IN New York - June-July 2019

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NEW YORK CHATSWORTH HOUSE FIVE CENTURIES OF GREAT ART AT SOTHEBY’S MUST-VISIT TAKE PRIDE IN THESE HISTORIC LGBTQ SITES

Hugh Jackman Why New Yorkers Love This Aussie

JUNE 15–JULY 15, 2019 INNEWYORK.COM




JUNE-JULY 2019 CONTENT

10 departments 6

SKYLINE Big happenings around town

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FLAVORS OF THE MONTH Hot trends in dining

10 IN STORE Shopping for summer necessities

11 OUT & ABOUT Events around the city with our favorite hotel people

features 12

NEW YORKERS LOVE HUGH JACKMAN

The superstar from Down Under makes himself at home in the Big Apple.

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CHATSWORTH HOUSE CROSSES THE POND

Sotheby’s New York hosts an exhibit of treasures from an English stately home. No passport required.

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PRIDE TRIPS

On the Cover What’s the real story behind Hugh Jackman’s second Tony Award? See p. 12.

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Tour NYC’s historic LGBTQ sites on the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots.

listings 20

ENTERTAINMENT

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DINING+DRINKING

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SHOPS+SERVICES

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MUSEUMS+ATTRACTIONS

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GALLERIES+ANTIQUES

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TRANSPORTATION+TOURS

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information NYC STREET MAP SNEAK PEEK: Special dates of note in late July and early August

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Harry Haun, Brian Scott Lipton, Joni Sweet, Terry Trucco



JULY

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HOT HAPPENINGS AROUND TOWN

It’s been six years since her last tour but “Jenny from the block”— aka Jennifer Lopez—is back on the road. And the Bronx-born diva is ready to party in honor of her 50th birthday when she brings her “It’s My Party: The Live Celebration” to Madison Square Garden. Expect glitz, glamour, costumes galore, galvanic dance moves and a playlist of new and greatest hits. | msg.com/madison-square-garden, also July 13

IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

PHOTOS: JENNIFER LOPEZ PERFORMING ON THE NBC TODAY SHOW, MAY 6, 2019, LEV RADIN/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; MARTA MINUJÍN, “THE WOMAN’S HEAD,” FROM “LA MENESUNDA,” 1965 (DETAIL). INSTALLATION VIEW: “LA MENESUNDA SEGÚN MARTA MINUJÍN (LA MENESUNDA ACCORDING TO MARTA MINUJÍN),” MUSEO DE ARTE MODERNO DE BUENOS AIRES, 2015, PHOTO: AGUSTINA VIZCARRA, COURTESY MUSEO DE ARTE MODERNO DE BUENOS AIRES; SABRINA IMAMURA IN “BROADWAY BARES: TAKE OFF,” ANDREW ECCLES

June-July skyline


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(THRU SEPT. 29) The New Museum devotes its third floor to the U.S. premiere of Argentinean artist Marta Minujín’s monumental environment, “La Menesunda.” newmuseum.org

JULY

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(THRU JUNE 29) Pam Tanowitz’s alfresco site-specific dance is a highlight of the River to River Festival in Lower Manhattan. lmcc.net/ river-to-river

JUNE

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JUNE

PHOTOS: CHINA SAILGP TEAM SKIPPERED BY PHIL ROBERTSON. RACE DAY 2 EVENT 2 SEASON 1 SAILGP, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, MAY 5, 2019, SAM GREENFIELD FOR SAILGP, ©SAILGP; PAM TANOWITZ’S “TIME IS FOREVER DIVIDING ITSELF TOWARD INNUMERABLE FUTURES,” CORY WEAVER, COURTESY THE FISHER CENTER AT BARD COLLEGE; MACY’S 4TH OF JULY FIREWORKS, KENT MILLER STUDIOS–MACY’S, INC.

JUNE

Dancers strip to raise money for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS in the annual burlesque show at the Hammerstein Ballroom. This year’s theme is travelrelated and a pun— “Broadway Bares: Take Off.” broadway cares.org

Nobody does it better: Macy’s 4th of July Fireworks spectacle—the largest celebration of independence in the nation—explodes over the city. macys.com/ social/fireworks

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(ALSO JUNE 22) SailGP comes to NYC for the first time when teams from the U.S., Australia, France, Great Britain, Japan and China race F50 catamarans on the Hudson River. sailgp.com INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

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flavors of the month

WHAT’S TRENDING ON THE FOODIE SCENE by Francis Lewis

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1. Tuna tartare japonais at La Goulue 2. Utsav’s dining room 3. Breakfast at Spanish Diner 4. Grand Central Oyster Bar & Restaurant

4 Breakfast is the most important meal of the day, right? So, if you’re heading to Hudson Yards for some midmorning shopping or contemplating a stroll on the nearby High Line, Chef José Andrés’ egg-centric breakfast menu at Spanish Diner at Mercado Little Spain (10 Hudson Yards, 646.495.1242) will stoke your furnace. I recommend arroz a la cubana: two fried eggs, three pork sausage links, sautéed white rice and tomato sauce. The waiter encouraged me to slice, dice and mix everything together, as a Spaniard would. Delicious. Another server, this time at Grand Central Oyster Bar & Restaurant (Grand Central Terminal, lower level, 212.490.6650), solved my lunchtime dilemma the other day. I wanted a chowder with my crabmeat salad sandwich. But which one: Manhattan or

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IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

New England? “Why not both?” she said. A bowl containing the yin and yang of chowders soon appeared: half red and spicy, half white and creamy. The lesson learned? New York waiters and waitresses know their stuff. Around four every afternoon, I reach for a cup of tea or take myself to a restaurant with an off-hours menu, like French bistro La Goulue (29 E. 61st St., 212.988.8169), where tuna tartare japonais (hello, wasabi sauce) with fries sets me up for the evening. I’m a great believer in post-theater dining, and Utsav (1185 Sixth Ave., enter on W. 46th St., 212.575.2525) is one of my go-to restaurants after a show. The ambience is regal, the service caring. I feel like a maharaja when I dine on such exotic Indian specialties as tandoori broccoli, Goa-style shrimp and lamb vindaloo.

PHOTOS: TUNA TARTARE JAPONAIS AT LA GOULUE, COURTESY LA GOULUE; DINING ROOM AT UTSAV, COURTESY UTSAV; HUEVOS ESTRELLADOS, HUEVOS A LA CUBANA AND PLATO COMBINADO, COURTESY MERCADO LITTLE SPAIN; GRAND CENTRAL OYSTER BAR & RESTAURANT, EVAN SUNG

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BATHING BEAUTIES

SUN FUN by Joni Sweet

SUMMER SPECTACLES Nothing feels more like summer than a fresh pair of shades. Here are four of the hottest places to find the coolest sunglasses in New York.

Everything

Victorinox But Water

There’s a swimsuit out there to flatter women of every shape and size, but finding the perfect one can make even the most enthusiastic shoppers feel defeated. Enter Everything But Water. The store is staffed by trained fit experts, who take the frustration out of shopping for a bathing suit. Considering your body type and style preferences, they’ll curate bikinis and one-pieces from all the top brands—think: Mara Hoffman, Onia, Robin Piccone, Reset Priority (right) and L*Space—for you to try on in the store’s spacious, beachy dressing rooms. The store’s unhurried atmosphere allows you to actually take the time you need to find a swimsuit that boosts your confidence—and a few cool accessories (like sun hats, sarongs and sandals) to complete your look. | 1060 Madison Ave., 212.249.4052

MOSCOT One look at MOSCOT’s cult-followed eyewear, and you’d never guess the brand started from a humble pushcart on the Lower East Side back in 1899. The unisex Lemtosh-Mac sunglasses are the brand’s gold standard, with handcrafted frames made of metal and Italian acetate. 108 Orchard St., 212.477.3796

Saturdays NYC

SURF’S UP! What guy doesn’t want to look like a surfer in swim trunks? Even if you’ve never ridden a wave, you can look like you belong on a board after a shopping trip to Saturdays NYC. The men’s lifestyle brand’s swim shorts stand out at the beach with vivid prints of psychedelic monstera leaves, dreamy lotus blossoms and classic palms. Shoppers can also choose from sportier styles, like solid-color drawstring trunks or nautical-inspired striped board shorts. Toss on one of Saturdays’ graphic tees, twill caps and a pair of leather slides, and you’ll instantly exude that Downtown-trendy meets Californiadreamin’ vibe that looks cool from coast to coast. | 31 Crosby St., 212.966.7875

Illesteva For sunglasses that make a statement, look no further than Illesteva. The NYC-based brand gives classic frames a boost by experimenting with shapes and materials. Case in point: a pair of Isabella sunglasses, featuring translucent acetate and cat-eye frames with flicked edges for extra flair. 49 Prince St., 212.925.2664 SEE If you fall in love with a pair of shades from SEE, don’t wait to take them home—the brand only produces 80–100 pairs of each color of each style. The upside is that the Brooklyn store always has fun new options to build your collection. 156 Bedford Ave., Williamsburg, Brooklyn, 347.599.1155 MoMA Design Store Vue Smart Glasses (below), launched exclusively at this store, live up to their name. Wearers on the go can listen to music, make calls and follow GPS directions while protecting their eyes from harmful rays. The unisex frames can be customized with prescription or tinted lenses. 44 W. 53rd St., 212.767.1050

MoMA DESIGN STORE

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IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

PHOTOS: RESET PRIORITY’S “PURE,” COURTESY EVERYTHING BUT WATER; TIMOTHY HYPER MONSTERA SWIM SHORT AND TIMOTHY PEAK PALM SWIM SHORT, COURTESY SATURDAYS NYC; VUE SMART GLASSES, COURTESY MOMA DESIGN STORE

in store


out & about CONCIERGES MIXED & MINGLED AT SEVERAL POSH EVENTS AROUND NEW YORK CITY

T-MOBILE hosted concierges at a reception in the wireless service’s Times Square location, where they learned about products and the T-Mobile Concierge Incentive Program.

Left to right: Angie Makishi, AKA Times Square; Travis Bratten, The Mercer; Robbi Moss, Hotel Edison Times Square.

Left to right: Denise Bethune-Mignott, The Phillips Club; Shelley Morrell, Hilton Grand Vacations; Natalia Nunez, Hilton Grand Vacations; Betsy Alvarado, Hilton Grand Vacations.

TUDOR CITY STEAKHOUSE entertained concierges and their guests at a light reception before they saw the Off-Broadway comedy hit, “The Play That Goes Wrong.”

Above: Cynthia Stepien, WAC Travel, and guest.

SEAMORE’S served cocktails and fan-favorite appetizers to concierges and their guests, who then attended the Museum of Jewish Heritage’s new exhibition, “Auschwitz. Not Long Ago. Not Far Away.”

Above: Victoria Nadirova, The Surrey; Victor Caguindagan, Lotte New York Palace. Right: Erik Alvarado, The Sohotel. Below, from left to right: Nellie Salas, retired NYCAHC member; Kevin Edmonds, Omni Berkshire Place Hotel; Mary Murphy, Omni Berkshire Place Hotel.

Below, from left to right: Deniz Altan, NH Jolly Madison Towers Hotel; guest of Deniz Altan; guest of Fernando Bardina; Fernando Bardina, Superior Ink.

INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

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NEW YORKERS LOVE HUGH JACKMAN. HERE’S WHY.

PHOTO : TKKTK

BY HARRY HAUN

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IN NEW YORK | MAY-JUNE 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM


PHOTOS: HUGH JACKMAN ONSTAGE AT THE 2014 GLOBAL CITIZEN FESTIVAL IN CENTRAL PARK ON SEPT. 27, 2014, DEBBY WONG/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; HUGH JACKMAN DANCING WITH SUTTON FOSTER AT THE 2014 TONY AWARDS AT RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL, HEATHER WINES/CBS, ©2014, VIA GETTY IMAGES

LET’S SET ASIDE FOR A SECOND the hot fact that People magazine voted him “Sexiest Man Alive” for 2008 and has numbered him among the 50 most beautiful people on Planet Earth for five years running. That’s just charm, charisma and good genes. And let’s not place undue importance on the fact that he wins fans on two radically different entertainment fronts in two radically different disguises. In movies, he’s Wolverine, an “X-Men” spin-off, meting out rough justice with skeleton and claws of steel. On Broadway and other stages, he’s a reigning musical talent. There are plenty of other reasons why New Yorkers love Hugh Jackman. He brings an honesty and reality to his work—and life— that not only invites belief, but also makes you feel he’s one of us, which he actually is in more ways than one. Let me count the ways. The son of an English couple who immigrated to Australia, he searched the world over for a place he could call his own—a home—and finally found it in NYC’s West Village in a residential apartment building. It’s a place fit for a prince, let alone a Jackman. So, New Yorkers should be lining up like pod people to welcome their adopted hometown boy when his world-tour revue “The Man. The Music. The Show.” stops at Madison Square Garden on June 28 and 29. His musical selections, he jests, “are really self-indulgent. I do my favorite songs. You all have to sit through it.” Translation: That would be ditties from “Les Misérables” (which got him an Oscar nomination), “Oklahoma!” (which got him an Olivier nomination) and “The Boy From Oz” (which got him the Tony Award, period)—plus shows where he wasn’t cast. Hugh’s secret for maintaining an intimate communication with the audience in Madison Square Garden is simple. “Whether it’s 300 people, 3,000 or 13,000, it has to feel like a celebration, and I have to connect with them. The first thing I do when I walk out onstage is to look into my wife’s eyes, and that grounds me.” He met his one and only, actress Deborra-Lee Furness, doing an Australian TV series straight out of drama school, and they married in 1996. Early in the marriage, Deborra-Lee suffered miscarriages, and the couple opted to adopt. Oscar is 19, and Ava is 13, and both are spending their summer on dad’s whirlwind world tour. The Jackmans make quite a decorative domestic picture, walking their pooches in the Village and picking up after them. It’s a his-and-hers tour of duty: Hugh is in charge of Dali, a French bulldog; Deborra-Lee handles the poodlemix, Allegra. Utterly without pretension, Hugh showed up on Kelly Ripa’s talk show in 2017 with a Band-Aid on his nose following surgery to remove a basal cell carcinoma. Whenever there are problems in Paradise, Hugh, a master of social media, gets the jump on gossips by going directly to his mil-

lions of followers on Instagram, Twitter and TV to tell them the truth. He now strongly advocates sunscreen to help ward off skin cancer. Similarly, he suggests that people wear helmets while biking around the city like a bat out of hell, as he does. When not attending a Broadway show (he was seen last December at the opening night of “To Kill a Mockingbird”) or performing in one (he’s due back in the fall of 2020 as Meredith Willson’s “The Music Man”), Hugh is co-founder with Barry and David Steingard of Laughing Man Coffee, which has two tiny walk-in shops in TriBeCa and Battery Park City. He contributes 100 percent of his profits to the Laughing Man Foundation, which he created to aid coffee farmers in developing countries. He even sweats generously, and therein hangs the tale of his second Tony Award. While performing “Hugh Jackman, Back on Broadway” in 2011, he would finish the show in a wringing wet T-shirt that he auctioned off to the audience to raise funds for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. The final total he raised—$1,789,580—passed the previous titleholder—$1,568,833—which he and Daniel Craig set during their run in “A Steady Rain” in 2009. In gratitude, the Tony folks rewarded these twin triumphs of perspiration with an honorary Tony, the only known incident of someone winning a prize for the actual sweat of his brow. A humbled, dirt-kicking Hugh kicked the honor right back to Broadway. “I feel that whatever I’ve given philanthropically to the community,” he said, ”I’ve received back from them tenfold.” All that, and he’s modest, too.

Hugh Jackman dances with Sutton Foster at the 2014 Tony Awards. Fast forward to September 2020 when they co-star in the Broadway revival of “The Music Man.” IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

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Chatsworth House Crosses the Pond This page: Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, England. Opposite page: The current Duke and Duchess of Devonshire.


Treasures from the English stately home spend the summer at Sotheby’s New York

PHOTOS: CHATSWORTH HOUSE EXTERIOR, ©CHATSWORTH HOUSE TRUST; PHOTO PORTRAIT OF THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE, SIMON BRODHEAD, ©CHATSWORTH HOUSE TRUST

By Terry Trucco

THE SUMMER’S MOST talked about art exhibition comes with a twist: It isn’t at a museum or an art gallery. “Treasures From Chatsworth: The Exhibition,” a knockout presentation of 45 masterworks from the storied English stately home Chatsworth House, unfurls at auction house Sotheby’s New York (1334 York Ave., 212.606.7000) from June 28 to Sept. 18. You can’t bid on anything, try as you might. But admission is free. Think of the show as 500 years of contemporary art. Because, yes, many of the works on view by the likes of Leonardo da Vinci, Rembrandt van Rijn, Canaletto and Lucian Freud were newly created when members of the Cavendish family snapped them up for the big house in Derbyshire, seat of the Duke of Devonshire. Duke or no duke, Chatsworth is no ordinary homestead. With more than 125 rooms, gardens laid out by Capability Brown and a luxuriant 500-year history, Chatsworth House is everything Downtown Abbey aspired to be, including real. Among the glittering who’s who of Chatsworth residents are IN NEW YORK | MAY-JUNE 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

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CHAPTER ONE: THE HOUSE In her 2010 memoir “Wait for Me!,” Duchess Deborah observed that Chatsworth’s original 16th-century house had the good fortune to be rebuilt between 1686 and 1707, “a time when it was impossible to invent anything ugly.” With a facade of local stone and a design that distilled the best of golden-age English architecture, the house is a seamless fit with the landscape. The 17th-century author Daniel Defoe declared it “the most beautiful place in the world.” Chatsworth House is undeniably one of a kind. Not only is it well-stocked with lavishly appointed sitting rooms, dining rooms, bedrooms, libraries and other functional spaces, Chatsworth also boasts state rooms: imposing, art-filled backdrops designed as eye-catching pass-throughs, built on the off chance that King William and Queen Mary might stop by. (They never did.) As Duchess Deborah saw it, the house’s charm derived From top: Lucian Freud’s unconventional commissioned portrait of Deborah, Duchess of Devonshire; the tiara from the sevenpiece set of Victorian jewelry known as the Devonshire Parure; Tony Award nominee David Korins’ rendering of an immersive exhibition gallery at Sotheby’s New York.

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IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

PHOTOS: LUCIAN FREUD, “WOMAN IN A WHITE SHIRT,” ©DEVONSHIRE COLLECTION. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF CHATSWORTH SETTLEMENT TRUSTEES; TIARA FROM THE DEVONSHIRE PARURE, ©DEVONSHIRE COLLECTION. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF CHATSWORTH SETTLEMENT TRUSTEES; EXHIBITION DESIGN RENDERING, COURTESY DAVID KORINS

Mary, Queen of Scots and John F. Kennedy’s sister Kathleen “Kick” Kennedy, whose husband, heir to the estate, was killed during World War II. Deborah Cavendish (1920– 2014), wife of the 11th duke, was one of the six fabled Mitford sisters who wafted through English literature, politics and high society. Scottish supermodel Stella Tennant is the niece of the current duke and duchess. To salute Chatsworth’s summer holiday in Manhattan, we’ve compiled the Chatsworth Chronicles. Hum a few bars of “Jerusalem” (or the Beatles) to get in the mood, and read on.


PHOTOS: THE PEERESS ROBE, ©DEVONSHIRE COLLECTION. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF CHATSWORTH SETTLEMENT TRUSTEES; ANTHONY VAN DYCK, “PORTRAIT OF JAN SNELLECK,” ©DEVONSHIRE COLLECTION. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF CHATSWORTH SETTLEMENT TRUSTEES; RAFFAELE MONTI, “THE VEILED VESTAL,” ©DEVONSHIRE COLLECTION. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF CHATSWORTH SETTLEMENT TRUSTEES

from the undirected way it grew over the centuries, with a congenial jumble of styles and periods tossed together by generations of acquisitive inhabitants. “You find a hideous thing next to something beautiful,” she wrote. “[Yet] each generation of Cavendishes had an unerring talent for employing the best people to build, to decorate, to garden and to buy.” Historic homes, of course, reside in the real world. By 1950, social change, staggering estate taxes and bygone extravagances had come home to roost, threatening Chatsworth’s future. Following massive sales of land and art, a charitable trust was established, turning the house and surrounding parklands into a magnificent museum open to the public. But the house is still home to the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, who oversee the property and pay rent for their rooms. “Chatsworth was built to show off the people who lived there, and now the house shows off itself,” says Peregrine Cavendish, the 12th and current duke. CHAPTER TWO: THE ART The breadth of Chatsworth’s holdings, considered one of Europe’s finest art collections, is, well, breathtaking, from ancient Egyptian steles to a 21st-century computer portrait by artist Michael Craig-Martin. Because the collection was assembled by a family and not a city or a nation, it’s been shaped—and, at its best, enriched—by the personal tastes and quirks of its owners, characteristics inherent in exhibition objects like the Devonshire Parure, a spectacular sevenpiece suite of High Victorian jewelry worn by the 6th duke’s niece at the coronation of Tsar Alexander II in 1856, and a ruby red Peeress Robe sported by Duchess Deborah at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. Highlighting the show are stellar examples of Old Master drawings and ancestral portraits, two of the collection’s aesthetic superpowers. Leonardo da Vinci’s mythological pen, ink and wash drawing “Leda and the Swan” was created while the artist was at work on the “Mona Lisa,” circa 1506. Rendered a century and change later, Anthony van Dyck’s

From left: The red velvet Peeress Gown worn by Duchess Deborah at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II; Anthony van Dyck’s portrait drawing of artist, draughtsman and collector Jan Snelleck; Raffaele Monti’s marble sculpture “The Veiled Vestal,” on display in the United States for the first time.

striking drawing “Portrait of Jan Snelleck” is a fine example of how—and why—the influential Flemish artist was a revolutionary portraitist. For a seismically different approach to portraiture, there’s “Woman in a White Shirt” (1958–60), Lucian Freud’s psychologically charged rendering of Duchess Deborah. Naturalistic and raw, the painting shocked early audiences and still unnerves viewers. Peregrine Cavendish has called the picture “the most beautiful thing at Chatsworth, and not just because it is of my mother.” Duchess Deborah, in turn, recounted an exchange between her husband and a local visitor shortly after the painting went on view. “Who is that woman?” the visitor asked. “It’s my wife,” said the duke. “Well, thank God it’s not mine,” came the reply. CHAPTER THREE: THE SETTING Besides hosting the Chatsworth show, Sotheby’s is celebrating its 275th anniversary, an excellent reason for a serious revamp of the former cigar factory that’s been its New York home since 1982. Designed by Shohei Shigematsu of OMA, the architectural firm founded by Rem Koolhaas, the new exhibition space is appropriately Chatsworthesque in scale, reimagined with 40 airy galleries of varying size that fill the building’s first four floors. An inviting summer retreat, in other words, for the 45 notable visitors from England. The objects are showcased in a witty installation featuring blown-up details from Chatsworth—ball-and-claw chair feet, grazing sheep, you get the idea. The installation is the brainchild of creative director David Korins, who’s known for his set designs for “Hamilton,” “Dear Evan Hansen” and the 2019 Academy Awards, among other projects. Welcome, then, to the show with everything. IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

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PRIDE

TRIPS NYC’s must-visit LGBTQ sites By Brian Scott Lipton

HISTORY IS SOMETIMES made through the most unexpected of events. In the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, New York City police made a raid on the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in the city’s West Village area—a fairly routine occurrence that LGBTQ patrons were faced with on a daily basis in their desire to spend evenings among their own people. But for the first time, the bar’s patrons not only fought back, but the incident led to days of protests outside the bar, an event which is now considered the first big step in the so-called “Pride” movement. Unsurprisingly, New York City commemorates the 50th anniversary of this landmark event as the sponsor of “World Pride NYC/Stonewall 50,” a celebration of the LGBTQ community that includes a special “Opening Ceremony” on June 26 at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, featuring such entertainers as Whoopi Goldberg, Cyndi Lauper and Chaka Khan, and the annual NYC Pride March and PrideFest, held in Lower Manhattan on June 30. However, whether or not you’re in town those days, there are other less crowded ways to mark this historic moment by visiting some special sites and places that are reminders of the people who fought not only in 1969, but both before and afterward, to further the cause of LGBTQ rights. STONEWALL INN/ STONEWALL NATIONAL MONUMENT The Stonewall Inn (53 Christopher St.), one of Manhattan’s few remaining gay bars, still operates much as it did 50 years ago, although its clientele is far more diverse. (Indeed, anyone can feel comfortable stopping in for a drink or even a Diet Coke.) More

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importantly, the bar is now part of the Stonewall National Monument, which notably includes Christopher Park, just outside its doors, where one can find George Segal’s “Gay Liberation” sculpture—unveiled in 1992—which features two standing men and two seated women in natural poses. PLAYWRIGHTS’ SIDEWALK AT THE LUCILLE LORTEL THEATRE Just down the street from the Stonewall Inn is the Lucille Lortel Theatre (121 Christopher St.), one of Off-Broadway’s most notable showplaces for new work and revivals by both established and up-and-coming playwrights. Just as important, though, is what’s right outside the theater’s front doors: the Playwrights’ Sidewalk, where built-in stars commemorate the names of dozens of this country’s scribes, including such major figures in the LGBTQ community as Tony Kushner, Terrence McNally, Larry Kramer, Edward Albee, Charles Busch and Mart Crowley (whose celebrated preStonewall play “The Boys in the Band” received a Tony Award-nominated revival on Broadway in 2018). NYC AIDS MEMORIAL / THE CENTER The aftermath of gay liberation led to a period of sexual freedom previously unenjoyed by many members of the LGBTQ community—too many of whom eventually fell prey to the deadly disease of AIDS. Their memories can be honored by a visit to the NYC AIDS Memorial (200-218 W. 12th St.), which features a triangular steel canopy, a central granite water fountain and a series of benches per-

PHOTOS: DIANA DAVIES, “STONEWALL INN,” 1969, NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, MANUSCRIPTS AND ARCHIVES DIVISION; GEORGE SEGAL, “GAY LIBERATION,” MICHELE VACCHIANO/SUTTERSTOCK.COM; SIGNED ALBUM COVER, “JUDY AT CARNEGIE HALL,” APRIL 23, 1961, ©CARNEGIE HALL ARCHIVES

1 The Stonewall Inn gay bar, photographed by Diana Davies in 1969. 2 George Segal’s “Gay Liberation” sculpture, part of the Stonewall National Monument in the West Village. 3 The live recording of gay icon Judy Garland’s historic 1961 concert at Carnegie Hall continues to sell and stream well. 4 A first edition of Walt Whitman’s “Leaves of Grass.” 5 Diana Davies’ 1970 photo of the Gay Liberation Front is in an exhibition at the New York Public Library. 6 Lesbian sculptor Emma Stebbins’ “Angel of the Waters” is a beloved landmark in Central Park.


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PHOTOS: WALT WHITMAN, “LEAVES OF GRASS,” FIRST EDITION, BROOKLYN: ROME BROS., 1855, RARE BOOKS DIVISION, THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, ASTOR, LENOX AND TILDEN FOUNDATIONS; DIANA DAVIES, “GAY LIBERATION FRONT MARCHES ON TIMES SQUARE, NEW YORK, 1970,” NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, MANUSCRIPTS AND ARCHIVES DIVISION; EMMA STEBBINS, “ANGEL OF THE WATERS” ATOP THE BETHESDA FOUNTAIN IN CENTRAL PARK, TANARCH/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

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fect for quiet contemplation. Engraved in the pavement are lines from Walt Whitman’s poem “Song of Myself,” selected and arranged by artist Jenny Holzer. The AIDS Memorial is also located just a stone’s throw away from The Center (208 W. 13th St.), a building that is a virtual second home for much of NYC’s LGBTQ community, offering a near-endless series of events, classes, and educational and community resources. NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY’S STEPHEN A. SCHWARZMAN BUILDING The main branch of the New York Public Library (Fifth Ave., between 40th and 42nd sts.), a Beaux Arts masterpiece “guarded” by the stone lions Patience and Fortitude, is an architectural wonder and should be visited by every tourist and resident. But a stop there is particularly timely at this moment, due to two special exhibits. “Love & Resistance: Stonewall 50,” located along the hallways of the library’s third floor, serves up a fascinating assortment of photographs and printed material from the early 1960s and beyond which provide a rarely seen glimpse into the world of political activism and LGBTQ culture. Downstairs, on the main floor, visitors can find “Walt Whitman: America’s Poet,” a compact and beautifully curated exhibition celebrating the legendary author of “Leaves of Grass” that includes copies of the book (including a first edition from 1855), manuscripts and 20th-century books and art influenced by Whitman, as well as historical photographs of 19th-century New York.

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ROSE MUSEUM AT CARNEGIE HALL Many people believe that the resistance to police during the Stonewall Riots was inexorably connected to the recent death of superstar Judy Garland, who passed away earlier that week at the age of 47 and whose funeral had been held uptown at the Frank E. Campbell funeral home on June 27. Garland was a gay icon, and her appearance at NYC’s famed Carnegie Hall in 1961 was considered among the greatest evenings of entertainment ever. (Her April 23 concert was preserved for all time on the still-popular album “Judy at Carnegie Hall.”) Those wishing to learn more about this remarkable night are encouraged to visit the Rose Museum at Carnegie Hall (154 W. 57th St.), an intimate space that showcases scores, letters, photographs and other artifacts related to the world’s most memorable musicians. GREEN-WOOD CEMETERY It may be an odd thought, but on a beautiful day there’s no better way to celebrate life than taking a stroll through Brooklyn’s bucolic Green-Wood Cemetery (500 25th St.), which many of America’s most notable authors, composers, artists, politicians and activists chose as their final resting place. The cemetery’s “residents” include many important LGBTQ figures, including Dr. Emery S. Hetrick and Dr. A. Damien Martin, the founders of the Hetrick-Martin Institute and the Harvey Milk High School; Broadway lyricist Fred Ebb; Emma Stebbins, a sculptor best known for her “Angel of the Waters” masterpiece that sits atop the Bethesda Fountain in Central Park; and Leonard Bernstein. IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

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entertainment

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The letters/numbers at the end of each listing are NYC Map coordinates (pp. 36-38).

1 Cast members of the world-premiere American opera are pictured in the Greenwich Village bar where the gay rights movement had its tumultuous beginning. | New York City Opera: “Stonewall,” p. 25 2 Magical things happen in this two-part Tony Award-winning Best Play of 2018. | “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” p. 22 3 Youngsters exercise their imaginations when they interact with multisensory environments, animation and live actors. | “Pip’s Island,” p. 24 4 Singer/songwriter Regina Spektor makes her Broadway concert debut. | “In Residence on Broadway,” this page

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BROADWAY OPENINGS In Residence on Broadway Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, 205 W. 46th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. inresidenceonbroadway.com. Iconic performers in concert. June 17-18: Mel Brooks. June 20-22, 25-26: Regina Spektor. July 2-3, 5-7: Criss Angel. July 16-21: Rain—A Tribute to The Beatles. H14 Moulin Rouge! The Musical Al Hirschfeld Theatre, 302 W. 45th St., btw Eighth & Ninth aves.,

877.250.2929. moulinrougemusical.com. (Previews begin June 28, opens July 25) With Baz Luhrmann’s 2001 movie as its starting point, the new musical spectacle celebrates truth, beauty, freedom and love in Belle Époque Paris. The greatest-hits score runs the gamut from Edith Piaf to Katy Perry and Lady Gaga. I14

BROADWAY Ain’t Too Proud—The Life and Times of The Temptations Imperial Theatre, 249 W. 45th

PHOTOS: LIZ BOUK, LISA CHAVEZ AND JORDAN WEATHERSTON PITTS (LEFT TO RIGHT) IN “STONEWALL,” SARAH SHATZ; BUBBA WEILER AND NICHOLAS PODANY (LEFT TO RIGHT) IN “HARRY POTTER AND THE CURSED CHILD,” MATTHEW MURPHY; “PIP’S ISLAND,” PAUL MARIANO; REGINA SPEKTOR, SHERVIN LAINEZ

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St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. ainttooproudmusical.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) The new musical captures the R&B group’s dance moves, harmonies and personal stories. H14

Aladdin C0L46N 7 ew Amsterdam Theatre, 214 W. 42nd St., btw Seventh & Eighth aves., 866.870.2717. aladdinthemusical.com. (2 hrs 20 mins) The musical comedy is an exotic magic carpet ride, filled with romance, special effects and songs from Disney’s 1992 animated feature. H14 All My Sons American Airlines Theatre, 227 W. 42nd St., btw Seventh & Eighth aves., 212.719.1300. roundabouttheatre.org. (Closes June 30) (2 hrs 15 mins) The revival of Arthur Miller’s first major play stars Annette Bening and Tracy Letts. H14 Be More Chill Lyceum Theatre, 149 W. 45th St., btw Sixth & Seventh aves., 212.239.6200. bemorechillmusical.com. (2 hrs 20 mins) The coming-of-age-in-the-digital-age musical is the story of a high-school kid who longs to be popular, while remaining true to himself. H14

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Beautiful–The Carole King Musical C0L421Stephen Sondheim Theatre, 124 W. 43rd St., btw Sixth & Seventh aves., 212.239.6200. beautifulonbroad way.com. (2 hrs 20 mins) The long-running musical traces the rise of the singer/songwriter. H14 Beetlejuice Winter Garden Theatre, 1634 Broadway, btw W. 50th & W. 51st sts., 212.239.6200. beetlejuicebroadway.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) The new musical is based on the 1988 film about a demented, rambunctious ghost named Beetlejuice. H13 The Book of Mormon C0L97231Eugene O’Neill Theatre, 230 W. 49th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. bookofmormonthemusical.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Two Mormon boys are on a mission to save souls in Africa in the irreverent, politically incorrect musical comedy. H13 Burn This Hudson Theatre, 139-141 W. 44th St., btw Sixth & Seventh aves., 855.801.5876. burnthisplay.com. (Closes July 14) (2 hrs 30 mins) A sexual attraction leads to a deeper love connection in the revival of Lanford Wilson’s 1987 play, starring Adam Driver. H14 The Cher Show Neil Simon Theatre, 250 W. 52nd St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. thechershowbroadway.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Using 35 of Cher’s greatest hits, the new musical follows the ups and downs of the superstar’s career and personal life. H13 Chicago Ambassador Theatre, 219 W. 49th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. chicagothemusical.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) In the 1997 Tony Award-winning revival of the vaudeville musical, two alluring jailbirds named Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly attain stardom while singing about sex and corruption. H13 Come From Away Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, 236 W. 45th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. comefromaway.com. (1 hr 40 mins,

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entertainment no intermission) On Sept. 11, 2001, 38 commercial airplanes were diverted to Gander, Newfoundland; when the 6,579 passengers landed, they found themselves stranded in a small town with a population half their size. How they adjusted to a changed world on Sept. 12 is the basis of the upbeat musical. H14

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Dear Evan Hansen Music Box Theatre, 239 W. 45th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. dearevanhansen.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) A socially awkward high-school senior goes from outsider to cool guy when he comforts the parents of a troubled teenager who has committed suicide in the Tony Award-winning musical. H14 The Ferryman Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, 242 W. 45th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. theferrymanbroadway.com. (Closes July 7) (3 hrs 15 mins) Jez Butterworth’s acclaimed comedy drama is set in 1981 at harvest time during the Northern Ireland conflict. H14

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Frankie & Johnny in the Clair de Lune Broadhurst Theatre, 235 W. 44th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. frankieand johnnybroadway.com. (Closes Aug. 25) (2 hrs 15 mins) A waitress (Audra McDonald) and a short-order cook (Michael Shannon) fall in love in Terrence McNally’s play. H14 Frozen St. James Theatre, 246 W. 44th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 866.870.2717. frozenthe musical.com. (2 hrs 15 mins) Disney’s 2013 Academy Award-winning animated film is now a full-length stage work, featuring the original songs, plus new songs and story material. H14

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Gary: A Sequel Titus Andronicus Booth Page #to 1 Theatre, 222 W. 45th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. garyonbroadway.com. (Closes Aug.Inks 4) (1 hr 35 mins, no intermission) Approvals Taylor Mac’s comedy picks up where ShakeCyan CD Jay Magenta CW None speare’s tragedy “Titus Andronicus” leaves off. Yellow AD Peter Black Nathan Lane stars. H14 Studio Bo Used Swatches Acct Kelly / Kevin / Marci Black Proofrd Joe F. Hadestown Walter Wicked GreenKerr Prod Heather Wicked Black

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Theatre, 219 W. 48th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. hadestown.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Anaïs Mitchell’s musical is an epic interpretation of two classic love stories: that of Orpheus and Eurydice, and that of Hades and his wife, Persephone. H13

pi; Studio:WICKED:ART:4C art:GreenSky.psd) YK; 1088 ppi; Studio:WICKED:ART:4C art:Elphaba-4C-Square.psd) pi; Studio:WICKED:ART:4C art:Glinda-4C.psd) K; 13264 ppi, 20084 ppi, -20085 ppi; Studio:WICKED:ART:4C art:Monkey-4C_hi-res.psd) K; 3472 ppi; Studio:WICKED:ART:4C art:Titles:WICKED.LOGO.4C.psd)

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Hamilton Richard Rodgers Theatre, 226 W. 46th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. hamiltonbroadway.com. (2 hrs 45 mins) Expect the unexpected when Print Ad Slug America’s past is told through the hip-hop sounds of today in the Pulitzer Prize-winning musical about political mastermind Alexander Hamilton. H14

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Harry Potter and the Cursed Child Lyric Theatre, 214 W. 44th St., btw Seventh & Eighth aves., 877.250.2929. harrypottertheplay.com. (Part One, 2 hrs 40 mins; Part Two, 2 hrs 35 mins) Harry Potter is a grown-up with children of his own in this eighth story in the Harry Potter series. “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” is one play presented in two parts. H14 Hillary and Clinton John Golden Theatre, 252 W. 45th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. hillaryandclintonbroadway.com.

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(Closes July 21) (1 hr 30 mins, no intermission) Any similarity between a former first lady and her husband is intentional in Lucas Hnath’s timely comedy about politics and marriage. H14

Ink Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, 261 W. 47th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. manhattantheatreclub.com. (Closes July 7) (2 hrs 40 mins) A struggling London newspaper becomes a must-read sensation in James Graham’s play, based on real events. H14 King Kong Broadway Theatre, 1681 Broadway, btw W. 52nd & W. 53rd sts., 212.239.6200. kingkongbroadway.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Beauty tames the beast in the new special-effectsladen musical, set on an uncharted island and in 1930s NYC. H13 King Lear Cort Theatre, 138 W. 48th St., btw Sixth & Seventh aves., 212.239.6200. kinglearon broadway.com. (Closes July 7) (3 hrs 30 mins) Glenda Jackson takes on one of the most challenging roles in the canon: the aging monarch in Shakespeare’s tragedy. H13 Kiss Me, Kate Studio 54, 254 W. 54th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.719.1300. round abouttheatre.org. (Closes June 30) (2 hrs 30 mins) The sparkling revival of Cole Porter’s musical-comedy valentine to the theater stars Kelli O’Hara and Will Chase as squabbling thespians. H13 The Lion King C0L41896Minskoff Theatre, 200 W. 45th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 866.870.2717. lionking.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Theatergoers sing along at the hit stage version of Disney’s beloved animated movie, enjoying songs by Elton John, as well as spectacular masks and dazzling puppets. H14

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Mean Girls August Wilson Theatre, 245 W. 52nd St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. meangirlsonbroadway.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Newbie Cady Heron is taken up by her high school’s most elite clique, The Plastics, but is this the pink pack she really wants to hang with in the musical with a book by Tina Fey? H13

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My Fair Lady Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center, 150 W. 65th St., btw Broadway & Amsterdam Ave., 212.239.6200. lct.org. (Closes July 7) (2 hrs 55 mins) The tuneful 1956 Lerner & Loewe musical is back on Broadway, starring Laura Benanti as Eliza Doolittle and Harry Hadden-Paton as Professor Higgins. I12

The Phantom of the Opera C0L64M 187 ajestic Theatre, 247 W. 44th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. phantombroadway.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) Broadway’s longest-running show tells the tragic story of a disfigured composer who falls in love with a young soprano. H14 Pretty Woman: The Musical Nederlander Theatre, 208 W. 41st St., btw Seventh & Eighth aves., 877.250.2929. prettywomanthemusical

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Oklahoma! Circle in the Square Theatre, 235 W. 50th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. oklahomabroadway.com. (2 hrs 45 mins) Rodgers and Hammerstein’s 1943 musical is reinvented for the 21st century in an intimate and immersive production. I13

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entertainment .com. (2 hrs 30 mins) The musical comedy tells the contemporary Cinderella story of a diamond in the rough, who finds a better life in the arms of a handsome corporate raider. H14

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The Prom Longacre Theatre, 220 W. 48th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. theprommusical.com. (2 hrs 15 mins) An Indiana high schooler wants to take her girlfriend to the prom in the new musical comedy. H13 To Kill a Mockingbird Shubert Theatre, 225 W. 44th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. tokillamockingbirdbroadway.com. (2 hrs 35 mins) Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prizewinning novel has been adapted for the stage. Jeff Daniels stars as Atticus Finch. H14 Tootsie Marquis Theatre, 210 W. 46th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. tootsiemu sical.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) The new musical comedy, based on the 1982 movie of the same name, features songs by David Yazbek. H14 Waitress Brooks Atkinson Theatre, 256 W. 47th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. waitressthemusical.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) A waitress, with a talent for baking, dreams of opening her own pie shop. Sara Bareilles has written the songs for the musical. H14 What the Constitution Means to Me The Hayes Theater, 240 W. 44th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.239.6200. constitutionbroadway .com. (1 hr 30 mins, no intermission) Author/ performer Heidi Schreck tells the story of how she paid for her college education by winning Constitutional debate competitions. H14 Wicked C0L418Gershwin Theatre, 222 W. 51st St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 877.250.2929. wickedthe musical.com. (2 hrs 45 mins) This hit musical— now in its 16th year—imagines Oz as a land of strife, where a young, green-hued girl is branded the Wicked Witch of the West. I13

OFF-BROADWAY+BEYOND Company XIV: Queen of Hearts Théâtre XIV, 383 Troutman St., btw Wyckoff & Irving aves., Bushwick, Brooklyn, 866.811.4111. companyxiv .com. (2 hrs 15 mins) The world-premiere production is inspired by Lewis Carroll’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” but with an avant-garde twist. Cocktails have been specially created to accompany the show. Jersey Boys New World Stages, Stage 1, 340 W. 50th St., btw Eighth & Ninth aves., 212.239.6200. jerseyboysnewyork.com. (2 hrs 30 mins) The behind-the-scenes story of pop sensations, Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons, includes the group’s greatest hits, such as “Sherry,” “Big Girls Don’t Cry,” “Walk Like a Man” and “Oh What a Night.” I13 Pip’s Island 400 W. 42nd St., at Ninth Ave., 888.718.4253. pipsisland.com. (1 hr) The immersive and interactive theatrical experience engages kids 4-10 in a walking adventure in which they navigate challenges and games, play a direct part in the storytelling and help Pip and his friends Pebble and Finn save the island from darkness and restore harmony to the land. I14

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Stomp C0L94O 1 rpheum Theatre, 126 Second Ave., at E. 8th St., 800.982.2787. stomponline.com. (1 hr 45 mins, no intermission) In a dazzling percussive performance, the cast conjures rhythm out of brooms, dustbins, hubcaps and more. E18

CABARETS+COMEDY CLUBS Café Carlyle C0L9431The Carlyle, A Rosewood Hotel New York, 35 E. 76th St., at Madison Ave., 212.744.1600. cafecarlylenewyork.com. A swanky supper club. June 11-15, 18-22, 25-29: Sutton Foster. F10 Feinstein’s/54 Below C0L52138254 W. 54th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 646.476.3551. 54below .com. The subterranean nightclub, restaurant and cocktail lounge is underneath the former Studio 54 disco. Highlights: June 12-15: Liz Callaway. June 20-22: Andrea McArdle. June 25-26, 28-29: Ann Hampton Callaway. July 2, 5-6: Joanna Gleason. July 9-13, 15-16, 18-21, 25-28: Sherie Rene Scott/Norbert Leo Butz Project. H13 Gotham Comedy Club 208 W. 23rd St., btw Seventh & Eighth aves., 212.367.9000. gothamcomedyclub.com. Headliners and new talents are on the calendar. Highlights: June 14-15: Liza Treyger. June 21-22: Josh Wolf. June 28-29: Gotham Comedy Live All-Stars. July 5-6: Rich Vos. July 12-13: Joe List. Food and drink menus available. I16

DANCE+MUSIC American Ballet Theatre C0L3572Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center, Columbus Ave., btw W. 63rd & W. 64th sts., 212.362.6000. abt.org. (May 13-July 6) The revered company pirouettes into Lincoln Center for its spring season. I12 Carnegie Hall C0L9541Seventh Ave., at W. 57th St., 212.247.7800. carnegiehall.org. The worldrenowned concert hall. Highlights: June 14: The Met Orchestra. June 18: Mitsuko Uchida, piano. June 27: New York City Gay Men’s Chorus. H13 Joyce Theater C0L1 9541 75 Eighth Ave., at W. 19th St., 212.242.0800. joyce.org. The venue welcomes modern-dance companies from the U.S. and abroad. Highlights: June 11-29: Pilobolus. July 2-7: Savion Glover. July 9-14: “The Bournonville Legacy.” July 16-21: Maria Kochetkova. H17 Mostly Mozart Festival C0L428Various venues in and around Lincoln Center. mostlymozart.org. (July 10-Aug. 10) New York’s longest-running music series presents music by Mozart, his contemporaries and successors, as well as international productions of dance, theater and music, including music of today. Highlights include the Mark Morris Dance Group (July 10-13) and a New York premiere production of “The Magic Flute” (July 17-20). I12 New York City Center C0L1 9541 31 W. 55th St., btw Sixth & Seventh aves., 212.581.1212. nycitycenter .org. A former Shriners Temple, this performing arts venue, celebrating its 75th anniversary, hosts music, dance and theater events. Highlights: June 13-16: Vakhtangov State Academic Theatre of Russia: “Masquerade.” June 26-29: Encores! Off-Center: “Working: A Musical.” July 10-11: Encores! Off-Center: “Promenade.” H13


New York City Opera: “Stonewall” C0TL1964 he Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center, Time Warner Center, 10 Columbus Cir., at W. 60th St., 212.721.6500. nycopera.com. (June 21-28) The American opera, with music by Iain Bell and a libretto by Mark Campbell, takes place on a hot night in Greenwich Village in 1969 and commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising. I12

JAZZ CLUBS

WINNER! NEW YORK DRAMA CRITICS’ CIRCLE AWARD

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PHOTO BY DARREN COX / SPOTCO

Blue Note Jazz Club 131 W. 3rd St., btw MacDougal St. & Sixth Ave., 212.475.8592. bluenote.net. The best and brightest jazz luminaries perform here. Highlights: June 13-16: The Martin Family. June 20-23: Ms. Lisa Fischer & Grand Baton. June 24-26: Savion Glover. June 27-30: Kenny G. July 2-7: Dirty Dozen Brass Band. July 9-14: Ron Carter Quartet. July 18-21: Life Cycles. G18 Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola C0L96418Jazz at Lincoln Center, 10 Columbus Cir., Broadway & W. 60th St., 212.258.9595. jazz.org/dizzys. The club boasts a stunning stage backdrop: the Manhattan skyline. Highlights: June 11-16: Christian McBride Big Band. June 20-23: Christian McBride’s Tip City. June 27-29: Sean Jones: Dizzy Spellz. July 18-21: Jon Faddis Quartet. Dinner served nightly. I12 Village Vanguard C0L1 9471 78 Seventh Ave. So., btw Perry & W. 11th sts., 212.255.4037. villagevan guard.com. The quintessential subterranean jazz club. Highlights: June 11-16: Peter Bernstein Quartet. June 18-23: Brad Mehldau Quintet. June 25-29: Ethan Iverson. July 2-7: Linda May Han Oh. (The club is closed July 8-14.) H18

TOOTSIEMUSICAL.COM |

MARQUIS THEATRE • 210 W. 46TH ST.

POP/ROCK CLUBS + VENUES Barclays Center C0L46 7 20 Atlantic Ave., at Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, 800.745.3000. barclayscenter .com. Brooklyn’s state-of-the-art entertainment and sports arena. Highlights: June 14-15: Ariana Grande. June 26: World Pride Opening Ceremony. June 28: Masters of Ceremony, with Snoop Dog and 50 Cent. July 19: Robyn. AA24 Beacon Theatre C0L2 941 124 Broadway, at W. 74th St., 866.858.0008. msg.com/beacon-theatre. Pop-music concerts and other acts. Highlights: June 13: Derek Hough. June 15: The Ultimate Doo-Wop Show. June 23, 24, 26, 28: Jackson Browne. July 9-10: Earth, Wind & Fire. J11 Madison Square Garden C0L95461Seventh Ave., btw W. 31st & W. 33rd sts., 866.858.0008. msg.com/ madison-square-garden. A prime entertainment and sporting venue. Highlights: June 18-19: Ariana Grande. June 28-29: Hugh Jackman: “The Man. The Music. The Show.” July 2: Hillsong. July 11: Billy Joel. July 12-13: Jennifer Lopez: “It’s My Party”: The Live Celebration Tour. G13 Radio City Music Hall C0L1 657 260 Sixth Ave., at W. 50th St., 866.858.0008. radiocity.com. The theater is an Art Deco landmark. Highlights: June 14-15: Aziz Ansari. June 18: Eros Ramazzotti. June 19: Billie Eilish. June 20: Lauren Daigle. June 22: Diana Ross. July 11: Churches. July 17-18: Lionel Richie. G13

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dining+drinking FOR INSIDERS’ PICKS, GO TO INNEWYORK.COM/BLOG/DAILY-NYC

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The letters/numbers at the end of each listing are NYC Map coordinates (pp. 36-38).

1 Yes, you can have breakfast at Tiffany’s—and lunch and afternoon tea, too. | Blue Box Cafe, this page 2 Los Angeles-based artist Conor Thompson created the 36-foot-wide, site-specific oil painting, “Modified Landscape,” for the dining room of this departmentstore restaurant located in Chelsea. | Freds at Barneys New York Downtown, this page 3 Chef Michael White and his team of toques ensure this brasserie is the talk of the town. | Vaucluse, p. 28 4 The “original db burger”—made with sirloin beef filled with braised short ribs, foie gras and black truffle, and served on a Parmesan bun—is arguably the city’s most extravagant. | db Bistro Moderne, this page

New York City Restaurant Prices Prices in the five boroughs vary wildly, from inexpensive pizza and burger joints to high-ticket temples of haute cuisine. To get a sense of price points for a particular eatery, we suggest you visit the restaurant’s website.

DOWNTOWN MANHATTAN Freds at Barneys New York Downtown— Italian-American 101 Seventh Ave., btw W. 16th & W. 17th sts., 646.264.6402; and one other NYC location. barneys.com. The chic restaurant inside one of the city’s chicest department stores is as much a destination for foodies as the store is for fashionistas. The most popular menu item is Freds chopped chicken salad. L, D and cocktails (daily), Brunch (Sa-Su). H17

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Gotham Bar and Grill—American 0941 37L 2 E. 12th St., btw University Pl. & Fifth Ave., 212.620.4020. gothambarandgrill.com. At his classic Greenwich Village staple (the restaurant opened in 1984), Chef Alfred Portale’s preparations consistently earn a Michelin star. L (M-F), D (nightly). F18 Gramercy Tavern—American 42 E. 20th St., btw Park Ave. So. & Broadway, 212.477.0777. gramercytavern.com. Guests experience the comfort of a late-19th-century American inn at this ever-popular restaurant in the Flatiron District. This is a non-tipping restaurant; hospitality is included. L & D (daily). F16 Nobu Downtown—Japanese–Peruvian 0L4181 27 95 Broadway, btw Vesey & Fulton sts.,

212.219.0500. noburestaurants.com. Celebrated dishes on Chef Nobu Matsuhisa’s menu include yellowtail with jalapeño and black cod with miso. The restaurant has been designed by David Rockwell with theatrical flair. L (M-F), D (nightly), Brunch (Sa-Su). G22

Seamore’s—Seafood 390 Broome St., at Mulberry St., 212.730.6005; and several other NYC locations. seamores.com. Seamore’s serves fresh, locally caught and sustainable seafood in simple preparations. Tacos, filled with either crispy or seared fish, are a specialty. L & D (daily), Brunch (Sa-Su). E20

MIDTOWN MANHATTAN Benjamin Steakhouse—Steak House Dylan Hotel, 52 E. 41st St., btw Park & Madison aves., 212.297.9177. benjaminsteakhouse.com. Cuts of U.S.D.A. prime steak are dry-aged on the premises at this classic chophouse with a rich clubby ambience. B, L & D (daily). F14 Blue Box Cafe—American 727 Fifth Ave., at 57th St., 212.605.4270. tiffany.com/blue-box-cafe. This elegantly themed café on the fourth floor of Tiffany & Co.’s flagship NYC location serves American classics for breakfast and lunch and offers a $52 tea service. The restaurant is decorated entirely in classic Tiffany & Co. blue-andwhite homeware. B (M-Sa), L (daily). Credit cards only; cash is not accepted. G13 db Bistro Moderne—French City 06431 Club Hotel, 55 W. 44th St., btw Fifth & Sixth aves., 212.391.2400. dbbistro.com. At Daniel Boulud’s Theater District restaurant, French dishes are fused with contemporary invention for specialties such as paupiette de loup de mer (potato-wrapped branzino). B (daily), L (M-F), D (nightly), Brunch (Sa-Su). G14 Gabriel Kreuther—French 41 W. 42nd St., btw Fifth & Sixth aves., 212.257.5826. gknyc.com. A warm space featuring weathered wood beams and cream banquettes sets the stage

PHOTOS: BLUE BOX CAFE, COURTESY TIFFANY & CO.; FREDS AT BARNEYS NEW YORK DOWNTOWN, SCOTT FRANCES; CHEF/OWNER MICHAEL WHITE OF VAUCLUSE, COURTESY ALTAMAREA GROUP; THE “ORIGINAL DB BURGER” AT DB BISTRO MODERNE, COURTESY DB BISTRO MODERNE

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for Alsatian-inspired creations by James Beard Award winner and Michelin-starred chef Gabriel Kreuther. Prix fixe menus only, except at the bar. L (M-F), D (M-Sa). G14

Le Bernardin—French 155 W. 51st St., btw Sixth & Seventh aves., 212.554.1515. le-bernardin .com. Simply prepared fish dishes are offered in an elegant space by world-renowned culinary legend Eric Ripert. Jackets required, ties optional. L (M-F), D (M-Sa). G13 Maloney & Porcelli—Steakhouse C0L73 916 7 E. 50th St., btw Park & Madison aves., 212.750.2233. maloneyandporcelli.com. The clubby, bi-level restaurant is known for its crackling pork shank with firecracker applesauce, Maine lobsters, Cajun-spiced filet mignon and rack of lamb. After 8 pm, generous pours of wine are included in the three-course prix fixe wine dinner ($85). L (M-F), D (nightly). F13 Park Avenue—American C0L360 Park Ave. So., at E. 26th St., 212.951.7111. parkavennyc.com. The restaurant changes its decor and menu with the four seasons. Offerings can include Faroe Island salmon and Long Island duck breast. During National Wine Week, July 15-19, diners taste generous samples of 10 wines poured by 100 vintners for $20 at lunch. L & D (daily). F16 Quality Meats—Steakhouse C0L6257 W. 58th St., btw Fifth & Sixth aves., 212.371.7777. quality meatsnyc.com. With its wood, stainless steel and marble decor and meat-hook chandeliers, the industrial yet warm interior harks back to old-time NYC butcher shops. During National Wine Week, July 15-19, diners taste generous samples of 10 wines poured by 100 vintners for $20 at lunch. L (M-F), D (nightly). G12 Sardi’s—American 234 W. 44th St., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.221.8440. sardis .com. This legendary restaurant, known for its humorous celebrity caricatures, has been a Theater District hangout since 1921. Specialties include jumbo lump crab cakes and grilled sirloin steak. L & D (Tu-Su), Brunch (Su). H14 The Sea Fire Grill—Seafood 158 E. 48th St., btw Third & Lexington aves., 212.935.3785. theseafiregrill.com. Contemporary dishes emphasize the flavors of fresh, seasonally sourced fish—whole Maine lobsters stuffed with crabmeat, roasted Nova Scotia halibut—in a space with a sleek, modern bar and an elegant dining room. Steaks and chops are also on the menu. L (M-F), D (nightly). E13 Smith & Wollensky—Steakhouse C0L627 4 97 Third Ave., at E. 49th St., 212.753.1530. smithandwollen skynyc.com. Steaks, seafood and an impressive wine list make this traditional restaurant a classic. During National Wine Week, July 15-19, diners taste generous samples of 10 wines poured by 100 vintners for $20 at lunch. L & D (daily). E13 Tudor City Steakhouse—Steakhouse 45 Tudor City Pl., btw E. 42nd & E. 43rd sts., 212.682.4000. tudorcitysteakhouse.com. Given its close proximity to the United Nations, this bright and airy restaurant in a luxury apartment complex enlivens its classic American steakhouse menu—U.S.D.A. prime cuts of beef INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

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dining+drinking dry-aged on the premises—with appropriately international options, like a yellow corn Venezuelan tamale appetizer and a range of ceviches and pastas. L (M-F), D (nightly). D14

UPTOWN MANHATTAN Bar Boulud—French 1900 Broadway, at W. 64th St., 212.595.0303. barboulud.com. Chef/ owner Daniel Boulud’s bistro, close to Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, serves seasonal fare—including signature terrines, pâtés, charcuterie and cassoulet. Wines come from the Burgundy and Rhône Valley regions. L (M-F), D (nightly), Brunch (Sa-Su). I12 Daniel—French 46 31 0 E. 65th St., btw Madison & Park aves., 212.288.0033. danielnyc.com. Awarded two stars in the 2019 Michelin Guide, Chef Daniel Boulud’s haute dining experience on the Upper East Side embraces seasonal Gallic cuisine, imbued with tradition but with a contemporary accent. Prix fixe tasting menus; wine pairings available. As befits the luxurious, regal space with neoclassical accents, jackets are required. D (M-Sa). F12 Jean-Georges—French 4C310L92T6 rump International Hotel & Tower, 1 Central Park W., btw W. 60th & W. 61st sts., 212.299.3900. jean-georges.com. This four-star haven overlooking Central Park offers the seasonal, market-driven cuisine of Chef/owner Jean-Georges Vongerichten in a formal dining room and the more casual Nougatine café. Jackets required in the dining room. L & D (daily), Brunch (Su). I12 Lincoln Ristorante—Italian C0L9L6184 incoln Center, 142 W. 65th St., btw Broadway & Amsterdam Ave., 212.359.6500. lincolnristorante.com. A stunning glass-enclosed pavilion, with a sloping roof covered in lush grass, houses Chef Shea Gallante’s culinary visions, from pasta and meat dishes to focaccia breads and charcuterie. L (W-F), D (nightly), Brunch (Sa-Su). J12

Celebrating our 1 Year Anniversary

Masa—Japanese 0453Time Warner Center, 10 Columbus Cir., 4th fl., btw W. 58th & W. 60th sts., 212.823.9800. masanyc.com. The omakase dinner experience costs $595 per person and can last two hours; the dress code, however, is casual. This is a non-tipping restaurant; hospitality is included. L (Tu-F), D (M-Sa). I12

Hors D’Oevres Prime Dry Aged Beef ✦ Surf n’ Turf ✦ Signature Desserts ✦ International Dishes ✦ Events & Parties ✦ As seen in Sophisticated Weddings ✦

Red Rooster Harlem—Soul Food 310 Lenox Ave., btw W. 125th & W. 126th sts., 212.792.9001. redroosterharlem.com. Ethiopian-born Chef/ owner Marcus Samuelsson serves comfort foods, such as Papa Eddie’s shrimp and grits, seafood jambalaya and jerk chicken. Ginny’s Supper Club downstairs features live music and a gospel Sunday brunch. L (M-F), D (nightly), Brunch (Sa-Su). G4

Located across from the United Nations and three blocks from Grand Central Terminal tudorcitysteakhouse.com hello@tudorcitysteakhouse.com 212.682.4000 LET'S CONNECT:

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COMPLIMENTARY PARKING

Vaucluse—French 100 E. 63rd St., at Park Ave., 646.869.2300. vauclusenyc.com. Chef/owner Michael White’s brasserie offers upscale French fare in a stately space featuring custom light fixtures and tufted banquettes. Specialties include the “white label burger” at brunch: an aged-beef-blend patty served with fontina cheese, tomato jam, dijonnaise and fries. L (M-F), D (nightly), Brunch (Su). F12


shops+services

PHOTOS: ARABIAN OUD’S TIMES SQUARE BOUTIQUE, COURTESY ARABIAN OUD; CAMBRIDGE CLASSIC WRISTWATCH, COURTESY DANIEL WELLINGTON; HENNESSY CAROLINA WEARING ALICE + OLIVIA TEE AND BOMBER JACKET, COURTESY SAKS X STONEWALL; PORTUGABA TOTE, COURTESY CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN; HARRYS OF LONDON SS 19 SHOES, COURTESY HARRYS OF LONDON

FOR INSIDERS’ PICKS, GO TO INNEWYORK.COM/BLOG/DAILY-NYC

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5 The letters/numbers at the end of each listing are NYC Map coordinates (pp. 36-38).

1 The Times Square boutique is an exotic Aladdin’s cave filled with precious fragrances. | Arabian Oud, p. 30 2 The Cambridge Classic wristwatch’s summer band is both preppy and patriotic. | Daniel Wellington, p. 30 3 In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, the department store collaborated with designers to create Pride-inspired clothing, accessories and beauty items. Here, Hennessy Carolina wears Alice + Olivia’s “Unity” tee and “Queen” sequined rainbow bomber jacket. The Stonewall Gives Back Initiative is the beneficiary of 30 percent of net proceeds from the sale of the collection. | Saks Fifth Avenue, p. 30 4 The designer’s Portugaba tote is handmade by artisans in Portugal. | Christian Louboutin, this page 5 These summer shoes and sneakers for men put a spring in their step. | Harrys of London, this page

ACCESSORIES+FOOTWEAR Christian Louboutin C0L819 4 65-967 Madison Ave., btw E. 75th & E. 76th sts., 212.396.1884; and several other NYC locations. us.christianloubou tin.com. Wearers of the chic shoes with the unmistakable red soles swear that comfort is not sacrificed to style. F10 Harrys of London 463 Park Ave., btw E. 57th & E. 58th sts., 646.905.8670. harrysoflondon.com. Designed in London and made in Europe, the brand’s innovative and classic shoes for men include lace-ups, boots, sneakers and loafers for all occasions, from sporty to formal. F12

Il Bisonte C0L475381 Bleecker St., at Perry St., 212.633.0334. ilbisonte.com. High-quality, well-designed handbags, briefcases, backpacks, travel bags and accessories can be found at the New York flagship of this luxury Italian leather goods brand. H18

APPAREL Brooks Brothers C0L695346 Madison Ave., at E. 44th St., 212.682.8800. brooksbrothers.com. Since 1818, this well-respected American clothier has been known for its superior-quality conservative clothing and accessories for boys, men and women. F14 INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

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shops+services Chanel C0L1 31285 5 E. 57th St., btw Madison & Fifth aves., 212.355.5050; and several other NYC locations. chanel.com. Ready-to-wear womenswear— lightweight knits, fitted blazers and updated bomber jackets—plus quilted bags and chain necklaces, emblazoned with the iconic interlocking “C” logo. F13 J. Press C0LY 5142 ale Club, 51 E. 44th St., at Vanderbilt Ave., 646.973.1329. jpressonline.com. Ivy league-inspired suits, sport coats, blazers, neckwear, shirts, outerwear, shorts, trousers, sweaters and accessories. F14 Paul Stuart C0L6587350 Madison Ave., at E. 45th St., 212.682.0320. paulstuart.com. The updated classics at this outfitter can seamlessly take both men and women from the boardroom to a night on the town. F14 Vivienne Westwood New York 14 E. 55th St., btw Madison & Fifth aves., 917.893.3556. viviennewestwood.com/en. The trendsetting British designer’s New York boutique in a Beaux Arts town house carries Westwood’s fashionforward clothes and accessories for men and women. Many items are unisex. F13

DEPT. STORES+CENTERS Barneys New York C0L32496660 Madison Ave., btw E. 60th & E. 61st sts., 212.826.8900; and several other NYC locations. barneys.com. The pick of runway styles for men and women from top designers, such as Marc Jacobs, Givenchy and Fendi. F12 Bergdorf Goodman C0L7 32749 54 Fifth Ave., btw 57th & 58th sts., 212.753.7300. bergdorfgoodman.com. Women can find designer labels, accessories and cosmetics in this iconic New York department store. The separate men’s store is directly across the street. G12 Bloomingdale’s C0L421 5 000 Third Ave., at E. 59th St., 212.705.2000; and several other NYC locations. bloomingdales.com. The storied fashion hub has recently renovated its shoe, cosmetics and ready-to-wear floors. E12 Brookfield Place 230 Vesey St., btw West & Liberty sts., 212.978.1698. brookfieldplaceny.com. The shopping center brings high-end apparel and accessories brands for men, women and kids, along with dining options. G22 Century 21 C0L962 87 2 Cortlandt St., btw Broadway & Church St., 212.227.9092; and several other NYC locations. c21stores.com. Deep discounts on everything, from famous designer apparel for men, women and children to cosmetics, shoes, electronics and housewares. F22 Empire Outlets 1 Richmond Terr., Staten Island. empireoutlets.nyc. The only outlet shopping center in New York City houses more than 100 designer outlet retailers. With easy and free access to and from Manhattan via the Staten Island Ferry, the center is less than a five-minute walk from the St. George Terminal. Macy’s Herald Square C0L961 3 51 W. 34th St., btw Broadway & Seventh Ave., 212.695.4400. macys

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.com. The department store spans a full city block with clothing, accessories and home decor, plus cosmetics and fragrances. G15

Neiman Marcus 20 Hudson Yards, at 10th Ave. & W. 33rd St. neimanmarcus.com. The luxury department-store chain’s first-ever brick-andmortar flagship in NYC offers the highest level of service and exclusive designer apparel and accessories for men and women. J15 Saks Fifth Avenue C0L48156611 Fifth Ave., btw 49th & 50th sts., 212.753.4000, F14; 250 Vesey St., Brookfield Place, at West St., 212.301.2440, G22. saksfifthavenue.com. A luxury department store carrying designer apparel, accessories, home decor, luxury brand cosmetics and fragrances. The Shops at Columbus Circle C0L36Time Warner Center, 10 Columbus Cir., btw W. 58th & W. 60th sts., 212.823.6300. theshopsatcolumbuscircle .com. This high-end retail and dining complex features more than 40 stores, the world-class Restaurant and Bar Collection, a park-view atrium and art installations. I12 The Shops at Hudson Yards 20 Hudson Yards, at 10th Ave. & W. 33rd St. hudsonyards newyork.com/shopping. Scores of luxury and specialty stores fill the seven floors of this new retail mecca. Among the establishments under one roof are Aritzia, Cartier, Coach, H&M, Jo Malone, Kiehl’s, Muji, Piaget, Rolex, Van Cleef & Arpels and the city’s first Neiman Marcus. J15 Westfield World Trade Center 185 Greenwich St., btw Vesey & Barclay sts., 212.284.9982. westfield.com/westfieldworld tradecenter. This shopping center features a stellar lineup of stores, including John Varvatos, L.K. Bennett and Roberto Coin. G22

FRAGRANCES Aedes Perfumery C0L7351 82 6A Orchard St., btw Canal & Hester sts., 212.206.8674. aedes.com. An opulent space, decorated with lush plants and a crystal chandelier, presents perfumes, home fragrances, soaps, creams and more from high-end beauty brands, such as Santa Maria Novella. D20 Arabian Oud 1584 Broadway, btw W. 47th & W. 48th sts., 212.757.0303. arabianoud-usa.com. The flagship boutique carries only eau de parfum in scents—up to 400—ranging from woody and floral to spicy and citrus. Oud is the main ingredient, and packaging reflects the brand’s Arabian culture and heritage. H14 Bond No. 9 New York C0L7459 Bond St., btw Lafayette St. & Broadway, 212.228.1732; and three other NYC locations. bondno9.com. The original NoHo boutique, as well as the brand’s other boutiques, carries a fragrance collection inspired by NYC and each of its neighborhoods, plus candles, fragrance-blending box sets and body-care products. F19

JEWELRY Cartier C0L31653 Fifth Ave., at 52nd St., 212.446.3400. cartier.us. The palatial New York location of the

French luxury design house, founded in 1847, offers exquisite jewelry, watches and clocks, leather goods, fragrances, tableware and objets d’art. G13

Daniel Wellington 444 Broome St., btw Broadway & Mercer St., 347.322.8608; and two other NYC locations. danielwellington.com/us. Simplicity, minimalism and clean lines characterize the brand’s watches for men and women. Interchangeable straps can alter the personality of a watch in seconds. F20 Tiffany & Co. C0L727 6 27 Fifth Ave., at 57th St., 212.755.8000. tiffany.com. The world-famous jewelry store carries diamonds, pearls, gold, silver, sterling flatware, fine timepieces, crystal and more—all of which come wrapped in signature robin’s-egg blue boxes. G13 Tourneau TimeMachine 12 E. 57th St., btw Madison & Fifth aves, 212.758.7300. tourneau .com. Established in 1900, Tourneau is the leading retailer of luxury watches in the United States, offering more than 80 world-famous brands, in more than 8,000 unique styles. F12

SPORTING GOODS NBA Store C0L3575 1 45 Fifth Ave., at 45th St., 212.457.3120. nba.com/nycstore. Team jerseys, basketballs, gifts and footwear fill this arena-style sports emporium of National Basketball Association merchandise and memorabilia. G14 The NHL Store C0L1 4287 185 Sixth Ave., at W. 47th St., 917.261.6770. nhl.com/info/nhl-store. The National Hockey League flagship store offers apparel, jerseys, footwear and merchandise for all 31 pro hockey teams, visits from players and an NHL-themed Starbucks. G14 Paragon Sporting Goods C0L48 317 67 Broadway, at E. 18th St., 212.255.8889. paragonsports.com. This only-in-New-York-City sports mecca carries all kinds of sports equipment and clothing, as well as exercise gear from major brands, including Timberland and Patagonia. F17

TOYS+GAMES Forbidden Planet C0L69832 Broadway, btw E. 12th & E. 13th sts., 212.473.1576. fpnyc.com. A massive stock of graphic novels and DC, Marvel and Darkhouse comics, plus games, posters, action figures, DVDs and anime. F18 The Lego Store 200 Fifth Ave., btw 23rd & 24th sts., 212.255.3217. lego.com. An 8-foot tall Statue of Liberty and NYC street scenes built from mini Legos inspire kids to create designs of their own. F17 Nintendo New York C0L5110 Rockefeller Plz., at W. 48th St., 646.459.0800. nintendonyc.com. A 10,000-square-foot interactive gaming paradise that features Nintendo Wii kiosks, branded merchandise, exclusive items featuring favorite Nintendo characters and franchises, and all the latest video games. F13


museums+attractions PHOTOS: JAMES MCNEILL WHISTLER, “LA BELLE DAME ENDORMIE,” 1894, GERTRUDE KOSOVSKY COLLECTION, PHOTO: MICHAEL BODYCOMB; ROGER BROWN, “VIRTUAL STILL LIFE #7 FLEXIBLE BLUE MADONNA WITH ORANGE SALT AND PEPPER SHAKERS,” 1996, PHOTO COURTESY ROGER BROWN STUDY COLLECTION, THE SCHOOL OF THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO; MARIA HELENA VIEIRA DA SILVA, “UNTITLED,” 1953, SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM, NEW YORK 53.1375, ©2019 ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK/ADAGP, PARIS

FOR INSIDERS’ PICKS, GO TO INNEWYORK.COM/BLOG/DAILY-NYC

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1 The letters/numbers at the end of each listing are NYC Map coordinates (pp. 36-38).

1 James McNeill Whistler’s transfer lithograph, “La Belle Dame Endormie,” is one of 42 Whistler works on paper promised to the museum and on view thru Sept. 1. | The Frick Collection, this page 2 “Roger Brown: Virtual Still Lifes,” on view thru Sept. 15, features works, such as “Virtual Still Life #7 Flexible Blue Madonna With Orange Salt and Pepper Shakers,” that combine his passion for collecting with his innovative approach to painting. | Museum of Arts and Design, this page 3 Maria Helena Vieira da Silva’s “Untitled“ from 1953 is among the rarely seen works included in “Artistic License: Six Takes on the Guggenheim Collection,” on view thru Jan. 12, 2020. | Guggenheim Museum, this page

MUSEUMS AKC Museum of the Dog 101 Park Ave., at E. 40th St., 212.696.8360. museumofthedog.org. The museum, under the auspices of the American Kennel Club (AKC), pays homage to man’s best friend and features artwork and interactive digital displays. Tu-Su 10 am-5 pm. F14 American Folk Art Museum 42 Lincoln Sq., Columbus Ave., at W. 66th St., 212.595.9533. folkartmuseum.org. The permanent collection focuses on works by self-taught artists and dating from the 18th century to today. Tu-Th, Sa 11:30 am-7 pm, F noon-7:30 pm, Su noon-6 pm. Free. I11 American Museum of Natural History C0L365Central Park West, at W. 79th St., 212.769.5100. amnh.org. Guests explore halls filled with dinosaur skeletons, fossils, dioramas, artifacts, gems and minerals, meteorites and more. Daily 10 am-5:45 pm. I10 Brooklyn Museum C0L5948200 Eastern Pkwy., at Washington Ave., Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, 718.638.5000. brooklynmuseum.org. Ancient Egyptian artifacts, photography and European, Asian and American art are housed in a grand 560,000-square-foot Beaux Arts building. W, F-Su 11 am-6 pm, Th 11 am-10 pm.

Cooper Hewitt 2 E. 91st St., at Fifth Ave., 212.849.8400. cooperhewitt.org. Interactive exhibits on historic and contemporary design, using groundbreaking technology. Su-F 10 am-6 pm, Sa 10 am-9 pm. F9

The Morgan Library & Museum 225 Madison Ave., at E. 36th St., 212.685.0008. themorgan.org. Rare books, manuscripts, drawings, prints and other treasures. Tu-Th 10:30 am-5 pm, F 10:30 am-9 pm, Sa 10 am-6 pm, Su 11 am-6 pm. F15

Fraunces Tavern Museum 0316 54 Pearl St., at Broad St., 212.425.1778. frauncestavern museum.org. Built in 1719, the building showcases Revolutionary War-era manuscripts, art, memorabilia and recreated period rooms. M-F noon-5 pm, Sa-Su 11 am-5 pm. F23

Museum of Arts and Design C0L6312 Columbus Cir., btw Broadway & Eighth Ave., 212.299.7777. madmuseum.org. The center celebrates innovative arts and crafts. Tu-W, F-Su 10 am-6 pm, Th 10 am-9 pm. F13

The Frick Collection 1 E. 70th St., btw Madison & Fifth aves., 212.288.0700. frick.org. Paintings by Old Masters are on display in the palatial former home of industrialist Henry Clay Frick. Tu-Sa 10 am-6 pm, Su 11 am-5 pm. G11 Guggenheim Museum 1071 Fifth Ave., at 89th St., 212.423.3500. guggenheim.org. An architectural icon, Frank Lloyd Wright’s landmark building houses significant modern and contemporary art. M, W-F & Su 10 am-5:30 pm, Tu & Sa 10 am-8 pm. G8 Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum Pier 86, 12th Ave., at W. 46th St., 212.245.0072. intrepidmuseum.org. The USS Intrepid aircraft carrier offers access to several of its decks featuring historic aircraft, interactive exhibits and flight simulators, plus the space shuttle Enterprise. M-F 10 am-5 pm, Sa-Su 10 am-6 pm. K14 The Jewish Museum 1109 Fifth Ave., at 92nd St., 212.423.3200. thejewishmuseum.org. A showcase for Jewish art and culture. M, Tu & F 11 am-5:45 pm, Th 11 am-8 pm, Sa-Su 10 am-5:45 pm. G8 The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Ave., at 82nd St., 212.535.7710. metmu seum.org. Renowned for its encyclopedic collections of American, European and Far Eastern fine and decorative art. Su-Th 10 am-5:30 pm, F-Sa 10 am-9 pm. G9

Museum of Illusions 77 Eighth Ave., at W. 14th St., 212.645.3230. museumofillusions.us. Interactive exhibits, based on mathematics, psychology, biology and other sciences, invite visitors to test their vision and learn about the human brain and how it perceives. M-Th 9 am-10 pm, F-Su 8 am-11 pm. I17 Museum of Jewish Heritage: A Living Memorial to the Holocaust C0L56Edmond J. Safra Plaza, 36 Battery Pl., btw West St. & First Pl., 646.437.4202. mjhnyc.org. Exhibitions celebrate the lives of those who perished in the Holocaust. Su-Th 10 am-9 pm (last entry 7 pm), F 10 am-5 pm (last entry 3 pm). G23 Museum of the City of New YorkC0L5914 1220 Fifth Ave., at 103rd St., 212.534.1672. mcny.org. The permanent exhibition, “New York at Its Core,” is a three-gallery, high-tech look at NYC’s 400-year history. Daily 10 am-6 pm. F7 National Museum of the American Indian C0L561 2 Bowling Green, at Broadway, 212.514.3700. nmai.si.edu. This Smithsonian Institution museum promotes Native American history, culture and arts. Su-W, F-Sa 10 am-5 pm, Th 10 am-8 pm. Free. F23 National September 11 Memorial & MuseumC0L415879 Museum entrance at 180 Greenwich St., btw Liberty & Fulton sts., 212.312.8800. 911memorial.org. The memorial features waterfalls set within the footprints of the Twin INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

31


THE DEFINING MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART FROM THE 20TH CENTURY TO TODAY

museums+attractions Towers. Memorial: Daily 7:30 am-9 pm. Free. Museum: Su-Th 9 am-8 pm (last entry 6 pm), F-Sa 9 am-9 pm (last entry 7 pm). G22

New Museum C0L57235 Bowery, btw Rivington & Stanton sts., 212.219.1222. newmuseum.org. Contemporary cutting-edge art in a variety of mediums by American and international artists. Tu-W, F-Su 11 am-6 pm, Th 11 am-9 pm. D20

WHITNEY

New-York Historical Society Museum & Library C0L51 8 70 Central Park West, at Richard Gilder Way (W. 77th St.), 212.873.3400. nyhistory.org. Objects and works of art focusing on the rich history of NYC and New York State. Tu-Th, Sa 10 am-6 pm, F 10 am-8 pm, Su 11 am-5 pm. I10 Tenement Museum C0LV 516 isitor center: 103 Orchard St., btw Broome & Delancey sts., 212.982.8420. tenement.org. Turn-of-the-20thcentury immigrant life on Manhattan’s Lower East Side is illustrated on guided tours of authentically preserved tenement apartments. Daily 10 am-6 pm (last tour 5 pm). C20 Whitney Museum of American Art 99 Gansevoort St., btw Greenwich & West sts., 212.570.3600. whitney.org. Indoor galleries and outdoor spaces are devoted to American art and artists. M, W-Th, Su 10:30 am-6 pm, F-Sa 10:30 am-10 pm. I18 Whitney Museum of American Art 99 Gansevoort Street

whitney.org @whitneymuseum

Whitney Museum of American Art. Photograph Š Ben Gancsos

ATTRACTIONS Bronx Zoo C0L5312300 Southern Blvd., Bronx, 718.220.1500. bronxzoo.com. The largest urban zoo in the U.S. provides natural habitats and environments for its 4,000 species. M-F 10 am-5 pm, Sa-Su 10 am-5:30 pm. Empire State Building ExperienceC0L3487 Entrance: 20 W. 34th St., btw Fifth & Sixth aves., 212.736.3100. esbnyc.com. Views of NYC and beyond can be seen from the 86th- and 102nd-floor observatories. Daily 8 am-2 am (last elevator ascends at 1:15 am). G15 The High Line C0L568G 1 ansevoort to W. 34th sts., btw 10th and 11th aves., 212.500.6035. thehighline .org. A 1.45-mile-long elevated park and public promenade. Daily 7 am-11 pm. Free. J15-J18 One World Observatory One World Trade Center, 285 Fulton St., entrance to the observatory is on West St., at Vesey St., 844.696.1776. oneworldobservatory.com. The indoor observatory is located at the top of the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere. Daily 8 am-9 pm (last tickets sold at 8:45 pm). G22 Statue of Liberty C0L652 7 12.363.3200. libertyellis foundation.org. The 151-foot neoclassical statue is known worldwide as a symbol of freedom and democracy. Statue Cruises operates a daily ferry service to Liberty Island: 201.604.2800. statuecruises.com. Top of the Rock C30 0L57 Rockefeller Plz., W. 50th St., btw Fifth & Sixth aves., 212.698.2000. topofthe rocknyc.com. Panoramic vistas of the city can be enjoyed from a vantage point some 70 floors above the ground. Daily 8 am-midnight (last elevator ascends at 11 pm). G13

32

IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM


galleries+antiques FOR MORE ART, GO TO INNEWYORK.COM/BLOG/DAILY-NYC

1

2

3

PHOTOS: CARVED EMERALD, NORTH INDIA, CA. 1650, CHRISTIE’S IMAGES LTD. 2019; SHARI MENDELSON, “MYTHICAL FIGURE WITH STARBURST,” 2018, COURTESY JASON JACQUES GALLERY; TERESA PAGOWSKA, “WASHING HEAD II,” 1976, COURTESY HEATHER JAMES FINE ART

The letters/numbers at the end of each listing are NYC Map coordinates (pp. 36-38).

1 This carved emerald, featured in the Maharajas & Mughal Magnificence auction on June 19, has an estimate of $3–$5 million. | Christie’s, this page 2 Shari Mendelson used found plastic, hot glue, resin, acrylic polymer and sheet metal to make “Mythical Figure With Starburst.” | Jason Jacques Gallery, this page 3 Teresa Pagowska’s “Washing Head II” is among the works by women surrealists on exhibit. | Heather James Fine Art, this page

Gagosian Gallery C0L155 3 55 W. 24th St., btw 10th & 11th aves., 212.741.1111 gagosian.com. The global gallery holds exhibitions of paintings, sculpture, photography and installations by postwar American and European artists, including Jeff Koons and Richard Serra. Thru July 19: “Jonas Wood: New Paintings and Works on Paper.” M-Sa 10 am-6 pm. J16

ANTIQUES

Galerie Lelong & Co. C0L528528 W. 26th St., btw 10th & 11th aves., 212.315.0470. galerielelong.com. The gallery represents contemporary midcareer and established artists from the United States, Europe, Latin America, Asia and Australia, including Jaume Plensa, Cildo Meireles and Yoko Ono. Thru July: “Leonard Drew.” Tu-Sa 10 am-6 pm. J16

1stdibs Gallery C0L416T5 erminal Stores, 269 11th Ave., Lobby 4, 7th fl., btw W. 27th & W. 28th sts., 646.779.0768. 1stdibs.com/gallery. The popular shopping website, 1stdibs.com, now has a physical presence in an 1890s landmark building within walking distance of Hudson Yards, featuring 50-plus antiques and 20th-century design dealers from the U.S. and abroad. M-Sa 10 am-6 pm, Th until 8 pm. J16 The Gallery at 200 Lex Powered by Incollect New York Design Center, 200 Lexington Ave., 10th fl., btw E. 32nd & E. 33rd sts., 646.293.6633. nydc.com/antiques. More than 50 leading international and American dealers show and sell antiques, vintage pieces and 21st-century design in a 33,000-square-foot destination for collectors and connoisseurs. M-F 9:30 am-5:30 pm. E15

ART GALLERIES Barbara Mathes Gallery C0L52622 E. 80th St., btw Madison & Fifth aves., 212.570.4190. barbara mathesgallery.com. American and European modern and contemporary paintings, drawings and sculpture. Thru June 28: “Fausto Melotti: Rhythm and Form.” M-F 10 am-6 pm. F9

Heather James Fine Art 42 E. 75th St., btw Park & Madison aves., 646.858.1085. heather james.com. With locations in California, Wyoming and New York, the gallery specializes in important 19th-century, modern and contemporary art, including impressionist, postwar, American and Latin American works. Thru July 31: “The Female Gaze: Women Surrealists in the Americas and Europe.” M-F 10 am-6 pm. F10 Jason Jacques Gallery C0L563129 E. 73rd St., btw Madison & Fifth aves., 212.535.7500. jason jacques.com. A leading purveyor of 19th-century European art pottery, the gallery juxtaposes masterworks from the past with contemporary ceramic arts. Thru July 13: “Spring Show.” M-Sa 10 am-6 pm. F10 Van Doren Waxter C0L463723 E. 73rd St., btw Madison & Fifth aves., 212.445.0444. vandorenwaxter.com. The gallery, located in an Upper East Side town house, offers a multigenerational program of established and emerging international artists.

Thru July 12: “Joshua Nathanson and Erin Jane Nelson: New Works.” M-F 10 am-5 pm. F10

AUCTION HOUSES Christie’s C0L5724120 Rockefeller Plz., btw Fifth & Sixth aves., 212.636.2000. christies.com. A prestigious auctioneer of fine art and antiques since the 18th century. June 12: Fine Printed Books & Manuscripts, including Americana; Summa de Arithmetica: The Birth of Modern Business. June 19: Maharajas & Mughal Magnificence. June 20: The David Gilmour Guitar Collection. July 18: One Giant Leap: Celebrating Space Exploration 50 Years After Apollo 11. G13 Doyle New York C0L1 57431 75 E. 87th St., btw Third & Lexington aves., 212.427.2730. doylenewyork .com. The auction house sells fine art, jewelry, furniture and more. June 13: Photographs. June 18: Travel & Sport in Africa From the Library of Arnold “Jake” Johnson. June 26: Doyle at Home. June 27: The Estate of Oleg Cassini. July 17: Provident Loan Society: Jewelry, Watches, Silverware & Coins. July 18: Doyle at Home. E9 Sotheby’s C0L1 2315 334 York Ave., at E. 72nd St., 212.606.7000. sothebys.com. Fine art and collectibles go on the block at this longstanding auction house. June 27: BENT. (interdisciplinary LGBTQ works). July 19: Omega Speedmaster: To the Moon and Back, Celebrating 50 Years Since Apollo 11. July 20: Space Exploration. C8 Swann Auction Galleries C0L1 4687 04 E. 25th St., btw Lexington & Park aves., 212.254.4710. swanngal leries.com. The family-owned auction house specializes in rare and antiquarian books and works on paper. June 13: American Art. June 20: The Pride Sale. F16

INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

33


transportation+tours FOR MORE ON WHAT TO DO, GO TO INNEWYORK.COM/BLOG/DAILY-NYC

Grand Central Terminal C0L45789 E. 42nd St., btw Lexington & Vanderbilt aves., 212.340.2583. grandcentralterminal.com. The majestic transportation hub, now more than 100 years old and beautifully restored, houses more than 65 shops and 35 restaurants. Tours of the landmark are offered daily. F14 Long Island Rail Road mta.info/lirr. Operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, taking visitors from Penn Station or Jamaica, Queens, to destinations throughout Long Island. For pricing and schedules, go online or call 511 and say “LIRR” at any time. I15 Metro-North Railroad C0L58 18 9 E. 42nd St., btw Lexington & Vanderbilt aves., 212.532.4900. mta .info/mnr. Commuter trains operate from Grand Central Terminal to 120 stations throughout seven counties in New York State. F14 NJ TRANSIT 973.275.5555. njtransit.com. NJ Transportation to Newark Liberty International Airport, MetLife Stadium, Prudential Center, the Jersey Shore and more. Buy tickets in advance with NJ Transit’s Mobile App. NYC Ferry ferry.nyc. The ferry service plies the East River, taking commuters and visitors to and from Lower Manhattan and Midtown and parts of Brooklyn and Queens. Adult one-way ticket, $2.75. Penn Station Eighth Ave., btw W. 31st & W. 33rd sts., 212.630.6401. amtrak.com. Subways converge with commuter rail and bus services to New Jersey and Long Island and national rail services. I15

TOURS Big Bus Tours 212.685.8687. bigbustours.com. Visitors can see NYC’s most famous attractions, including the Empire State Building and the Brooklyn Bridge, on this bus service, which offers fixed loops and hop-on, hop-off tours with 30 stops. Times/prices vary.

Boatsetter 305.600.5435. boatsetter.com. Rent a yacht, powerboat or sailboat and spend half a day (up to four hours) or longer cruising around New York Harbor, while relaxing and taking in the view. Most boats accommodate one to six passengers, and each rental comes with a captain. Prices vary.

34

Amtrak C0LPenn Station, Eighth Ave., btw W. 31st & W. 33rd sts., 800.872.7245. amtrak.com. Guests travel in comfort on these passenger trains, stopping at stations throughout the United States and Canada. I15

City Brew Tours NYC C0L4653 87 47.429.8687. citybrew tours.com. Guides take visitors behind the scenes of Brooklyn’s leading craft-beer breweries. Tours include the five-hour, all-inclusive NYC Original Brew Tour: tastings of up to 16 beer styles, access to four breweries, lunch with beer-pairing and roundtrip transportation. Dates/times/prices vary.

Empire CLS 8 21. 00.451.5466. empirecls.com. Professional, hospitality-trained chauffeurs take passengers in late-model luxury vehicles to and from airports in the tristate region, as well as to parties, proms, casinos, weddings and family celebrations. Nights on the town are a specialty.

Ghosts of New York Walking Tour C0L4652 87 02.780.7169. ghostsofny.com. Guides take visitors in search of the city’s ghostly spirits on tours such as “Edgar Allan Poe Spook” and “Phantom Pub Crawl Starring Harry Houdini.” Dates/times/prices vary.

TRANSPORTATION

IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

PHOTO: COURTESY BOATSETTER, THE #1 BOAT RENTAL COMMUNITY

The letters/numbers at the end of each listing are NYC Map coordinates (pp. 36-38).

Circle Line Sightseeing Cruises C0L48P 27 ier 83, W. 42nd St., at the Hudson River, 212.563.3200. circleline42.com. Day and night tours around the island of Manhattan include the Best of NYC Tour, a two-and-a-half-hour guided tour that circumnavigates Manhattan Island. Times/ prices vary. K14


Green-Wood Cemetery Guided Tour C0L45725th St. & Fifth Ave., Greenwood Heights, Brooklyn, 718.768.7300. green-wood.com/toursevents. Visitors can learn about the landmark’s history and landscaped 478 acres on a two-hour guided trolley tour every W and Su at 1 pm. $20. Harlem Spirituals Gospel and Jazz Tours C0L5839690 Eighth Ave., 1st fl., btw W. 43rd & W. 44th sts., 212.391.0900. harlemspirituals.com. Visitors experience informative sightseeing tours that showcase Harlem’s rich cultural diversity and world-famous sites and attractions centered around gospel and jazz music. Some tours include brunch or lunch. Dates/times vary. I14 Madison Square Garden All-Access Tour C0L64589Seventh Ave., btw W., 31st & W. 33rd sts., 866.858.0007. msg.com/tours. This tour of the famous sports and entertainment arena takes visitors on an exploration of the totally revamped and modernized venue. Daily 9:30 am-3 pm, departing about every 30 minutes, with tours lasting approximately 75 minutes. $33 adults, $28 seniors/students/children 12 and under. H15 Municipal Art Society of New York Tours C0L584212.935.3960. mas.org. These walking tours are architectural forays through NYC’s neighborhoods, historic districts, landmark buildings and street life. Dates/times vary. A daily 75-minute tour of Grand Central Terminal is offered at 12:30 pm. $30 adults, $20 seniors/ students, children under 10 and military.

Best Way

to & from

Newark Airport

NYC Newark Liberty Int’l Airport Station* NO TRAFFIC. ONLY $13.00. JUST 25 MINUTES. *CONNECT TO AIRTRAIN NEWARK

njtransit.com/ewr

NYC Discovery 17 212.465.3331. Dozens of guided walks, including food and drink-oriented tavern tours, and art history and movie site tours. Private tours also available. Dates/times/ prices/meeting points vary. Radio City Stage Door Tour C0L512For tickets, visit the Radio City Sweets & Gifts Shop, 1260 Sixth Ave., at W. 50th St., 866.858.0007. radiocity.com/ tours. Radio City Music Hall’s secrets are revealed on a guided walking tour that explores the venue’s Art Deco interiors and introduces visitors to one of the iconic Rockettes. Daily 9:30 am-5 pm. $30 adults, $26 students/seniors (65+). G13 Royal Egypt Tour With Dr. Zahi Hawass 917.719.1974. royalegypt.com. Discover the secrets of Egypt with a tour company unlike any other. Visit the Land of the Pharaohs with the world’s most famous archaeologist, Dr. Zahi Hawass, who has held the keys to all Egyptian antiquities for more than 20 years. Meet distinguished guests including Dr. Mostafa Waziri, Egypt’s Head of Antiquities, and former First Lady Mrs. Jehan Sadat, in the residence of Egypt’s late president Anwar Sadat. “No one can tour Egypt like this. Except for you—when you come and join me,” says Dr. Hawass. Watson Adventures Scavenger Hunts C0L5872877.946.4868. watsonadventures.com. These scavenger hunts—private or public, adults-only or family-friendly—are staged in some of the city’s top neighborhoods and attractions, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Grand Central Terminal, the American Museum of Natural History and Central Park. Dates/times/ prices/meeting points vary.

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INNEWYORK.COM | JUNE-JULY 2019 | IN NEW YORK

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PARK

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TOMPKINS SQUARE

Ave A

East Village

Queens-Midtown Tunnel

Queensboro Bridge

Ave C

GREENWICH VILLAGE

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Roosevelt Island

Long Island City

t tS es W

Soho

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West Village

Sutton Place

Roosevelt Island Tram

E 63 St

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Lenox Hill

72 St Q E 72 St

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UPPER EAST SIDE

Lex Av/63 St

Third Ave

14 St

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Flatiron District

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UNION SQUARE

MADISON SQUARE 23 St PARK W•R Flatiron Building

Empire State Bldg

Midtown South

B• D • F • M W• N•Q•R

34 St

New York Public Library The Morgan Library & Museum

NY Waterway Tours Bus Stop

5 Av

Midtown West

7 B• D • F • M BRYANT PARK

42 St Bryant Pk

District

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10 St

77 St

Grand Central Terminal

Midtown East

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St. Patrick’s Cathedral

Rockefeller NY Waterway 50 Center Tours Bus Stop St Radio City 1 49 St Music Hall 47-50 Sts N • W• R Diamond Rockefeller Ctr District B• D • F • M Times Theater

B• D • E

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Frick Collection

Museum of 5 Av/ Modern Art 53 St (MoMA) E•M

Central Park South

N • W• R

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Park Zoo

Conservatory Water

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Carousel Wollman Skating Rink

Sheep Meadow

Strawberry Fields

The Lake

Second Ave

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Pier 61

Chelsea Piers

34th St Hudson Yards 7

Jacob K. Javits Convention Center

Pier 78

50 St

C•E Gray Line New York Sightseeing

Clinton

Circle Line Sightseeing 42nd St W 42 St World Yacht Dining Cruises W 40 St NY Waterway Commuter Ferry CitySightseeing Cruises

Pier 84 Taxi West 44th St

W 46 St

W 48 St

Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum

W 53 St

W 50 St

DEWITT CLINTON PARK

W 55 St

W 57 St

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66 St

B• C

72 St

American Folk Art Museum

Lincoln Center

1•2•3

72 St

DAMROSCH PARK 59 St Columbus Circle A • B• C • D • 1 Museum of Arts & Design

Pier 90

Pier 96

W 60 St

W 62 St

W 65 St

W 70 St

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New-York Historical Society

First Ave

MacDougal St

13 St

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Eighth Ave Sullivan St

Sixth Ave La Guardia Pl

24 St

Blvd Vernon

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21 St 22 St

23 St St

Wooster St

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W 77 St

Fifth Ave

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Berry St

Fifth Ave Park Ave

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Park Ave Lexington Ave

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Lexington Ave Third Ave

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Bedford

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F• J • M• Z

Essex St Grand St

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Tribeca

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Fort Greene

Center Atlantic Ave •

B D N Q R 2 3 4•5 •

Schermerhorn A•C

Bergen St F

2•3•4•5

Boro Hall

Dean St Bergen St

Co urt St

Cobble Hill

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City Sightseeing Cruises

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Brooklyn Heights

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Museum

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Financial District

Dumbo

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Chinatown

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Battery Park City

West BRdway

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Broadway Cortlandt Al Lafayette St

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Mulberry St

Gold St

Elizabeth St

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PROMOTION

IN Places to Go THIS MONTH’S TOP PICKS FOR SHOPPING, ATTRACTIONS AND MORE

Smith & Wollensky Times change. Our steak doesn’t. A lot has changed since 1977—phones, cars, the relative tightness of jeans. But Smith & Wollensky has remained the same. The iconic building, the noshortcuts preparation, the legendary waiters, the USDA prime, dry-aged steak, none of it has changed with the times. Why should it? It’s like they say ... if it ain’t broke, don’t put a parsley sprig on top of it. Smith & Wollensky, unchanged since 1977. 797 Third Ave., 212.753.1530, www.smithandwollenskynyc.com

Paname French Restaurant Paname, a French nickname for Paris, offers French cuisine and weekend brunch in a sophisticated but charming neighborhood bistro. Located in Midtown East, Paname serves artfully presented classic and contemporary menu items, including baby octopus, escargot, boudin noir and bouillabaisse. Come in for a prix fixe lunch with three courses for $26, or dinner with three courses for $43. 1068 Second Ave., 212.207.3737, www.panamenyc.com

Tootsie Tony® nominee Santino Fontana delivers “one of the best musical performances ever seen on a musical stage” (Rolling Stone) in the hilarious show critics are calling “Broadway’s funniest new musical!” (New York Post). Nominated for 11 Tony Awards, including Best Musical, “Tootsie” is a New York Times Critic’s Pick, a “madly entertaining riot” (The Hollywood Reporter), and “the winner Broadway has been waiting for!” (The Washington Post). Marquis Theatre, 210 W. 46th St., 877.250.2929, www.TootsieMusical.com

Patsy’s Italian Restaurant

Patsy’s, a celebrity favorite since 1944, was Frank Sinatra’s choice when in New York. Just steps from Carnegie Hall, this fourth-generation, family-owned-andoperated restaurant provides generous portions and a family-friendly atmosphere that feels like home. Patsy’s signature award-winning sauces, as well as artisanal pastas, are available at Patsy’s only location and better grocers nationwide. 236 W. 56th St., 212.247.3491, www.patsys.com

The Frick Collection Since 1935, the Frick has been one of NYC’s cultural treasures. Located on the Upper East Side, the Frick is known for its distinguished old master paintings and outstanding examples of European sculpture and decorative arts. Along with special exhibitions and concert series, the Frick offers a wide range of educational programs. Come enjoy paintings by Bellini, Goya, Rembrandt, Renoir, Turner and many others. Children under 10 are not admitted. 1 E. 70th St., 212.288.0700, www.frick.org


sneak peek

JULY 15-AUGUST 15 ’19 HIGHLIGHTS

AUG

Lincoln Center Out of Doors (thru Aug. 11) Lincoln Center, lincolncenter.org/ out-of-doors

11

25

Battery Dance Festival (thru Aug. 17) Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park, batterydance.org/battery-dance-festival

AUG

1 JULY

JULY

15 40

“Moulin Rouge!” opening night Al Hirschfeld Theatre, moulinrougemusical.com

“Leonardo da Vinci’s ‘St. Jerome’” (thru Oct. 6), Metropolitan Museum of Art, metmuseum.org

22

“Bat Out of Hell– The Musical” (thru Sept. 8) New York City Center, nycitycenter.org

AUG

AUG

NYC Restaurant Week (thru Aug. 16), various restaurants, nycgo.com/restaurant-week

IN NEW YORK | JUNE-JULY 2019 | INNEWYORK.COM

3

Dragon Boat Festival (also Aug. 4), Flushing Meadows Park, hkdbf-ny.org

9

Rave Theater Festival (thru Aug. 25) The Clemente, ravetheaterfestival.com

PHOTOS: LALAH HATHAWAY APPEARING AT LINCOLN CENTER OUT OF DOORS, COURTESY LALAH HATHAWAY; DANNY BURSTEIN IN “MOULIN ROUGE!,” ©MATTHEW MURPHY, 2018; ANDREW POLEC AND CHRISTINA BENNINGTON IN “BAT OUT OF HELL–THE MUSICAL,” SPECULAR; CITADEL, COURTESY BATTERY DANCE FESTIVAL

24

JULY

JULY



PEACEFULLY TOGETHER. EN ROUTE. NEW YORK FLAGSHIP STORE 381 Bleecker Street shop at ilbisonte.com


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