuls, outspoken and outrageous, all the more so because they knew they would be quoted by each other in tomorrow's newspapers. Individually, they soon achieved the success they were striving for and collectively they changed the face of American humor. The film follows their accomplishments and escapades through the exciting decade of the '20s. They not only embodied the era but they also helped create it and shape it for others.
For members of MoMA, tickets are free and can be reserved online starting a week before the screenings. Non-members, can buy tickets at the door before the screenings and tickets will also be on sale one week in advance at the film entrance which is just East of MoMA's main entrance at 11 West 53rd Street). Regular tickets: $12. Seniors: $10 and Students with ID cards: $8. Edna Ferber in Hall of Fame with Dorothy Parker
Edna Ferber will join Dorothy Parker in the New York Writers Hall of Fame, it was announced last night at the Forbes Gallery on Fifth Avenue. Ferber will join 13 other writers, four living, the others deceased, in the Class of 2012. A gala on June 5 at the Princeton Club will honor all inductees.
The evening was hosted by Bob Forbes and many state authors, librarians and literary professionals attended the cocktail party. As each name was announced, a rousing round of applause greeted each one.
It is a diverse list of New Yorkers who are being honored. Ferber, who won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature for her 1924 novel So Big, was a member of the Algonquin Round Table with Parker. In 2011, Parker was inducted into the hall of fame, joining such luminaries as Willa Cather, Herman Melville and E.B. White.
The living writers who join the hall in 2012:
1. E.L. Doctorow
2. Pete Hamill
3. Toni Morrison
4. Joyce Carol Oates
Writers who will be honored posthumously:
1. John Cheever
2. Hart Crane
3. Edna Ferber
4. Washington Irving
5. Henry James
6. Mary McCarthy
7. Marianne Moore
8. Barbara Tuchman
9. Kurt Vonnegut
10. Richard Wright
The event is the work of the Empire State Center for the Book, an affiliate of the United States Library of Congress. Each has a different focus, but the mission of each is to sponsor programs and highlight their area’s literary heritage, call attention to the importance of books, reading, literacy, and libraries. The Empire State Center for the Book sponsors the Empire State Book Festival and the Letters About Literature program. The Hall of Fame is being created at the State Library in Albany.
Congratulations to all the winners, and to the readers who keep buying their books.
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Tagged algonquin round table, awards, Edna Ferber, Empire State Center for the Book, Hall of Fame
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Behind the Scenes for Launch of Dorothy Parker American Gin
[caption id="attachment_696" align="aligncenter" width="640" caption="The New York Distilling Co. still was custom-made in Germany. This is where the Dorothy Parker American Gin is manufactured in Brooklyn."]
[/caption]This year saw two honors bestowed upon Dorothy Parker. First, she was inducted into the New York State Writers Hall of Fame in April. We are happy to announce the second honor: a new distillery named its first batch of spirits Dorothy Parker American Gin in November.
[caption id="attachment_697" align="alignright" width="225" caption="Dorothy Parker American Gin is on sale now in New York City."]
[/caption]For the first time, readers can peruse Parker stories about gin while drinking gin named for her.
The story behind the creation of Dorothy Parker American Gin starts at the brand-new New York Distilling Company, which opened for business just a few weeks ago in Brooklyn. The nearly 5,000 square foot factory and bar straddles the border between Williamsburg and Greenpoint (literally: one doorway opens to Williamsburg, another is in the Greenpoint ZIP code). The gritty factory is next door to a firehouse; inside is a gleaming copper still that was custom-made outside Stuttgart, Germany, and shipped over by boat.
Dorothy Parker American Gin is the first of two gin brands from NYDC. The other is Perry’s Tot, named for a commander of the nearby Brooklyn Navy Yard. Let’s find out about the gin, then about the distillery, a unique new business in New York City.
The distillery general manager is Allen Katz, a personable authority on all things cocktails and beverage-related, and a major league Parker fan. How big? Writing a college musical based on her short stories would classify him as eligible for Parker geekdom. However, then I found out he and his wife read “Here We Are” at their wedding last year, and that put him in league with other serious Parker-philes, like the ones who get Parker tattoos and name their children after her (dogs & cats don’t count). So it’s easy to see why Dorothy Parker would be his first choice for a namesake gin brand. Katz gave me a personal tour of the entire operation.
Katz said he, “wanted to name a product after a woman. Respectfully, she was more of a broad than a lady. She fits into cocktail culture here and around the world.” Katz, who had a career in the liquor business working for a distributorship, started making inquiries while dreaming up the Parker brand. “In asking contemporaries, two-thirds of the people I asked in their thirties and forties didn’t know who she was,” he said. “Most people didn’t know.” He thought a Parker brand would be a nice tribute. “It’s very personal,” he said. “I’ve been a devotee since I was 19 or 20 reading Parker in college.”
The bottle’s cool label with Parker’s profile wasn’t created by some kid found on project4hire.com. The distillery hired the legendary design guru Milton Glaser, one of the most important designers in the country, and creator of the iconic “I LOVE NY” campaign. (And since he’s 82 and co-founded New York, maybe he drank with Mrs. Parker?)
The properties of the gin are similar to others, but the Brooklyn distillery has added other ingredients. Katz explained what’s in the Dorothy Parker bottle: “Juniper, the backbone of gin. By law, juniper must be included in gin. The word “gin” comes from jenever, it’s Dutch for juniper,” he said. It also includes, “orange peel, lemon peel, coriander, green cardamom, sweet cinnamon, elderberries and dried hibiscus petals. It’s a blend of classic and contemporary ingredients." (And strong: it's 44% alcohol or 88 Proof).
You might be thinking of a martini, but Katz recommended some other mixes: “It’s ideal for classic sour style cocktails: a gin daisy, French 75. It would be a fantastic gin and tonic. And with these artisan tonics, such as Fever Tree, Q Tonic, Bittermens…” The gin and tonic water goes to a new level of taste.
So. You are reading this and you want a bottle, now, if possible. Currently it is only available for purchase in New York City, and is distributed by Southern Wine and Spirits of America. It is available via mail order from Astor Wines & Spirits (212) 674-7500 (USA only, and there are more than 15 states they can’t ship to because of state liquor laws). It’s for sale in New York City at Union Square Wines & Spirits, Brooklyn Wine Exchange, Smith & Vine, Dry Dock in Red Hook and Zachys.
The New York Distilling Co. has created several batches of its gins so far. The team is also planning to release American rye whiskey, with a rock and rye scheduled for 2012.
The distillery has three partners. In addition to Katz is Tom Potter, company president. He is one of the founders of the Brooklyn Brewery and wrote a book about brewing. Bill Potter is the distiller; an expert wine sommelier, he teaches wine education, and formerly worked at one of the best bars in town, Tribeca Grill.
[caption id="attachment_695" align="alignright" width="300" caption="The Shanty is the bar inside the Manhattan Distilling Co. at 79 Richardson Street between Leonard and Lorimer – 5 minutes from the Lorimer St-Metropolitan Ave Subway Stop on the L and G Lines. "]
[/caption]Katz said it was a two-year process to open the business and get the still working. The gleaming 1,000-liter copper hybrid pot still, mash tun cooker and fermentation tanks were all custom-made in Germany. The partners had to renovate the warehouse and build it out for manufacturing. They also added a nice touch: their own cozy bar on the premises, where patrons can watch the gin and whiskey be distilled through giant picture windows that overlook the factory floor. This is The Shanty, a full bar, almost 850 square feet. The Shanty looks like it came right out of 1925. It serves the distillery’s gin, along with a wide range of other spirits and beer. It just opened a couple weeks ago and is already a hit in the neighborhood.
Katz said he and the partners are pleased that the New York Distilling Co. is open for business, and that their new gin brands are on shelves now.
“I’ve worked in beverages for a long time,” Katz said. “Since I was a teenager, I wanted to produce something. It’s nice to go to creating something from scratch.”
We’ll be following the progress of Dorothy Parker American Gin.
[/caption]This year saw two honors bestowed upon Dorothy Parker. First, she was inducted into the New York State Writers Hall of Fame in April. We are happy to announce the second honor: a new distillery named its first batch of spirits Dorothy Parker American Gin in November.
[caption id="attachment_697" align="alignright" width="225" caption="Dorothy Parker American Gin is on sale now in New York City."]
[/caption]For the first time, readers can peruse Parker stories about gin while drinking gin named for her.
The story behind the creation of Dorothy Parker American Gin starts at the brand-new New York Distilling Company, which opened for business just a few weeks ago in Brooklyn. The nearly 5,000 square foot factory and bar straddles the border between Williamsburg and Greenpoint (literally: one doorway opens to Williamsburg, another is in the Greenpoint ZIP code). The gritty factory is next door to a firehouse; inside is a gleaming copper still that was custom-made outside Stuttgart, Germany, and shipped over by boat.
Dorothy Parker American Gin is the first of two gin brands from NYDC. The other is Perry’s Tot, named for a commander of the nearby Brooklyn Navy Yard. Let’s find out about the gin, then about the distillery, a unique new business in New York City.
The distillery general manager is Allen Katz, a personable authority on all things cocktails and beverage-related, and a major league Parker fan. How big? Writing a college musical based on her short stories would classify him as eligible for Parker geekdom. However, then I found out he and his wife read “Here We Are” at their wedding last year, and that put him in league with other serious Parker-philes, like the ones who get Parker tattoos and name their children after her (dogs & cats don’t count). So it’s easy to see why Dorothy Parker would be his first choice for a namesake gin brand. Katz gave me a personal tour of the entire operation.
Katz said he, “wanted to name a product after a woman. Respectfully, she was more of a broad than a lady. She fits into cocktail culture here and around the world.” Katz, who had a career in the liquor business working for a distributorship, started making inquiries while dreaming up the Parker brand. “In asking contemporaries, two-thirds of the people I asked in their thirties and forties didn’t know who she was,” he said. “Most people didn’t know.” He thought a Parker brand would be a nice tribute. “It’s very personal,” he said. “I’ve been a devotee since I was 19 or 20 reading Parker in college.”
The bottle’s cool label with Parker’s profile wasn’t created by some kid found on project4hire.com. The distillery hired the legendary design guru Milton Glaser, one of the most important designers in the country, and creator of the iconic “I LOVE NY” campaign. (And since he’s 82 and co-founded New York, maybe he drank with Mrs. Parker?)
The properties of the gin are similar to others, but the Brooklyn distillery has added other ingredients. Katz explained what’s in the Dorothy Parker bottle: “Juniper, the backbone of gin. By law, juniper must be included in gin. The word “gin” comes from jenever, it’s Dutch for juniper,” he said. It also includes, “orange peel, lemon peel, coriander, green cardamom, sweet cinnamon, elderberries and dried hibiscus petals. It’s a blend of classic and contemporary ingredients." (And strong: it's 44% alcohol or 88 Proof).
You might be thinking of a martini, but Katz recommended some other mixes: “It’s ideal for classic sour style cocktails: a gin daisy, French 75. It would be a fantastic gin and tonic. And with these artisan tonics, such as Fever Tree, Q Tonic, Bittermens…” The gin and tonic water goes to a new level of taste.
So. You are reading this and you want a bottle, now, if possible. Currently it is only available for purchase in New York City, and is distributed by Southern Wine and Spirits of America. It is available via mail order from Astor Wines & Spirits (212) 674-7500 (USA only, and there are more than 15 states they can’t ship to because of state liquor laws). It’s for sale in New York City at Union Square Wines & Spirits, Brooklyn Wine Exchange, Smith & Vine, Dry Dock in Red Hook and Zachys.
The New York Distilling Co. has created several batches of its gins so far. The team is also planning to release American rye whiskey, with a rock and rye scheduled for 2012.
The distillery has three partners. In addition to Katz is Tom Potter, company president. He is one of the founders of the Brooklyn Brewery and wrote a book about brewing. Bill Potter is the distiller; an expert wine sommelier, he teaches wine education, and formerly worked at one of the best bars in town, Tribeca Grill.
[caption id="attachment_695" align="alignright" width="300" caption="The Shanty is the bar inside the Manhattan Distilling Co. at 79 Richardson Street between Leonard and Lorimer – 5 minutes from the Lorimer St-Metropolitan Ave Subway Stop on the L and G Lines. "]
[/caption]Katz said it was a two-year process to open the business and get the still working. The gleaming 1,000-liter copper hybrid pot still, mash tun cooker and fermentation tanks were all custom-made in Germany. The partners had to renovate the warehouse and build it out for manufacturing. They also added a nice touch: their own cozy bar on the premises, where patrons can watch the gin and whiskey be distilled through giant picture windows that overlook the factory floor. This is The Shanty, a full bar, almost 850 square feet. The Shanty looks like it came right out of 1925. It serves the distillery’s gin, along with a wide range of other spirits and beer. It just opened a couple weeks ago and is already a hit in the neighborhood.
Katz said he and the partners are pleased that the New York Distilling Co. is open for business, and that their new gin brands are on shelves now.
“I’ve worked in beverages for a long time,” Katz said. “Since I was a teenager, I wanted to produce something. It’s nice to go to creating something from scratch.”
We’ll be following the progress of Dorothy Parker American Gin. NoirFest Coming to Santa Monica Jan. 14
[caption id="attachment_687" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="Santa Monica, Jan 14 - March 28, 2012"]
[/caption]We got a message from DPS member Helen K. Garber in Los Angeles about NoirFest Santa Monica 2012. She is a photographer. It sounds just like what you'd expect from a Noir event, and would be good for Los Angeles area fans. The reception takes place during Photo LA weekend, when the international photographic community gathers in Santa Monica. Helen says:
[/caption]We got a message from DPS member Helen K. Garber in Los Angeles about NoirFest Santa Monica 2012. She is a photographer. It sounds just like what you'd expect from a Noir event, and would be good for Los Angeles area fans. The reception takes place during Photo LA weekend, when the international photographic community gathers in Santa Monica. Helen says:
I have the great joy of inviting you to join me for my latest solo exhibition in Los Angeles: Jan. 14 - Feb. 25, 2012 @ dnjGallery, Bergamot Station, Santa Monica, CA. I have spent the last two years creating Encaustic Noir, the series of mixed media assemblages that will be exhibited in the main gallery. dnj owner/director Pamela Schoenberg curated an amazing companion show of vintage night photography by the master artists who have inspired my work. You will be able to see original vintage images by Brassai, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Andre Kertesz, Robert Doisneau and other renowned photographers in the second gallery. Pamela chose only photographers working in Paris in the 1930’s. If you don’t know photographic history, please consider that they were among the real life characters represented in Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris.More information here.
Excuse My Dust But Dorothy Parker House Will Come Down
[caption id="attachment_682" align="aligncenter" width="640" caption="214 West 72nd Street is the gray stone house in the center. It was damaged in 2010 by the glass building on its east side. Dorothy Rothschild lived here in the 1890s as a child. Photo by Kevin Fitzpatrick."]
[/caption]Tuesday night I attended the monthly meeting of Community Board 7, which covers the Upper West Side. The reason I was there was to speak to oppose the demolition of Dorothy Parker’s childhood home at 214 West 72nd Street. As a previous post explained, the building was damaged by construction of a giant building on the corner of 72nd and Broadway. Since Parker lived there as a young child, we spoke up about it being knocked down. The story was first reported by the neighborhood news site DNAinfo, which led to stories in the New York Times and the Village Voice.
On Tuesday, I first spoke to the Preservation Committee. There were six members in attendance. What was being proposed, and I’ll post the full document, was this:
[/caption]By now, I could see that Dorothy Parker was taking it on the chin. I am no stranger to proceedings like this. I attended a two-week federal court case and have the marks to show for it. But this was more disheartening. Here is why.
It was only after I spoke that Ms. Palitz gave me the proposal they were voting on, which they voted 4-1 to approve. This meant they would approve, to the full Community Board later that evening, that the building be exempted from the proposed historic district and that a 12-story building be allowed in its place.
I was disheartened because the Dorothy Parker Society did not do more. Come on, I was in the New York Times talking about this matter. I asked for letters to be written, in two consecutive email appeals, and less than 12 bothered to write something. If the building is demolished, and it looks like it will be, the society’s inaction is party to it. Just clicking “Like” on a Facebook post is not enough to save a New York City building, people.
I was disheartened, truly, by the attitude of the Preservation Committee who gave no thought, at all, to the building being preserved. Parker’s name was not included in any of the discussion, and in fact, the only place that Parker was included was in the paperwork prepared by the Ma family.
It was during this point in the meeting that the idea of a plaque or memorial was raised. This was the only friendly response from the Preservation Committee of the whole evening. The Ma family would support a plaque or memorial to Parker on the new building. It was talked about back and forth, and the board liked the idea. Of course the Dorothy Parker Society loves plaques. We’ll revisit this proposal with the Ma family in the future.
After the vote was taken by the Preservation Committee, we all waited an interminable amount of time for the Community Board to get through their other business on the agenda before the vote came to them on the building.
Gabrielle Palitz then gave a recap to the full 35-member board and the few community members left in the room. This was 3 ½ hours later, after we sat through a raucous debate about a restaurant liquor license and outlawing motorized bikes. Her recap was a 5-minute support for knocking the building down. It leans 2-inches to the east, there are serious cracks in the wall, the new building next door punched holes in the foundation, and staircases are coming loose. A term used a few times to refer to it was “integrity in question” about the safety of the building.
I then got up to be the only speaker. I was given a chance to state my case, so I made three points.
1. The Preservation Committee didn’t include in its one and half page document mention that it was the home of Dorothy Parker. I explained who she was and why she is important.
2. The Preservation Committee received almost ten letters and emails in support from the community opposing the demolition, and these were not read.
3. I asked the community to remember all authors and artists who lived in the neighborhood are important and should not be forgotten. It’s what makes the Upper West Side great.
Then attorney Lobel stood up and quoted from my book. I loved this; I just wished the whole board had bought a copy of it. He quoted from the passages that said Parker was under five when she lived there, and that the Rothschilds moved around a lot. Again, this speaks to their argument that because an author was a child in a residence it’s not important, or that because she lived in a bunch of places, then we can knock down one because there’s more to still see. I’ve said it before: you would not do this to the childhood home of any important person, no matter the circumstances. The childhood home influences the writer or artist; years later as an adult “creating” work, the childhood memories will influence the adult work. Second, because there is another neighborhood apartment nearby, let’s knock down this one, is a weak argument. If you were going to knock down a church or temple, would you say, oh, there’s another one across the street to see?
The board didn’t have much to say by now. It was already a four-hour meeting and they wanted to get out of there before midnight. The chairman moved, for the first time of the evening, to vote unanimously to approve the proposal as written. It was seconded. And then every hand on the board shot up. I was stunned. The vote came down to 36-0-2-0. Wow. So much for history.
So what happens now? These are the next steps.
A Community Board does not control what happens in New York City, it only makes recommendations and passes along community support, reaction, and opinions. The real power lies with the City. And the Community Board’s recommendation now goes to the Landmarks Preservation Commission. If you know anything about the NYC LPC, they are not to be trifled with. It is the LPC that is currently debating creating the West End Historic District. They will take the board’s recommendation under review, but they will make their own decision. It will be the LPC that the Ma family faces next, sometime in early 2012.
After the meeting, I chatted with Lobel and Tiffany Ma. They showed me an architectural drawing of the proposed building. I’m to be sent a copy of it. We briefly talked about next steps and a plaque or something like a gallery.
Here is where I sit, two days after the board voted. I can continue to tilt at a windmill and try and voice a concern to the LPC that the house is historically significant and should be saved. However, the DPS has already showed it is ineffective and can’t be bothered to send emails or letters, so a letter-writing campaign is out of the question. It would come down to me attending a LPC hearing and speaking up for saving the house. But is it going to help?
No.
I have not read the engineering report or looked at the photos of the damages. But from the tenor of all parties, the house is going to come down for safety reasons. The Ma family bought the house as an investment. They have a couple of retail businesses in the two bottom floors, and residential apartments above them. It was not their fault that an unscrupulous developer next door erected a 20-story building over them and compromised the common wall separating them. 214 West 72nd Street is not going to fall down this week, but someday it might. The family does not have the means to repair it, and the developer next door hasn’t compensated them for the damages. The reason for a 12-story height is two-fold. First, to make it financially sound, the added 7 floors will generate the revenue needed to pay for the construction. Second, the height difference from a 20-story neighbor, down to 12-story, down to five next to it, is not unreasonable.
I did what I could. I wrote about the house, I gave interviews about it. I went to a board meeting and stood up, literally, for saving the house. In the end all I could do was make the community aware that a house where a neighbor once lived as a girl, who grew up to be a world-famous author, is in their midst and is about to be demolished.
Here is where the rubber meets the road, so to speak. I have to support the Ma family in letting the building come down. It is going to fall down. I am going to ask, in writing, for a plaque, a significant marker or memorial to Dorothy Parker. By supporting this development, we could get a nice plaque, on a busy street corner that will attract eyeballs walking by. After the meeting, a man in the audience thanked the DPS for the plaque on 310 West 80th, that he passes by all the time (a plaque paid for and erected not by the DPS, but by the owner of 310 West 80th). So, who knows? In two or three years we could have a new bronze plaque on the Upper West Side.
If you have comments, post them below.
[/caption]Tuesday night I attended the monthly meeting of Community Board 7, which covers the Upper West Side. The reason I was there was to speak to oppose the demolition of Dorothy Parker’s childhood home at 214 West 72nd Street. As a previous post explained, the building was damaged by construction of a giant building on the corner of 72nd and Broadway. Since Parker lived there as a young child, we spoke up about it being knocked down. The story was first reported by the neighborhood news site DNAinfo, which led to stories in the New York Times and the Village Voice.
On Tuesday, I first spoke to the Preservation Committee. There were six members in attendance. What was being proposed, and I’ll post the full document, was this:
214 West 72nd Street (Broadway.) Request to exclude existing building from the proposed West End Avenue Historic District and proposal to develop a new 12-story residential building with ground floor commercial use. The proposal would include demolition of an existing building with significant structural damage.I’ll get back to that statement above. In the entire 1 ½ page document, Dorothy Parker’s name was not included. I found out why. When the demolition matter came to my attention in October, from reporter Leslie Albrecht, I was concerned enough to start a letter-writing campaign. Surely, I thought, with the 4,155 people who get the monthly e-newsletter (and 15,000 a week who visit dorothyparker.com) we could generate a deluge. I was wrong. In the six weeks of the letter-writing campaign, I was copied on about 15 emails. At the committee meeting, I asked the co-chair, Gabrielle Palitz, how many letters they got. She told me “three.” I was stunned, because I knew more were sent. A woman from the board office spoke up, and said the actual number was nine. Nine. I then found out that the Preservation Committee and the Community Board didn’t even bother to read them. To the Preservation Committee, I made a few points. I was the only person to speak to save the building. I said that as a fellow Upper West Side resident in an equally old building, all buildings have cracks in the walls. If we went and demolished every old building with cracks the Upper West Side would be empty. I then explained the importance of preserving an old home of an author, even if she lived there briefly. Parker is one of the Upper West Side’s most important former residents, and is a member of the National Academy of Arts and Letters and the New York State Writer’s Hall of Fame. I was only asked one question, directly: “What does the Dorothy Parker Society do?” with a kind of smirk by Jay Adolph of the committee. I then explained our mission. The building is owned by the Ma family. They were represented by Richard S. Lobel, of the firm Sheldon Lobel. He had a stack of engineering studies, photos, drawings, and reports. I glanced at them but didn’t get to view them. He then spoke of the Dorothy Parker connection, briefly, along the lines of her being a former resident but also a tenant of numerous other apartments on the Upper West Side. His main point was to bring up additional engineering studies and how the demolition of the building wouldn’t harm the building next to it, No. 216. The engineer’s report shows extensive damage was done to 214 W. 72nd Street. Last month the Preservation Committee had asked him to provide more information about what would happen to the neighboring property. I had a faint glimmer of hope. A representative for Linda B. Rosenthal, Assemblymember for District 67 of the New York State Assembly, spoke on her behalf. Ms. Rosenthal opposes the demolition and said it was a “slippery slope” to enter into, because the building was being carved out of the proposed historic district. The remarks were heard by the Preservation Committee, but not the full Community Board. [caption id="attachment_684" align="alignright" width="200" caption="214 West 72nd Street was built in the 1890s."]
[/caption]By now, I could see that Dorothy Parker was taking it on the chin. I am no stranger to proceedings like this. I attended a two-week federal court case and have the marks to show for it. But this was more disheartening. Here is why.
It was only after I spoke that Ms. Palitz gave me the proposal they were voting on, which they voted 4-1 to approve. This meant they would approve, to the full Community Board later that evening, that the building be exempted from the proposed historic district and that a 12-story building be allowed in its place.
I was disheartened because the Dorothy Parker Society did not do more. Come on, I was in the New York Times talking about this matter. I asked for letters to be written, in two consecutive email appeals, and less than 12 bothered to write something. If the building is demolished, and it looks like it will be, the society’s inaction is party to it. Just clicking “Like” on a Facebook post is not enough to save a New York City building, people.
I was disheartened, truly, by the attitude of the Preservation Committee who gave no thought, at all, to the building being preserved. Parker’s name was not included in any of the discussion, and in fact, the only place that Parker was included was in the paperwork prepared by the Ma family.
It was during this point in the meeting that the idea of a plaque or memorial was raised. This was the only friendly response from the Preservation Committee of the whole evening. The Ma family would support a plaque or memorial to Parker on the new building. It was talked about back and forth, and the board liked the idea. Of course the Dorothy Parker Society loves plaques. We’ll revisit this proposal with the Ma family in the future.
After the vote was taken by the Preservation Committee, we all waited an interminable amount of time for the Community Board to get through their other business on the agenda before the vote came to them on the building.
Gabrielle Palitz then gave a recap to the full 35-member board and the few community members left in the room. This was 3 ½ hours later, after we sat through a raucous debate about a restaurant liquor license and outlawing motorized bikes. Her recap was a 5-minute support for knocking the building down. It leans 2-inches to the east, there are serious cracks in the wall, the new building next door punched holes in the foundation, and staircases are coming loose. A term used a few times to refer to it was “integrity in question” about the safety of the building.
I then got up to be the only speaker. I was given a chance to state my case, so I made three points.
1. The Preservation Committee didn’t include in its one and half page document mention that it was the home of Dorothy Parker. I explained who she was and why she is important.
2. The Preservation Committee received almost ten letters and emails in support from the community opposing the demolition, and these were not read.
3. I asked the community to remember all authors and artists who lived in the neighborhood are important and should not be forgotten. It’s what makes the Upper West Side great.
Then attorney Lobel stood up and quoted from my book. I loved this; I just wished the whole board had bought a copy of it. He quoted from the passages that said Parker was under five when she lived there, and that the Rothschilds moved around a lot. Again, this speaks to their argument that because an author was a child in a residence it’s not important, or that because she lived in a bunch of places, then we can knock down one because there’s more to still see. I’ve said it before: you would not do this to the childhood home of any important person, no matter the circumstances. The childhood home influences the writer or artist; years later as an adult “creating” work, the childhood memories will influence the adult work. Second, because there is another neighborhood apartment nearby, let’s knock down this one, is a weak argument. If you were going to knock down a church or temple, would you say, oh, there’s another one across the street to see?
The board didn’t have much to say by now. It was already a four-hour meeting and they wanted to get out of there before midnight. The chairman moved, for the first time of the evening, to vote unanimously to approve the proposal as written. It was seconded. And then every hand on the board shot up. I was stunned. The vote came down to 36-0-2-0. Wow. So much for history.
So what happens now? These are the next steps.
A Community Board does not control what happens in New York City, it only makes recommendations and passes along community support, reaction, and opinions. The real power lies with the City. And the Community Board’s recommendation now goes to the Landmarks Preservation Commission. If you know anything about the NYC LPC, they are not to be trifled with. It is the LPC that is currently debating creating the West End Historic District. They will take the board’s recommendation under review, but they will make their own decision. It will be the LPC that the Ma family faces next, sometime in early 2012.
After the meeting, I chatted with Lobel and Tiffany Ma. They showed me an architectural drawing of the proposed building. I’m to be sent a copy of it. We briefly talked about next steps and a plaque or something like a gallery.
Here is where I sit, two days after the board voted. I can continue to tilt at a windmill and try and voice a concern to the LPC that the house is historically significant and should be saved. However, the DPS has already showed it is ineffective and can’t be bothered to send emails or letters, so a letter-writing campaign is out of the question. It would come down to me attending a LPC hearing and speaking up for saving the house. But is it going to help?
No.
I have not read the engineering report or looked at the photos of the damages. But from the tenor of all parties, the house is going to come down for safety reasons. The Ma family bought the house as an investment. They have a couple of retail businesses in the two bottom floors, and residential apartments above them. It was not their fault that an unscrupulous developer next door erected a 20-story building over them and compromised the common wall separating them. 214 West 72nd Street is not going to fall down this week, but someday it might. The family does not have the means to repair it, and the developer next door hasn’t compensated them for the damages. The reason for a 12-story height is two-fold. First, to make it financially sound, the added 7 floors will generate the revenue needed to pay for the construction. Second, the height difference from a 20-story neighbor, down to 12-story, down to five next to it, is not unreasonable.
I did what I could. I wrote about the house, I gave interviews about it. I went to a board meeting and stood up, literally, for saving the house. In the end all I could do was make the community aware that a house where a neighbor once lived as a girl, who grew up to be a world-famous author, is in their midst and is about to be demolished.
Here is where the rubber meets the road, so to speak. I have to support the Ma family in letting the building come down. It is going to fall down. I am going to ask, in writing, for a plaque, a significant marker or memorial to Dorothy Parker. By supporting this development, we could get a nice plaque, on a busy street corner that will attract eyeballs walking by. After the meeting, a man in the audience thanked the DPS for the plaque on 310 West 80th, that he passes by all the time (a plaque paid for and erected not by the DPS, but by the owner of 310 West 80th). So, who knows? In two or three years we could have a new bronze plaque on the Upper West Side.
If you have comments, post them below.
New Book Imagines Round Table Chatter
We got a press release today about a new self-published book based on the Algonquin Round Table. The PR says...
A new book, Lunch at the Algonquin, featuring the 1920s celebrities now known as the Algonquin Round Table, or "The Vicious Circle," is now available in paperback and in Kindle format.
The author, Mr. Kim Goldsworthy of Rosemead, California, describes his historical fiction novelette as a re-creation of a one-hour luncheon attended by the famous Algonquin Wits of the Roaring Twenties or the Jazz Age. Specifically, the dialogue features the wit and sarcasm of Dorothy Parker (writer/screenwriter), Robert Benchley (writer/actor), Harold Ross (editor and founder of The New Yorker magazine), George S. Kaufman (Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright), and Marc Connelly (Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright), and others.
Like a fly-on-the-wall, the book records a typical conversation of this group as they eat lunch in the Algonquin Hotel in mid-town Manhattan, one afternoon in 1921, as they gab about the hot issues of the day: Prohibition; women's rights; radio; film; the Red Scare; the Sacco-Vanzetti trial of the century. They likewise converse about the little things, like pets, the theater, and what to do this weekend. In between bites, they spit their venom on each other as they toss off their insults and sexual innuendos between puns, word-play, literary allusions, and quotable quotes.
The author has included historical background to allow the reader to pick up the vibration of post-World War I America as expressed by the most literate New Yorkers living through the Jazz Age. For example, the newest interests of the early 1920s were mainly: the spread of the deadly Spanish flu epidemic; the spreading of jazz music; the propagation of radio as a consumer good; and the two newest Amendments to the U.S. Constitution concerning the right to vote ("women's suffrage") and the banning of alcoholic beverages ("Prohibition").
Final Walking Tour of 2011 is Dec. 4
Come out to the last walking tour of 2011!
Algonquin Round Table Walking Tour
Sunday, Dec. 4, Noon-2 p.m.
Location: Algonquin Hotel, 59 W. 44th St (bet 5th and 6th Avenues)
Cost: $20
Walk in the footsteps of the Vicious Circle in the only walking tour dedicated to the city’s greatest literary friends. See the places where the Round Table, lived, worked, played and drank. You’ll visit the former homes, theaters and speakeasies associated with Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, Franklin P. Adams, Heywood Broun, Edna Ferber, George S. Kaufman and many more. The walk begins and ends in the landmark Algonquin Hotel. The walk is led by Kevin C. Fitzpatrick, president of the DPS and author of “A Journey into Dorothy Parker’s New York.”
Buy tickets in advance via TicketWeb or pay cash at the walk. All ages welcome.