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Jack Dempsey's Broadway Restaurant, known popularly as Jack Dempsey's, was a restaurant located in the Brill Building on Broadway between 49th Street and 50th Streets in Manhattan, New York City. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
In 1935, Dempsey opened Jack Dempsey's Restaurant in New York City on Eighth Avenue and 50th Street, across from the third Madison Square Garden. The restaurant's name was later changed to Jack Dempsey's Broadway Restaurant when it relocated to Times Square on Broadway between 49th and 50th Streets.
Jack Dempsey's Broadway Restaurant was located in the Brill Building's first floor on Broadway. It features in several episodes of the Broadway themed NBC musical drama Smash. Stephin Merritt makes reference to the Brill Building on the Magnetic Fields' "Epitaph For My Heart" from their 1999 release 69 Love Songs.
Chef Melissa Rodriguez has unveiled Crane Club in Chelsea's historic 85 Tenth Avenue building, transforming one of New York's most architecturally significant restaurant spaces—formerly home to ...
An exclusive tour and sit-down with the Garden’s new executive chef earlier revealed there are plenty of changes – and not just on the menu – at the hotel owned by Beanie Babies billionaire ...
The restaurant, on the ground floor of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, a building designed by McKim, Mead & White, has double-height ceilings, but as at all of Carmellini’s restaurants, there is nothing ...
In 1933, Hannah and her new husband Jack Dempsey appeared together in a featured Pathé newsreel. In 1935, Hannah's husband Jack Dempsey [8] opened his famous Broadway restaurant & bar Jack Dempsey's Broadway Restaurant, which became an institution. In 1937, Hannah was cast in the Harold Arlen and E. Y. Harburg musical Hooray for What!
The Studebaker Building was designed by James Brown Lord, who also designed Delmonico's Restaurant at 44th Street and Fifth Avenue (Manhattan).The exterior was composed of red brick and terra cotta with the employment of the anthemion motif in a repeated manner in the terra cotta as well as in the large projecting cornice at the roof level. [9]