Sara Sjolin
Earlier today, we caught “Mosaic Man” Jim Power decorating a light pole on the southwest corner of St. Marks Place and Second Avenue. He said his latest creation – which includes tiles representing a Japanese flag (a nod to the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami) as well as shout-outs to MosaicMansTrail.com, Neither More Nor Less, and Neighborhoodr: East Village (the employer of Mr. Power’s social media guru) – is his 71st standing mosaic in 26 years of bringing local color.
Seen a scene like this? Post your photo in The Local’s Flickr pool.
Nick DeSantis
Members of Community Board 3 just voted overwhelmingly to recommend a denial of Heathers’ application to renew its liquor license, heeding the complaints of residents who earlier told the board’s SLA committee that the bar is a noisy nuisance. Supporters of the bar — mostly employees and customers — were left dumbstruck as only one member of the board voted in favor of the 13th street watering hole. Heathers’ ultimate fate will be decided by the State Liquor Authority at a later date.
Daniel Maurer
Forcella isn’t the only Bowery newcomer that’s experiencing delays. When we last checked in with Tom Birchard, owner of Veselka, he had hoped to open his Bowery outpost in September. Now he says it’ll be “about a month” before the borscht martinis are flowing, adding that he’s “pushing hard” for November 4 or 5. The good news: As of yesterday, Veselka Bowery has a chef in Michael Sullivan. Mr. Sullivan got his start as the sous chef at the esteemed Chanterelle before moving on to become executive chef at David Waltuck’s other defunct restaurant, Le Zinc. More recently, he was opening chef of Greenpoint restaurant Anella, and then executive chef at Flex Mussels. Read more…
We were impressed by those one-cent ice cream cones last week, but this might be an even juicier deal – Katz’s Delicatessen has not only cut the price of its massive corned beef and pastrami sandwiches to $10 each (if you’re one of the first 200 to order via GrubHub from noon till 10 p.m. today), but in an unprecedented move, they’re delivering to the East Village and points beyond. We’ve just placed our order via GrubHub’s Facebook promotion and will let you know how it goes. Update: Our pastrami sandwich arrived (with pickles!) at 2:10 p.m., just a little over half an hour after we ordered it. Heaven.
Early Saturday morning, members of BANGdance warmed up for the debut of “City Life” at the FAB! Festival. “We’re calling this, terrible as it is, full-on homeless,” choreographer Nathalie Matychak reminded her seven dancers, four of whom were sprawled out across folding chairs. Ms. Matychak, who has lived in the East Village since 2007, was inspired to create what she said was an “honest portrayal” of day-to-day life in the city, complete with a subway ride, a traffic jam, and a death that is largely ignored by the dancers. Hear and see more from her and from her performers in our audio slideshow.
You’ve heard one former NYU student’s memories of working the door at Limelight (the documentary about the club opened tonight at Sunshine Cinema); now let Jane Bernstein, an NYU alum of an earlier era, regale you with stories of working the box office at a still more legendary club – the one and only Fillmore East.
Amalie R. Rothschild A crowd gathered in May 1970 when tickets went on sale for Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.
As I prepare for the Fillmore East’s fortieth reunion on Saturday night, I wish I could remember more about all the music that played there. From opening night on March 8, 1968 to the final concert on June 27, 1971, the best-known performers of the era (The Doors, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, Santana, Joni Mitchell, Elton John, The Allman Brothers) were on the stage twice each Friday and Saturday night, at 8 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. Only the Rolling Stones and the Beatles bypassed the legendary theater on Second Avenue and Sixth Street for stadium-sized audiences.
I heard nearly all of these performances because I worked at the Fillmore, first as a “candy chick,” then in the main office, and then as a “box office crazy.” I spent five days a week in our narrow “shoe-box office,” with its graffiti-covered walls and 50-pound boxes of Hershey’s Kisses, which we distributed by the handful to customers. Read more…
Joyce Manalo
Last month, Fourth Arts Block, a nonprofit public arts organization, approached the New York City Department of Design & Construction about an art project. They wanted to transform a row of drab storage containers that had been parked on 4th Street between Bowery and Second Avenue for about two years – a byproduct of water main work that was expected to go on for yet another year. The group got city approval on September 12th, and today, the containers boast vivid street art. Read more…
Ray LeMoine
Last night, Anthony Pappalardo celebrated the publication of “Live…Suburbia!” at Nike’s Bowery Stadium. The book of photos and essays, co-authored with Max G. Morton, documents post-1960s youth subcultures, from the Kiss Army to the hardcore punk and skateboarding scenes that Mr. Pappalardo, 36, became a part of while growing up north of Boston. (Mr. Pappalardo, whose first book was “Radio Silence: A Selected Visual History of American Hardcore Music,” toured the world during the 1990s playing with bands like Ten Yard Fight and In My Eyes.) In the book, Mr. Pappalardo documents his own transition from suburbanite to Manhattanite. Over e-mail, we asked him how the East Village, which he considers a mecca for suburban dreamers, shaped that transformation, and how the neighborhood itself has transformed since he first came here to attend shows at clubs that are now long gone. Read more…
Courtesy of HBO.
“I first visited New York City when I was 17 years old, and it was love at first sight,” explains actress Heather Burns. Though she plays Leah, the quintessential Brooklynite (and the girlfriend of Zach Galifianakis’s character) on HBO’s “Bored to Death,” the East Village has been her home for 18 years. When she became a student at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, the Chicago native landed a rent-stabilized apartment on St. Marks Place and never left. These days, she’s engaged to fellow “Bored to Death” actor Ajay Naidu and gearing up for the third season of her hit show — premiering Sunday, October 10 — by visiting plenty of local hotspots. Read more…
Dominique Zonyee Scott
With rats potentially on the wane in Tompkins Square Park, another war against rodents is being waged – without nearly as much hoopla – several blocks south. Residents of Max Meltzer Tower, a senior citizen development at 94 East First Street near First Avenue say that rats are running wild in the complex’s courtyard.
“At night they all come out and have a party,” said Harry Baron, 71. “Now I try to go upstairs before 7 p.m., because that’s when they come out.”
Thelma Yearwood, 82, president of the tenants association, said that holes drilled during the Houston Street Corridor Reconstruction Project, which started this spring, brought the rats out from underground. Since then, she said, she has seen several of them run through the courtyard almost every evening. Read more…
Jamie Larson
Yesterday, St. Mark’s Bookshop co-owner Bob Contant told The Local that he hoped to hear from Cooper Union today about his request for a $5,000 per month rent reduction, but knew nothing for sure: “They could table the whole thing.”
The Board of Directors has been holding regular committee meetings all week. Earlier in the week, Director of Public Affairs Claire McCarthy said the issue would likely be discussed at a meeting of the entire board on Wednesday; beyond that, she said, there was no new information.
She added that school officials are well aware of the Bookshop’s support but there is no timeline on a decision.
Meanwhile, Mr.Contant said, “All of this publicity has really helped us.” The number of signatures on the petition (now over 35,900) spiked over the weekend following a New York Times story.
Until a decision is made, the pressure remains on Cooper Union.
“Trying to look at it objectively,” Mr. Contant said, “the longer it goes on, the worse they look.”
Update | 8:07 p.m. It now appears that the story will not see it’s conclusion until the end of next month. Mr. Contant said that Cooper Union Vice President T.C. Wescott told him earlier today that the store’s request was being sent to the board’s Finance and Business Affairs Committee, and their report on the rent dispute is expected to be completed in late October. “Nobody wants to be pressured into making a decision,” Mr. Contant told The Local.
Michelle Rick
Good morning, East Village.
After The Local revealed yesterday that Neal Essex, the man accused of raping a woman on Eighth Street, had a lengthy jail record and history of mental illness, The Post now weighs in with more details. In 1991, years after bludgeoning his mother to death in 1984, he was found not guilty due to insanity, and spent time in mental institutions until he was released in 2005. The victim on Saturday was in her 60s.
DNAinfo reports that the police are on the lookout for a man who robbed an Upper East Side convenience store and then, an hour later, pulled a gun on an employee at a convenience store on First Avenue and Ninth Street.
ArtsBeat stops in to the Antifolk Festival at Sidewalk Café before it ends on Sunday. The “harder edge and social anger of some the early songwriters – Roger Manning, Brenda Kahn, Cindy Lee Berryhill – has given way to more angst and soul-searching,” and the atmosphere surrounding the scene has changed, since “the neighborhood’s gotten too expensive for starving artists and many of the musicians live out in Brooklyn these days.” Read more…
Photographs by Dominique Zonyee Scott and Güney Cüceloğlu.
Armed with posters that read “I am Troy Davis” and “Enough is Enough, Stop the Legal Lynching,” protesters walked from Washington Square Park to Union Square and points west tonight in protest of the execution of Troy Davis.
Shortly after a 4:30 p.m. meeting time, a group of about ten protesters at the corner of Washington Square Park and University Place used a plastic crate as a podium in order to entreat passersby to “join the cause for change and fair justice” and “say no to the death penalty.”
“NYU students need to stand up to the bigoted government,” said one.
“This is a human issue – we are all Troy Davis,” said another. Read more…
Today, dear readers, is the last day of summer. Before you bust out the pumpkin ale and slip into some corduroy, won’t you pay your respects to one of the true boys of summer, Manuel Apreu, who has been selling piraguas (a version of snow cones) in Loisaida for the past twenty-three years? The Local recently caught up with him before he retired to the Dominican Republic for the season, in search of warmer weather and cheaper rent. Join us in wishing him a fond (if temporary) farewell.
Christine Jenkins
After quietly hitting the streets of Williamsburg a few weeks ago, the Palenque Homemade Colombian Food truck made its Astor Place debut for lunch today. Nena Sierra, 42, said she and her partner Viviana Lewis, 47 (both natives of Colombia) plan to park across from the Walgreens at Astor and Lafayette from 11:30 a.m. till 6 p.m. daily, while continuing to put in nightshifts on Bedford Avenue across the river.
The truck is an offspring of Hecho en Casa, the catering company that Ms. Lewis opened in Williamsburg four years ago after her career as a restaurant owner in Colombia. In June, the company was tapped to serve arepas at the Renegade Craft Fair in McCarren Park. Ms. Sierra, a filmmaker who has produced commercials for the Colombian market (she teamed up with Ms. Lewis after hiring her as a caterer), said they went through 3,000 of them over the course of the two-day event. That’s when they decided to start building out a truck. Read more…
Thanks to our AMC Eagle-eyed readers, we’ve added over a dozen new contenders to our gallery of the East Village’s sweetest rides, including a vintage fire truck, two green monsters (a Ford Fairlane 500 and a Dodge Dart Swinger) and not one but two lemon-yellow Minis (one of them old-school, the other new-school). Which of the cars in the newly expanded slideshow will replace the defunct Free Willie Nelson as the unofficial vehicle of the East Village? (The Free Willie, by the way, posted a rather hilarious letter to its fans soon after its unfortunate demise.) Voting starts Monday, which gives you one more weekend to nominate your own favorites by adding them to The Local’s Flickr pool.
Carly Okyle Part of the memorial to Nelson Perez, an East Village resident who died on September 10.
In a recent photograph, Nelson Perez is sitting on a bicycle that he had built himself, looking cool and confident. Around the East Village, he was known as Monster Rock (or “Monstro”), as well as the Gentle Giant. Bicycles and motorcycles were his passion. It was a passion that would eventually kill him, and he knew it.
“He would say, ‘I’m gonna ride to die,’” said Sandra “Sin” Mercado, a friend of Mr. Perez’s who was with him on the early hours of Saturday, September 10, when the fatal accident took place. Read more…
Phillip Kalantzis-Cope
Good morning, East Village.
While Jeremiah’s Vanishing New York offers up another post in support of St. Mark’s Bookshop, it looks like the troubled Heathers may be the latest neighborhood cause célèbre – L magazine’s blog, The Measure, thinks the bar’s liquor license should be renewed because “it is a bastion for a diverse mix of gay and straight creatives who are looking for a drink in an increasingly frat-like East Village bar scene.”
Voice critic Robert Sietsema eats cow tongue at Prune, but that’s hardly his most disconcerting dispatch today: After making light of the “ridiculous amounts of hoopla” over the 14th Street IHOP and pointing out that the place was half-empty around lunchtime, Mr. Sietsema stuffs some pancakes with sausages in an attempt to reproduce a childhood favorite. They’re “still superb.”
Still not sold on IHOP? Jimmy’s No. 43 will start serving brunch on Saturday. According to Zagat Buzz, items will include “‘black and tan’ griddle cakes (complete with ale batter, bananas, salted stout-caramel sauce, curry spiced pretzels, cocoa and powdered sugar).” Grub Street has still more East Village food news, including special meals at Hearth and JoeDoe. Read more…
Carolyn Sun Left to right: Paul Cramer (founder of Petit Versailles public garden), Jan Hanvik of CB3, and Ralph Lewis of the Peculiar Works Project.
Last night at the dramatically lit Theater for the New City, Community Board 3’s Arts and Cultural Committee met to discuss the future of Art In Empty Spaces (A.I.E.S.), an initiative to feature the work of local artists in empty storefronts. Last May, CB3 and No Longer Empty, a non-profit for public art, teamed up with Tamara Greenfield, executive director of Fourth Arts Block, to bring art to 200 Avenue A (the former Superdive space) as well as to 215 Houston. Last night, the creators of the program struggled with the question of how to sustain it. Read more…