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In April 2004, Vanity Fair included Tepperberg, Strauss and Barish in the magazine's "Kings and Queens of Clubs" article, featuring the major nightlife impresarios of New York at the time. [9] Soon thereafter, Tepperberg and Strauss partnered with Tao founders Marc Packer and Rich Wolf to open TAO at The Venetian Las Vegas and added partner Lou ...
The River Café is a restaurant located on a former coffee barge in the East River under the Brooklyn Bridge.It has offered its own ferry service from Wall Street.Opened in 1977 by Michael O'Keeffe, who has also owned several other New York City restaurants, it was one of the first fine dining restaurants in the city to promote locally sourced and organic food, American cuisine, and high-end ...
Critics from The New York Times have given The Odeon a full review in 1980, [16] 1986, [17] 1989, [18] and 2016. [2] Moira Hodgson, the first critic to review the restaurant for The New York Times, in 1980, praised chef Patrick Clark's cooking and the service. [16] Hodgson also noted the clientele, referring to them as "pillars of the art world ...
Café des Artistes was a fine restaurant at 1 West 67th Street in Manhattan. New York City. It was owned by George Lang, who closed the restaurant in early August 2009 and announced later that month that the restaurant would remain closed permanently. [1] His wife, Jenifer Lang, had been the managing director of the restaurant since 1990. [2]
Balthazar is a French brasserie restaurant located at 80 Spring Street (between Broadway and Crosby Street) in SoHo in Manhattan, in New York City. [4] It opened on April 21, 1997, and is owned by British-born restaurateur Keith McNally.
Caffe Cino was an Off-Off-Broadway theater founded in 1958 by Joe Cino.The West Village coffeehouse, located at 31 Cornelia Street, was initially conceived as a venue for poetry, folk music, and visual art exhibitions.
Caffe Reggio, September 2015. Caffe Reggio is a New York City coffeehouse first opened in 1927 at 119 Macdougal Street in the heart of Manhattan's Greenwich Village.. Italian cappuccino was introduced in America by the founder of Caffe Reggio, Domenico Parisi, in the early 1920s. [1]
The San Remo Cafe was a bar at 93 MacDougal Street at the corner of Bleecker Street in the New York City neighborhood of Greenwich Village.It was a hangout for Bohemians and writers such as James Agee, W. H. Auden, Tennessee Williams, James Baldwin, William S. Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Miles Davis, Allen Ginsberg, Billy Name, Frank O'Hara, Jack Kerouac, Jackson Pollock, William Styron, Dylan ...