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One of the most popular exhibits at the 1964 World’s Fair held in Flushing Meadows Queens was the New York State Pavilion. Commissioned by the state of New York, the pavilion was designed by the architect Philip Johnson and was the Fair’s largest and most controversial; indeed, it was in fact more famous for being [...]
MANHATTA (1921) is a film that, for decades, has been more famous as a topic amongst film historians than for actually ever being seen (or even heard of) by anyone. It shared the mostly unseen worship that silent films such as F.W. Murnau‘s NOSFERATU and Robert Wiene‘s THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI evoked in the [...]
After the success of his novel IN COLD BLOOD, Truman Capote decided to throw a party. More in his element amongst the glitter of celebrities than at the keys of his typewriter, the magnificent gnome was a party animal if there ever was one. But unlike the typical soiree of the flowery 60s, where the [...]
In 1918, at the New York Hippodrome, legendary magician and escape artist Harry Houdini made an 8- foot, 6,000 pound elephant disappear. A crowd of over 5,000 packed the auditorium to watch Houdini’s latest stunt: the “world’s most incredible” conjuring illusion. The pachyderm would proudly and graciously appear upon Houdini’s introduction, with a raising of [...]
Today marks the 28th anniversary of John Lennon’s murder: the passing of a legend and also of a generation. For those of us who grew up in the Sixties, we’d thought that Lennon and the Beatles were somehow immortal. Despite the harsh reality of Vietnam, the Kennedys, King, as well as our own private losses [...]
At the northwest corner of Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, stands an English Elm called “Hangman’s Elm” or The Hanging Tree. The tree is 110 feet tall (33.52 m) and has a diameter of 56 inches (1.42 m). In 1989, the New York Department of Parks and Recreation determined that the tree is 310 [...]
Many people (including New Yorkers) are still unaware that the Statue of Liberty‘s current torch is not its original. During extensive renovation work in 1986, workers determined that the 100-year-old torch was beyond repair and replaced with a facsimile. The 1886 torch is now on display in the monument’s lobby…and pictured above. photo: iNeTours. Com [...]
On November 10 at a revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s SOUTH PACIFIC, an 89-year-old woman was honored. The cast performing at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre, none of whom were even born when their honoree gained her moment of lasting fame, were delighted to meet her; her name, not even her face, was known to them…but [...]
Once the fastest commercial jet in the world, in 1999 setting a New York-London speed record of 2:59:59 that still stands, this British Airways Concorde was temporarily “airborne” today. Suspended above the Hudson River, the airliner is carefully being placed upon a pier next to the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum after a year’s [...]
The recent Auld Lang Syne observances in honor of our two departing baseball teams are a big business in NYC lately. Last week, we had the Yankees depart amidst a parade of saccharine nostalgia and commercialized praise; this week, it’s the Mets (not to be outdone; but, as always, ultimately outdone) departing amidst a similar [...]
Yet another Immortal of the Silver Screen has proven that immortality is, in fact, limited to the silver screen. Even though it was strongly rumored that Paul Newman was dying, it’s never easy to accept the imminent demise of a superstar: our own immortal daydreams rely so heavily on their eternal presence. Newman will be [...]
