Elaine's
Elaine's | |
---|---|
Restaurant information | |
Established | 1963 |
Closed | 2011 |
City | New York City |
County | Manhattan |
State | New York |
Postal/ZIP Code | 10128 |
Country | United States |
Elaine's was a bar and restaurant in New York City that existed from 1963 to 2011. It was frequented by many celebrities, especially actors and authors. It was established, owned by and named after Elaine Kaufman, who was indelibly associated with the restaurant; Elaine's shut down several months after Kaufman died.[1]
Elaine's was located on the Upper East Side, near the corner of 2nd Avenue and East 88th Street in Manhattan.
History[]
Established in 1963,[2] Elaine's is famed both for its late chain-smoking namesake and proprietress Elaine Kaufman, who ran the restaurant for over four decades, as well as numerous writers and other prominent New Yorkers, including Nelson W. Aldrich Jr., Woody Allen, Noel Behn, Candace Bushnell, William J. Bratton, Paul Desmond, Jared Faber, Mia Farrow, Clay Felker, Helen Frankenthaler, Joseph Heller, Peter Maas, Norman Mailer, Robert Motherwell, George Plimpton, Mario Puzo, Sally Quinn, Daniel Simone, Mark Simone, Gay Talese, Tom Wolfe. Bobby Zarem, and Sidney Zion, who had all been regulars over the years.
Other visitors to the establishment included Leonard Bernstein, Michael Caine, Kirk Douglas, Clint Eastwood, Mick Jagger, Willie Nelson, Don Rickles, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, New Jersey attorney Arthur Maurello (who later relocated to South Dakota) and his wife Irene, Luciano Pavarotti, Eli Wallach and Elaine Stritch, who served as bartender in 1964.
The restaurant was noted for its Oscar night, where celebrities and visiting Hollywood stars congregated to watch the Academy Awards ceremony.
Kaufman had a reputation for not mincing words, for booting less-favored customers to seat new arrivals and for forbidding hamburgers to be served in Elaine's. [1] She was once arrested after a physical altercation with a visiting Texan. Elaine also once had a fist fight with the actress Tara Tyson and then claimed that the thespian had set her ablaze with a lit cigarette.[3] She also once chased away the notorious paparazzo Ron Galella by hurling two garbage can lids at him and exclaiming, "Beat it, creep... you're bothering my customers".[4]
In culture[]
Billy Joel immortalized the establishment in his song "Big Shot" (1978), with the lyrics, "They were all impressed with your Halston dress and the people that you knew at Elaine's".[1]
The opening dinner scene from Woody Allen's Manhattan (1979) was filmed at the restaurant, as was a scene from his later work Celebrity (1998). There is a short sequence in the film Morning Glory (2010) of Elaine Kaufman herself at the bar of Elaine's (where the producer played by Rachel McAdams is trying to track down the television host played by Harrison Ford, and Elaine relates at what time he left). In the hit comedy Big Business (1988), to divert a mismatched set of twins (played by Bette Midler and Lily Tomlin) from upsetting an important shareholder vote, Midler's alter-ego character offers to take them to Elaine's.
In the 2018 American television miniseries The Looming Tower, the main character John O'Neill, played by Jeff Daniels, is frequently seen at Elaine's. The character of Elaine is played by actress Barbara Rosenblat in episodes 1 and 6.
On May 10, 2014, The Moth Radio Hour featured old pre-recorded monologues about experiences they'd had at Elaine's by George Plimpton (featuring his introducing Jerry Spinelli to writers, editors, and director Woody Allen at Elaine's, two months before Houghton Mifflin published Spinelli's first book) and Plimpton's friend José Torres (who recounted an anecdote he'd shared at Elaine's, about conquering his fear the first time he faced a white man in the boxing ring).[5]
In his autobiography Party of One: A Memoir in 21 Songs, television personality and former MTV video jockey (VJ) Dave Holmes stated that he lived in an apartment above Elaine's when he moved to New York City in 1994.[6]
Until its closing, Elaine's was a frequent dinner spot in the Stuart Woods's novel series featuring Stone Barrington, wherein during that time the author always began the first paragraph with "Elaine's. Late".[7]
The late bar and restaurant is the subject of A.E. Hotchner's 2013 volume "Everybody's Coming to Elaines: Forty Years of Movie Stars, All-Stars, Literary Lions, Financial Scions, Top Cops, Politicians, and Power Brokers at the Legendary Hot Spot".[8]
Elaine's was a favorite meeting and dining spot for Stone Barrington and Dino Bacchetti in the Stone Barrington series written by Stuart Woods.
Smoking ban[]
In 2003, New York City banned smoking in restaurants. Kaufman claimed to have quit smoking several years earlier but was unhappy about her customers' being forced to forgo tobacco at their seats.[9]
Closing[]
Elaine Kaufman died from Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and pulmonary hypertension on December 3, 2010, aged 81.[1] Kaufman willed the establishment to longtime manager Diane Becker. Becker shut down the restaurant soon thereafter; it closed on May 26, 2011. Becker later explained her reason for closing the restaurant: "The truth is, there is no Elaine’s without Elaine...the business is just not there without Elaine."[10]
Legacy[]
In late 2013, The Writing Room (now closed), owned by Michael and Susy Glick, proprietors of the nearby boîte, Parlor Steak & Fish (now closed) and BB&R (Blonde, Brunette and a Redhead - also closed), opened its doors in Elaine's old space, featuring the prior restaurant's original famed canopy.[11]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ a b c d Enid Nemy (December 3, 2010). "Elaine Kaufman, Who Fed the Famous, Dies at 81". The New York Times. Retrieved December 3, 2010.
Elaine's, in fact, was a scene, a noisy restaurant and bar celebrated as a celebrity hangout that all but shouted "New York" to the rest of the country, if not the world. For Billy Joel, in his 1979 hit "Big Shot", the very name connoted the uptown in-crowd. ("They were all impressed with your Halston dress/And the people that you knew at Elaine’s.") And in the new movie Morning Glory with Harrison Ford, Diane Keaton and Rachel McAdams, the indomitable Ms. Kaufman herself makes a cameo appearance.
- ^ Heilpern, John (June 2009). "Dining (and Duking) with Elaine". Vanity Fair. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
- ^ Ross, Barbara (March 21, 2013). "Actress Locks 25m Mansion Sale". NY Daily News. Retrieved April 10, 2013.
- ^ Alex Rees. "From the Archives: Elaine Kaufman Versus Celebrity Photog Ron Galella". NYMag. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
- ^ The Moth Radio Hour. WNYC. May 10, 2014.
- ^ Party of One: A Memoir in 21 Songs. Penguin Random House. 2017.
- ^ See, for example, Woods, Stuart. Shoot Him If He Runs. G.P. Putnam's Sons.
- ^ Hotchner, A. E. (23 April 2013). Everyone Comes to Elaine's: Forty Years of Movie Stars, All-Stars, Literary Lions, Financial Scions, Top Cops, Politicians, and Power Brokers at the Legendary Hot Spot. ISBN 9780062004253.
- ^ Khoury, Peter. "Elaine's; A Defiant Last Puff". Retrieved 2018-07-22.
- ^ kludt, Amanda (May 2011). "Elaine's to Close Six Months After Founder's Death". Retrieved October 10, 2011.
- ^ "Reviving Elaine's Without Elaine". New York Times. December 8, 2013.
External links[]
Coordinates: 40°46′45″N 73°57′03″W / 40.77918°N 73.95077°W
- Defunct restaurants in New York City
- Restaurants established in 1963
- Restaurants disestablished in 2011
- 1963 establishments in New York City
- 2011 disestablishments in New York (state)