77TH YEAR, NO. 3,946
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 2017
TWO SECTIONS
50 CENTS
Report: Kushner’s Co. Breaks Record With B’klyn Heights House-Sale Deal SEE PAGE 3
Last Ride for Senior Shuttle Longtime Brownstone Brooklyn Service to Cease Operations at End of June SEE EE PAGE AGE 2
Brownstone Brooklyn’s Senior Shuttle To Cease Operations at End of June Never Fear, Says Heights and Hills: Borough-wide Replacement Planned By Mary Frost
Brooklyn Heights Press
A shuttle bus serving seniors from Brooklyn Heights to Carroll Gardens for more than 20 years will stop rolling at the end of June. The shuttle provides seniors with access to shopping, medical facilities and senior centers, including the St. Charles Jubilee and Eileen Dugan centers. Judy Willig, executive director of Heights and Hills, a nonprofit that provides supportive services for seniors in Brooklyn, said in a letter to riders that times have changed since the shuttle launched in 1994.
With the closing of Long Island College Hospital (LICH), ridership of the shuttle dropped dramatically, she wrote. At the same time, “the Department for the Aging has recently changed how they are funding transportation programs for seniors. Effective July 1, 2017, the Department for the Aging will be funding one provider for the entire borough of Brooklyn, with the intention of serving more people more cost-effectively.” Willig told the Brooklyn Heights Press that Heights and Hills will be working with the new provider to make sure that the transition goes smoothly, and while the service may look different (meaning there probably won't be a shuttle making the same
loop around the neighborhood), individuals who use Heights and Hills' current service will still be able to get transportation to the same destinations. Not only does the shuttle ply its way along a regular route from the Brooklyn Bridge to Third Place in Carroll Gardens, but it also provides special shopping trips, such as the twice-monthly run to Fairway in Red Hook. “Until the funding replacement, there will be no way to get [to Fairway],” said Amy, a volunteer for seniors at 75 Henry St. in Brooklyn Heights. “It gives people the opportunity to shop out of the neighborhood two times a month,” she said. “Fairway has a beautiful view. You can sit down and have coffee, do a little shopping. It’s a day out.”
For Name Changes, Call 718-422-7400.
2 • Brooklyn Heights Press • Thursday, May 11, 2017
Report: Jared Kushner’s Company Makes Record-Breaking B’klyn Heights House-Sale Deal
Reported Sale of 27 Monroe Place Is Second-Priciest in the Entire Borough By Lore Croghan
Brooklyn Heights Press
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
Score one for Jared Kushner. The company headed until recently by President Trump’s sonin-law and senior adviser has made a record-breaking property transaction. The Kushner Cos. sold landmarked rowhouse 27 Monroe Place for $12.9 million, New York Post columnist Jennifer Gould Keil reported. That is a new record for a Brooklyn Heights house sale. The price surpasses the $12.5 million sum that “Grand Theft Auto” video-game creator Dan Houser and his wife Krystyna paid in 2012 for 70 Willow St., the 1830s mansion where Truman Capote worked on “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” and “In Cold Blood.” Jared Kushner stepped aside from the leadership of Kushner Cos. to serve as President Trump’s senior adviser. He was in charge of the company back in 2014 when it bought 27 Monroe Place from Brooklyn Law School. The purchase price was $7,419,004, city Finance Department records indicate. Prior to the sale of the 1840s rowhouse, Kushner Cos. meticulously renovated it and transformed it into a single-family home. The Brooklyn Heights Press could not ascertain the identity of 27 Monroe Place’s purchaser because the property’s sale deed
does not yet appear in Finance Department records. A Kushner Cos. spokesman declined to comment on the transaction. The asking price for the brick rowhouse had been $16 million. The listing brokers were Corcoran Group’s Leslie Marshall and James Cornell. In recent years, Jared Kushner’s company and its investment partners have paid more than $1 billion to amass a high-profile property portfolio in Brooklyn Heights and neighboring DUMBO. In Brooklyn Heights, Kushner Cos. and its investment partners now own the former headquarters of the Jehovah’s Witnesses at 25-30 Columbia Heights — the complex that’s topped with an iconic red-neon sign that says “Watchtower.” DUMBO purchases include a massive parking lot at 85 Jay St. with about 1 million square feet of development rights and a cluster of former Watchtower Bible-printing plants on Prospect, Adams, Sands and Pearl streets that have been turned into a techie-friendly office complex that’s now called DUMBO Heights. Kushner Cos.’ sale of 27 Monroe Place house is the secondpriciest house sale in the entire borough of Brooklyn. The record for most expensive Brooklyn house still rests with 177 Pacific St. Photographer Jay Maisel paid $15.5 million for the Cobble Hill property in 2015.
ABOVE: Presidential senior adviser Jared Kushner’s company has made a record-breaking Brooklyn Heights house sale, according to a New York Post report. AT LEFT: Here’s Brooklyn Heights house 27 Monroe Place, which Kushner Cos. has reportedly sold.
Annual Spring Carnival For Kids in Cobble Hill
Heights Press photo by Lore Croghan
On Saturday, May 20 at 10 a.m., the Families First Annual Spring Carnival will take place on Baltic Street, between Court and Clinton streets in Cobble Hill. Sponsored by Families First, which is located at 250 Baltic Street, this community celebration is especially for small children, from toddlers to kindergarten-aged kids. The Carnival features a variety of children’s activities including, pony rides, bouncy houses, face painting, tattoos, carnival games, arts and crafts, a bake sale, a used book and toy sale and balloons. The Annual Spring Carnival is the principal fundraiser for Families First, a not-for-profit organization established in 1981 to provide families with children’s classes, workshops for parents, and an indoor play space. Ridgewood Savings Bank and other corporate sponsors have offered underwriting assistance for this year’s Spring Carnival. Proceeds from the event will be used to support parent/child education programs at Families First.
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BROOKLYN EAGLE Tony Award Winner Lena Hall, Plus Icons Of Brooklyn’s New Century Highlight St. Ann’s Warehouse SEE PAGE 5
Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP
Volume 17, No. 37
Two Sections
THURSDAY, MAY 11 2017
$1.00
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From Salem to Gowanus: The Odyssey of Hannah Tinti By Peter Stamelman Special to Brooklyn Eagle
It is refreshingly unusual to meet a writer whose work you greatly admire and to discover that the writer is warm, engaging, smart as a whip and as open as ... well ... a book. Hannah Tinti (who is a proud Gowanus resident) is the author of the 2004 short story collection “Animal Crackers,” the 2008 novel “The Good Thief” and, just published this month, “The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley,” which is an unqualified triumph. If you have room for only one book in your beach bag this summer, “Hawley” is it. The book is both a coming-of-age story and a thrilling tale of revenge and renewal. Think “The Road to Perdition” meets “Paper Moon,” with “Treasure Island” and “Great Expectations” thrown in for good measure. Compelling does not begin to describe its relentless pacing and narrative drive. Tinti is supremely confident, consistently fearless and prodigiously gifted — a trifecta that immediately vaults her to the pole position among American writers. Recently, Tinti and I met at the Greenlight Bookstore on Fulton Street, where later in the evening she would be bartending at an event celebrating Independent Bookstore Day. We talked about “Hawley,” some of her favorite themes, her childhood in Salem, Massachusetts and why she lives in Brooklyn. Below are edited excerpts from our conversation. Brooklyn Eagle: I’m curious: Is the fact that you grew up in Salem at all responsible for your fascination with crimes, mysterious, malevolent characters and good versus evil? Hannah Tinti: You know, I do think growing up in Salem was an influence. As a kid, I liked to tell scary stories. And Salem is fertile territory for a writer. Two things happened that emphasized Salem’s connection to the witch trials and ghosts and goblins: First, the coal plant closed; then, Parker Brothers combined with Milton Bradley and moved out to western Massachusetts. So, after that, the mayor and City Council put more energy into promoting Salem’s notorious past and attracting tourists, [and] now it is like Halloween 365 days a year there. Eagle: Before we move on to the book, let me ask some Brooklyn-centric questions: What made you decide to live in Brooklyn, what are some of your favorite Brooklyn-based activities and are you part of the famous Brooklyn “literary mafia”? HT: [Laughing] Is it a mafia? I mean, I do have writer friends in Brooklyn, but also lots of other friends with more normal occupations. That said, I am very involved in the Brooklyn and the entire New York City literary community, principally because of One Story magazine [Note: Tinti is the executive editor of the short story monthly, which is based in and published out of the Old American Can Factory on Third Street.] So, regarding your “mafia” question, I suppose the answer is “yes,” though I’ve always felt a bit like an outsider. I was a shy kid and I get along best with other people who also feel like they don’t fit in. As for as activities, the thing I do the most is walking. I have a dog, so I’m out on the street three to four times day. My favorite walks are in Prospect Park and through Red Hook and along the piers. Eagle: On to the book: “The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley” feels like it’s set in a sort of timeless setting — not the distant past but not quite the present either. Was that deliberate? HT: Yes. For example, as I moved forward with the writing, I realized that I didn’t want any digital devices in there because I felt like they would ruin everything. I didn’t want to deal with texting, laptops. Also, the whole scene in the boat at the end [spoiler alert] wouldn’t work because Loo could have just held up her cellphone and known exactly where she was. So, I fudged some things and didn’t really spell out the time period in which the Courtesy of Random House story is set. Eagle: That’s a good segue to my next question: What is it about you and watches? [Timepieces figure significantly in “Hawley.”] HT: [Laughing] I think watches are fascinating and time is a fascinating thing. For example, I love certain novels that play with time. I’m very interested in time as a device. If you remember at the beginning of the novel, there’s Frederick Nunn with all his clocks. I’m like Frederick Nunn — I always like to know what time it is even though I don’t actually wear a watch. Instead, I have this weird, internal clock and it’s usually pretty accurate. But I do love looking at catalogs of intricate, one-of-akind watches that were made for wealthy barons of industry and that took years to assemble. Eagle: Is that what gave you the idea of Ed King [the book’s principal villain] and his bloody quest for the holy grail of watches? HT: Exactly. The idea that a watch could be worth $10 million. And these barons would compete with each other to see who could have the most intricate watch made for them. The
analogy with today, I guess, would be who can build the tallest skyscraper. Eagle: Hawley’s partner in crime, Jove: Is his name meant to make the reader think of Jupiter, the god of the sky and thunder? HT: Yes, because the 12 bullets are connected to Hercules’ 12 labors. So, for example, Mabel Ridge is a stand-in for Hera, who is always trying to thwart Hercules at every turn, and Jove is a stand-in father figure for Hawley, since Hawley’s father died when he was so young. Eagle: What accounts for your uncanny ability to write about adolescence [Loo, the heroine of “Hawley,” is 12 when the novel begins and Ren, the principal character in “The Good Thief,” is even younger at 9 years old] so convincingly? Are you still very in touch with your adolescent self? HT: Yes, I think I am. Growing up, I was quiet and shy and when you are quiet and shy, you spend a lot of time observing things. So I have a lot of strong memories of my childhood. But, also, the fun thing about writing a coming-of-age story is that kids are figuring things out for the first time. I think readers love these kinds of books because it reminds them of their own discoveries. Eagle: Speaking of discoveries — when Loo discovers her father’s violent and murderous past, her reaction is at first judgmental, but then — and I believe this one of the elements that makes the novel so satisfying — it becomes one of acceptance. HT: I think there’s this nature-versus-nurture dynamic. I mean, Loo has inherited certain violent tendencies. I do think a capacity for violence can be passed on. And Hawley recognizes this trait in his daughter, but he’s also trying to show her another way of living. So, as best he can, he’s trying to show her normalcy, even though Hawley himself has not had a normal life. But remember, Loo has also inherited things from Lily [Loo’s mother.] But her mother’s already dead when the novel begins, so Loo is trying to figure out how to live in the world with her violent tendencies, yet still hold on to her mother’s compassion. You know, I think our parents are both heroes and strangers to us, all at the same time. Eagle: I agree. There are some lines in chapter six that have haunted me ever since I read them. Hawley and Lily are living in Alaska and she’s now pregnant. “She took his hand and put it on her swollen stomach. Recently, the baby had started to move. Whenever Hawley felt the fluttering deep inside his wife, it made him want to get into his car and drive.” Those lines haunt me because that’s precisely how I felt when I first learned I’d be a father. And male friends have told me the same thing. How did you know? HT: [Laughing] That’s the ambivalence all you guys feel, right? About the commitment of being a father. A lot of my friends who are fathers — after reading the book — have pulled me aside, secretively, and said the same thing: How did you know? I mean, all of these guys are good fathers, but they didn’t have the immediate physical connections to the child the way the mother did. For guys, I think that connection comes later. Eagle: Very true. You also scared me and made me feel guilty when you write about how, when Lily first tells Hawley she’s pregnant, all Hawley thinks about is his scrambled eggs getting cold. How did you get inside my head? HT: [Laughing] But isn’t that true?! Doesn’t that happen?! And believe me, it’s not just a “guy thing.” Eagle: Another male-centric question: How did you become so familiar with guns, rifles, pistols, ordnance? Lots of research? HT: I did do a lot of research. I had never shot a gun before I started this book. Eagle: That’s remarkable because the first time Loo fires her father’s bolt-action Model 5 Remington is incredibly well-written. It reminded me of that great scene in “Shane” when Joey asks Shane to fire his pistol and the sound is like an explosion. HT: Thanks. The first time I fired a gun was at the West Side
Rifle Range in Manhattan. I signed up to learn how to shoot a .22 caliber rifle. That was my first time, but then one of my good friends Helen Ellis, who has a cousin who belongs to a gun club, arranged for me to go to the club and shoot everything: pistols, rifles, you name it. I was madly taking notes the whole time. I learned about the physicality of the different calibers and the difference between shooting a shotgun as opposed to shooting a sniper rifle. Plus, I have some relatives who are in the military, so I talked with them. Then I also have a good friend who, when his father passed away, inherited a gun shop. So, he factchecked all my gun references. Eagle: You know you were so lucky that The New York Times got Pete Hamill to review the book [Note: Hamill loved it.] In his review, he has a funny line to the effect that you must have joined the NRA to learn so much about guns. HT: [Laughing] Yes, I know. I have to say that I was so honored to have Pete Hamill review the book, and the fact that he liked it was the icing on the cake. Eagle: How were you able to make your descriptions of the gunshot wounds so precise, vivid, visceral? There are many passages that made me wince. Did you talk to a lot of trauma surgeons? HT: YouTube! I did a lot of research on YouTube. I did also read descriptions in medical journals from people who had been shot. But more than the technical details, I felt that each time he’s shot, there’s a life lesson: That just as he’s trying to make his way through the world, something else pulls him down, but he keeps getting up. Eagle: OK, we figured out the watch thing — now what about the whales? HT: The whales kind of came in accidentally… Eagle: You didn’t know from the beginning there’d be two whales? HT: No, the whales just kind of materialized — and actually, there are more than two whales, because there’s the whale’s heart that Loo crawls into at the museum and the stone whale where the kids party (which really exists, by the way.) Eagle: The whale’s heart — there’s one at the American Museum of Natural History. HT: Yup, I went there and saw it. And even though it’s for little kids, I said, “I’m crawling in there,” and I did. It was amazing and it was essential in helping me write the scene with Loo. Eagle: Were you worried readers would find your adding the whales a bit hubristic? Like “Here she goes, she’s giving us ‘Moby Dick?’” HT: Yes. Actually, I was very nervous about that because I thought, “You’re not a good enough writer to do that.” But the only way I can get those kind of demons out of my head when I’m writing is to pretend, “Hey, no one’s ever going to read this anyway.” I like to go against the grain. But I will tell you that in one of my early drafts I did take out the whales because I thought it might feel cheesy. But then I thought, “I’m going to go for it.” And also, I wanted to make the whales fearsome, like the whales 18th-century whalers encountered. For those early whalers, these really were monsters from the deep. Not like a whale-watching expedition today, where everyone’s going “Oh, look, a baby whale, how cute.” They’re huge creatures! And we are like gnats to them. Also, I was worried about the [politically incorrect] aspect of his shooting at the whale. I thought “Oh, God, everyone’s going to come after me.” And I even thought the same thing about all the guns. In fact, some of the comments on Amazon cited all the guns and the violence. And I understand. Eagle: But, you know, this politically correct bunk and the “trigger warnings” is getting tiresome — I mean, c’mon, it’s an American novel and as H. Rap Brown famously said, “Violence is as American as apple pie.” Anyway, to move along: [spoiler alert] Is Ed King really dead at the novel’s conclusion? I kind of felt maybe you left some doubt there because you are contemplating a sequel. HT: No, I’m not thinking about doing a sequel. That’s not what I’m working on next. Although ... who knows, maybe in the future… One thing is for certain about the future: Whatever tale Tinti does give us next is sure to be riveting and spellbinding. “The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley” is published by The Dial Press, an imprint of Random House. For more information about the book and the author, go to randomhousebooks.com.
INSET: Author Hannah Tinti
Photo by Dani Shapiro
Thursday, May 11, 2017 • Brooklyn Eagle • 3
‘Hidden Waters of New York’ Explores B’klyn, From Newtown Creek to Coney By Raanan Geberer
Courtesy of Countryman Press
Brooklyn Eagle
The major waterways of New York City, New York Harbor and the Hudson River are known throughout the world. But the city is home to many lesser-known lakes, streams, bays, ponds and tributaries. Sergey Kadinsky, a staffer for the city Parks Department and an adjunct professor of history at Touro College, pays tribute to them all in his book “Hidden Waters of New York City” (The Countryman Press, division of W.W. Norton & Co.). Many of the waterways he mentions are in Brooklyn, and the borough merits an entire section in his book. Many of the bodies of water he writes about are pleasant indeed: Sheepshead Bay, the lake in Prospect Park, the ponds in Green-Wood Cemetery, some of the inlets off Jamaica Bay. However, the two bodies of water that lead off the Brooklyn section are among the most polluted on the East Coast and probably in the nation: the Gowanus Canal and Newtown Creek. They’re so toxic that both have been designated as Superfund sites. Kadinsky does an admirable job of describing both. Not only does he describe the pollution and current efforts to lessen it, he takes us into their history. For example, did you know that before the growth of industry, the Gowanus was once a pristine tidal inlet that was known for its oysters? Kadinsky also details the bridges that traverse both bodies of water, such as the circa-1889 Carroll Street Bridge over the Gowanus, the oldest retractable bridge in the U.S. When a boat comes through the canal, the bridge slides back over tracks onto dry land until the vessel is safely through. For Newtown Creek, he lists not only the bridges that cross it today, but also those that have been removed, such as the “Penny Bridge” that gave its name to a now-defunct Long Island Rail Road state. Sheepshead Bay, on the other hand, is a fishing-boat hub and tourist area. Its piers date to the 1930s, when Emmons Avenue was widened. For years, the central attraction of the community was Lundy’s seafood restaurant; although the restaurant is now closed, its landmark building is still there. If you’re ever in the area, you can also check out the Russian immigrants fishing for herring from the Ocean Avenue foot bridge. As Kadinsky reminds us, Sheepshead Bay originally ran into Coney Island Creek, making Coney Island a true island. In 1937, to facilitate the construction of the Belt Parkway, the section of Coney Island Creek between the bay and Shell Road was filled in. Part of the surviving portion of the creek is filled with the sunken hulls of small boats. The star of these is the wreck of the famed “yellow submarine” constructed by Brooklyn resident Jerry Bianco. As Kadinsky tells it, Bianco launched the sub, which he called the Quester, in 1970. He hoped to find the wreck of the ocean liner Andrea Doria, which sank in 1956 after a collision with another ship. However, because there wasn’t enough ballast to keep it on an even keel, Bianco’s submarine “keeled to the side and settled on the shallow bottom of the creek.” Also covered in “Hidden
Sylvan Lake in Green-Wood Cemetery
Eagle photo by Raanan Geberer
Waters of New York City” are the various lakes, ponds and brooks inside the city’s parks and cemeteries. Some of these are truly hidden; others, like Prospect Park’s lake, are not. Everyone who is reading this article has probably seen Prospect Park Lake. Kadinsky goes into great detail, describing the various subsidiary ponds, the bridges over the lake, the boathouse and the original source of the water. A short distance from Prospect Park is Green-Wood Cemetery, and its ponds were built into the original design of the park to create a rural atmosphere. While Green-Wood is no longer as heavy a tourist destination as it was in the mid-19th century before the creation of public parks, it is still a pleasant place to visit, and the ponds contribute to its pleasant aura. Finally, the book explores the various inlets, creeks and basins in southeast Brooklyn that may be unfamiliar to those who don’t live in the area: Gerritsen Inlet, Mill Basin, Paerdegat Basin and more. If you’ve driven past neighborhoods where the back yards of the houses face the water and have docks and boats attached to them, here’s the place to find out about them. “Hidden Waters of New York City” is well-written and easy to understand, and it’s a must for anyone who wants to find out more about nature and history in the big city.
Brooklyn-based Supermodel, Activist Ashley Graham to Host Book Signing Brooklyn Eagle On Wednesday, May 17, supermodel body activist, and now author Ashley Graham will host a book signing at The Bookmark Shoppe in Bay Ridge. One of the most outspoken voices gracing the cover of magazines today encourages women to be their most confident selves, recognize their personal beauty and reach for their highest dreams in this wise, warm and inspiring memoir. Graham has been modeling professionally since the age of 13. Discovered at a shopping mall in Nebraska, she has graced the covers of top magazines, including Cosmopolitan and British Vogue, and she was the first size 14 model to appear on the front of the popular Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue. The face of brands such as H&M Studio, she is also a judge for the latest season of “America’s Next Top Model.” Graham is leading a new generation of women breaking ground and demolishing stereotypes, transforming ideals about body image and what is fashionable and beautiful. A woman who proves that when it comes to beauty, size is just a 4 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, May 11, 2017
number, she is the voice for the body positivity movement today and a role model for all women — no matter their individual body type, shape or weight. In this collection of insightful, provocative essays illustrated with a dozen photos, Graham shares her perspective on how ideas around body image are evolving — and how we still have work to do. She also focuses on the fun and stress of a career in the fashion world, her life before modeling; and her path to accepting her size without limiting her dreams — defying rigid industry standards and naysayers who told her it couldn’t be done. As she talks about her successes and setbacks, Graham offers support for every woman coming to terms with who she is, to bolster self-confidence and motivation to be her strongest, healthiest and most beautiful self. Though a Nebraska native, Graham now calls Brooklyn home.
INSET: Ashley Graham
Photo by Cass Bird
Sergey Kadinsky, author of “Hidden Waters of New York City” Photo courtesy of Countryman Press
Tony Winner Lena Hall, Plus Icons of Brooklyn’s New Century Highlight St. Ann’s Warehouse Brooklyn Eagle
Sarah Ruhl’s “How to Transcend a Happy Marriage” at Lincoln Center Theater. She recently portrayed both roles of Hedwig and Yitzhak in “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” in Los Angeles (LA Drama Critics Circle nomination) and San Francisco, and toured the U.S. and Canada as part of Josh Groban’s “Stages” tour. She also starred as Nicola in Tony Award-winning musical “Kinky Boots,” and has appeared on HBO’s “Girls” and Amazon Prime’s “Good Girls Revolt,” among other TV shows and films. Her solo album “Sin & Salvation: Live at the Carlyle” is available on iTunes. Michael “Buzzy” O’Keeffe set out to build a restaurant on the East River waterfront that would combine three of his avocations: building, food and being by the water. In 1977, after 12 years of lengthy negotiations with New York City, he succeeded with his outstanding barge restaurant, The River Café, the first establishment to make DUMBO a destination. From the beginning, O’Keeffe has insisted that The River Café sources only the finest ingredients available, setting the bar for culinary excellence on the East Coast and far beyond. The Brooklyn landmark celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. Steve Hindy began brewing beer in his Park Slope home after leaving his post as a Middle East Correspondent for the Associated Press. After founding Brooklyn Brewery in 1987, Hindy eschewed traditional marketing and instead donated beer to arts, music and community organizations throughout the city. As a result, Williamsburg flourished around him, and today Brooklyn Brewery thrives, spreading the beer and the brand all over the world as a beacon of Brooklyn’s renaissance. St. Ann’s Warehouse plays a vital role on the global cultural landscape as an American artistic home for international companies of distinction, American avant-garde masters and talented emerging artists ready to work on a grand scale. St. Ann’s signature flexible, open space allows artists to stretch, both literally and imaginatively, enabling them to approach work with unfettered creativity, knowing that the theater can be adapted in multiple configurations to suit their needs. In the heart of Brooklyn Bridge Park, St. Ann’s Warehouse has designed an award-winning, spectacular waterfront theater that opened in October 2015. The new theater offers St. Ann’s signature versatility and grandeur on an amplified scale while respecting the walls of the original 1860’s Tobacco Warehouse. In addition to the flexible Steinberg Theater, the building complex includes a second space, a studio, for St. Ann’s Puppet Lab, smaller-scale events and
Chairman Joe Steinberg (center), with board members Adam Max (left) and David Walentas. Photos courtesy of St. Ann’s Warehouse
Honoree Steve Hindy, Brooklyn Brewery founder AP Photo community uses, and The Max Family Garden, designed by landscape architects Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates and open to Brooklyn Bridge Park visitors during park hours. Susan Feldman founded Arts at St. Ann’s (now St. Ann’s Warehouse) in 1980 as part of the New York Landmarks Conservancy’s campaign to save the National Historic Landmark Church of St. Ann and the Holy Trinity on Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights. For 21 years, St. Ann’s presented a decidedly eclectic array of concert and theatrical performances in the church sanctuary. From Fall 2001 through the 2014-15 season, the organization activated found warehouses in DUMBO with the world’s most imaginative theater- and music-makers, help-
ABOVE: Honoree Michael (Buzzy) O'Keeffe, founder of the River Café. INSET: Susan Feldman, founder of St. Ann’s Warehouse ing to make the burgeoning neighborhood a destination for New Yorkers and tourists alike. After 12 years (2001-2012) at 38 Water St., St. Ann’s transformed a second raw space at 29 Jay St., turning it into an interim home for three years (2012-2015) while the organization adapted the then-roofless Tobacco Warehouse in Brooklyn Bridge Park into the new St. Ann’s Warehouse. The new St. Ann’s Warehouse retains the best of its past homes: the sense of sacred space from the organization’s original home in the church, and the vastness and endless capacity for reconfiguration artists have harnessed in St. Ann’s temporary warehouses in DUMBO. For more information, visit stannswarehouse.org.
Tony award winner Lena Hall will highlight St. Ann’s Warehouse’s 2017 Gala.
Eagle file photo by Lore Croghan
Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
On the first Monday in June, St. Ann’s Warehouse will bring together, within its historic walls, some of the most iconic and transformative forces of Brooklyn in the new century. The modern, cutting-edge theatre, built within the preserved walls of a 19th-century tobacco warehouse, and sitting within a stone’s toss of the Brooklyn Bridge, will stage its 2017 Gala at 45 Water St. Two world-famous icons associated with Brooklyn — Michael (Buzzy) O’Keeffe, founder of the River Café, and Steve Hindy, founder of Brooklyn Brewery, will be honored as pioneers whose vision, perseverance and dedication to excellence created internationally hailed brands tied to Brooklyn. A special concert created for the occasion by Lena Hall, Tony awardwinner and Grammy nominee, will be the highlight entertainment of the evening. The evening will also pay unofficial homage to St. Ann’s Warehouse founder Susan Feldman. She has produced cuttingedge theatre arts in settings that, since 1980, have enhanced performance spaces and paved the way for significant historic preservation. The permanent home of St. Ann’s Warehouse Theatre is within the walls of a preserved 19th-century tobacco warehouse that sits adjacent to the Brooklyn Bridge Tower. St. Ann’s Warehouse might not have had a permanent home without the work of Brooklyn’s unofficial “First Couple” of the new century, Joe and Diane Steinberg. Together the Steinbergs have empowered more positive changes in arts, science and social services than any other private individuals — often behind the scenes. Joe Steinberg, chairman of St. Ann’s Warehouse, and Adam Max, the new chairman of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), have continued the long-standing devotion to Brooklyn arts institutions that outgoing BAM chairman Alan Fishman and his wife Judy, fostered for many decades. The gala on June 5 will begin at 6:15 p.m. with cocktails on the waterfront and in the Max Family Garden, followed at 7:45 p.m. with the concert and a family-style dinner in the Joseph S. and Diane H. Steinberg Theater. Hall’s performance will celebrate the power of art in turbulent times, with music by Janis Joplin, Radiohead, Talking Heads and more. The concert is a singular opportunity to experience the rare combination of grit and beauty that characterizes Hall’s singing. A Tony Award-winner for her critically acclaimed performance as Yitzhak in the hit 2014 Broadway revival of “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” Hall is currently starring, to rave reviews, in
St. Ann’s Warehouse at 45 Water St. Thursday, May 11, 2017 • Brooklyn Eagle • 5
Our World In Pictures MEXICO — Family Mourns: Family members stand around the coffin of 6-year-old Victor Serrano Ruiz, who died in a fireworks explosion, as they say their last respects inside their two-room cinderblock home in San Isidro on Wednesday. An errant firecracker landed on a cache of fireworks and touched off a powerful explosion Tuesday at a home in Puebla, killing 11 children and AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell three adults. GERMANY — Sun Sets: A stork stands in its nest during sunset in Biebesheim on AP Photo/Michael Probst Wednesday.
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Our World In Pictures IRAN — President Runs for Re-election: Iranian worker Kianoush Mahmoudzadeh prepares electoral posters of President Hassan Rouhani for the May 19 presidential election campaign in a printing house in Tehran on Wednesday. Rouhani, whose moderate administration struck the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, is campaigning for another four-year term as Iran’s top elected official. He faces five opponents, chief among them is hard-liner Ebrahim Raisi, a close ally of Supreme Leader Ayatollah AP Photo/Vahid Salemi Ali Khamenei. IRAQ — Residents Flee Fighting: A man pushes two children in a wheelchair as they flee heavy fighting between Islamic State militants and Iraqi special forces in Mosul on Wednesday. AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo
Thursday, May 11, 2017 • Brooklyn Eagle • 7
Don’t Look Down! NYPD Unit Works at Dizzying Heights On Top of Brooklyn Bridge
AP Photos/Julie Jacobson
NYPD Detective Slawek Dziubek turns to check on fellow Emergency Services Unit officers during a training exercise climb up the south cable of the Brooklyn Bridge. By Colleen Long The Associated Press
Police Sgt. John Flynn didn’t even flinch as he started his descent from the top of the Brooklyn Bridge, briskly walking down a narrow suspension cable with only a safety harness between him and a possible 27-story fall to the glinting East River below. “It becomes like second nature to you,” he said of the dizzying height. “Three stories is no different from 30 stories.” Being part of the Manhattan skyline was just another day at the office for Flynn and other members of an elite unit that specializes in dangerous, often high-rise rescues. Training exercises like a recent climb up the iconic bridge are designed to get team members thinking beyond the risk to their own lives so they can help save someone else’s. Successful rescues over the years have included window washers dangling 17 stories up the side of a skyscraper, distraught people threatening suicide on the Manhattan Bridge and a young thrill-seeker who used suction cups to climb the glass walls of Trump Tower. They’ve even saved a paraglider who crashed into the torch of the Statue of Liberty. “You’re working from the minute you get the call,” said Flynn, a rope rescue instructor. “You’re thinking about how to best approach the climb, and how to approach the person even before you meet them, how to help them.” NYPD’s 400-officer Emergency Services Unit is among the most highly trained in the nation in both rescues and law enforcement, and it’s one of the most coveted assignments at the 35,000-member department. Candidates must have at least five years on patrol and make it through an eight-month training program followed by rigorous testing. They go on to work as SWAT teams, jump out of helicopters, rappel down skyscrapers and dive into waters in scuba gear. “The officers are handling multiple different jobs all in the same tour,” said Deputy Chief Vincent Giordano, the commanding officer of the unit. “They’re prepared for anything, and they train for anything.” 8 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, May 11, 2017
New York has the second-most skyscrapers in the world, just behind Hong Kong, with about 325 buildings taller than 500 feet. While the Fire Department also is trained to handle highrise rescues, the NYPD unit is brought in on cases in which people are resisting help, suicidal or otherwise mentally unstable. Most of the officers on the bridge drill had climbed taller
But they don’t save all of those who are intent on taking their own lives, and those cases haunt members of the unit. “You’re just doing your best to try to save someone,” said Detective Jose Otero. Others resist help because they are trying to make a point. That was the case last August, when Detective Chris Williams, a 14year member of the unit, was about to end his shift for the day and got a call that a protester was using suction cups and ropes to climb from the fifth floor to the 21st floor of Trump Tower. Climber Stephen Rogata said he just wanted to talk to thenGOP nominee Donald Trump, and refused any help or efforts to get him to surrender for his own good. “I explained to him that Trump was not at home,” Williams said. “It’s going to rain, and you don’t want to be on the side of this glass building in the rain.” While Williams talked, police took out a window above Rogata and officers set up a rigging system. But Rogata refused to clip into the safety line. Williams decided it was time to take matters into his own hands. “That’s when I grabbed him by his arms and did a long drag and pulled him inside the window,” he said. The scene played out on national television, but the officers are used to an audience. During the bridge drill, crowds below gathered to watch, and 911 calls poured in. A local television helicopter circled as officers, accompanied by three journalists from The Associated Press, climbed the sloping suspension cable to the top of the southern stone tower. Detective Williams dangled on the side of a vertical ladder at the very top, helping others ascend. “It’s all about trusting the equipment, and your partner,” he said. “And yeah, I guess, yourself.”
structures and gone up the bridge under more stressful circumstances. Flynn, for instance, helped talk a jumper down from the top in 2013. The man stood at the very edge, and it took hours to get him down. “It’s very hard,” Flynn said. “You’ve just convinced this person they should live, and then you’ve got to get them down.”
INSET: Emergency Services Unit Officer Quinn secures his safety line as other members of the unit finish ascending the south support cable for the Brooklyn Bridge during a training exercise.
Muslim, Law Enforcement Communities Come Together to Host Career Day More Than 600 Children Attended Council of Peoples Organization’s Event By John Alexander Brooklyn Eagle
Children ages 13 and up were invited to a career day on Saturday that was sponsored by the Council of Peoples Organization (COPO), formerly known as the Council of Pakistan Organization. The event aimed to teach the children about federal, state and city agency career opportunities and was held at Kingsborough Community College. The attendees, more than 600 children, were given the opportunity to meet with members of the New York State Police force, NYPD, the Department of Correction, the Department of Justice, the Nassau County Police Department and the FBI. They were offered demonstrations in fingerprinting, crime scene investigation techniques and foot printing, among other law enforcement skills. The children were given the chance to personally interact with a variety of civil servants who offered them advice, encouragement and the chance to learn about exciting new career opportunities. According to its website, COPO was formed in the aftermath of 9/11. Several business owners in Central Brooklyn responded to the backlash faced by South Asians, particularly Muslims, in the neighborhood. COPO opened its doors on Feb. 1, 2002 to help remedy the situation faced by the affected communities. It was also a way to help build stronger relations between Muslim and non-Muslim community groups by establishing connections between the communities and various government agencies, the website states. COPO is supported by dozens of organizations and elected officials, including U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, U.S. Reps. Yvette Clark and Gerald Nadler and Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams.
Kids learn about evidence collection at a crime scene.
FBI Agent Alice shows the children how to collect fingerprints at a crime scene.
Eagle photos by Arthur De Gaeta
Police Sgt. Douglas of the NYC School Safety Division hands out coloring books to the kids.
Children attending COPO Youth Career Day proudly stand in front of the American flag. Thursday, May 11, 2017 • Brooklyn Eagle • 9
Holocaust survivor and Brooklyn resident Bronia Brandman (second from right) walks through the front gate of the Auschwitz death camp with Brig. Gen. Zvika Haimovich, Holocaust survivor Giselle Cycowicz, Friends of the Israel Defense Forces National Vice President Robert Cohen and Maj. Gen. Meir Klifi-Amis (left to right). It was the first time Brandman, 86, had seen Auschwitz since her liberation nearly 72 years ago. Photo by Shahar Azran
Borough Park Resident, Holocaust Survivor Makes Emotional Return to Auschwitz By Paula Katinas Brooklyn Eagle
In an emotional journey that served as her ultimate triumph over the Nazis, an elderly Borough Park resident who survived the horrors of the Holocaust paid a return visit to the infamous Auschwitz death camp — this time as a free woman. It was the first time Bronia Brandman, 86, had seen Auschwitz since her liberation nearly 72 years ago. For her return trip, Brandman was accompanied by a delegation comprised of officers of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), as well as members of the group 40 Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF). “I came to Auschwitz in 1943 as a child of 12. My parents and four siblings were consigned to the gas chambers. The daily bestiality and dehumanization was beyond words, and the world’s silence was deafening,” Brandman said in a statement. “I never wished to return to that place of our degradation and annihilation, but to return in the presence of our noblest, the bravest of the brave — our IDF soldiers, allows my spirit to soar with pride and hope.” Her journey back to Auschwitz was part of a 10-day trip to
10 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, May 11, 2017
Poland and Israel sponsored by FIDF. Israeli soldiers and FIDF supporters accompanied a group of Holocaust survivors across Poland and Israel. The trip began on April 24 and ended May 3. “This mission was one of the last opportunities for these survivors to return to Auschwitz and tell of its horrors,” said FIDF National Vice President Robert Cohen. “It was a rollercoaster emotional experience for everyone involved. We passed through the gates of hell, ignoring the false promise that ‘work sets you free,’ where countless Jews suffered from unimaginable cold, hunger and despair. We were surrounded by those who survived within the camps’ walls and also by those who make sure they are not forgotten — the brave soldiers who protect their legacy: the state of Israel and the Jewish diaspora around the world.” Brandman, who was born in Jaworzno, Poland, watched in horror as two of her sisters were sent to the gas chambers. Her entire family, with the exception of her older brother and a cousin, died at the hands of the Nazis. After immigrating to the U.S., Brandman had vowed never to return to Poland. But she decided to come to Auschwitz as part
of the FIDF’s “From Holocaust to Independence” delegation. While in Poland, the delegation attended a reception and heard from IDF Chief of the General Staff Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot. In a touching moment during the reception, Miri Amir, an Israeli Holocaust survivor, was reunited with Miroslawa Gruszczynska, the woman whose family hid her from the Nazis in Poland during World War II. The delegation traced the Jewish community’s steps from the Warsaw Ghetto to Buczyna Forest, where the Nazis executed more than 800 children. The group then visited the site of Auschwitz. The delegation also flew to Israel, where they met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin, visited IDF bases, commemorated Israel’s Memorial Day for fallen soldiers and celebrated Israel’s Independence Day. “This historic delegation traced the modern history of the Jewish people through the eyes of Holocaust survivors and IDF officers,” said Maj. Gen. Meir Klifi-Amir, national director and CEO of the FIDF. “It told the story of our near extinction in Europe, the creation of a Jewish homeland and the new generation of Jewish defenders of the Jewish people who safeguard our legacy today. By marching together into the dreadful Auschwitz-Birkenau camps with IDF soldiers and the survivors who somehow endured that torture, we sent a powerful message to the world that we remember and that the Holocaust cannot and will not ever happen again.”
INSET: Bronia Brandman chats with Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat (left) and Maj. Gen. Meir Klifi-Amir at the Western Wall.
Riverkeeper’s Sixth Annual Sweep Brings Spit & Polish to Hudson River & Tributaries Brooklyn-based Volunteers Join Forces with Newtown Creek Alliance & NY State’s ‘I Love My Park’ Day By Andy Katz Special to Brooklyn Eagle
Riverkeeper’s sixth annual sweep brought volunteers in to clean 90 sites along the Hudson River Valley on May 6, from Albany to Brooklyn Bridge Park. One Brooklyn location, East River State Park, received twice the love because Riverkeeper’s sweep coincided with New York state’s “I Love My Park” day, another annual event that brings volunteers into state parks to clean, help build amenities and generally get the parks in top-notch shape for the coming season. Riverkeeper is a member-supported watchdog organization that calls itself “New York’s clean water advocate” and whose mission, according to its website, is “to protect the environmental, recreational and commercial integrity of the Hudson River and its tributaries.” “We had a great turn out,” Riverkeeper Coordinator for East River State Park, Michal Karwat said. “I was honestly surprised — there were maybe 20 or more people here just for East River Park.” By early afternoon, most of the volunteers were already gone, but the narrow sandy berm and rocky shoreline that line both East River State Park and the adjacent, city-run, Bushwick Inlet Park, were pristine and already taken over by park visitors, drawn in large numbers by Saturday’s Smorgasburg, which takes place alongside East River State Park, on 90
Kent St., every Saturday from April to October, and on Sundays in Prospect Park. Given that the parks receive fewer visitors in the colder months preceding May, volunteers reported finding more industrial effluvia from the factories and construction sites upriver than litter along the banks. Brooklyn resident Josh Jupiter displayed the intact frame from a worksite scaffold he had pulled from the water. Going beyond merely tidying up a shoreline park, Riverkeeper and Newtown Creek Alliance members gathered at the site of what was once the Brooklyn end of the Meeker Street Bridge — or “Penny Bridge” as it became popularly known because the first toll to cross was one penny — to reclaim the trash and rubble-strewn landing as a park for nearby industrial workers to spend a few quiet moments alongside Newtown Creek. “It’s a tough spot to reach,” Newtown Creek Alliance volunteer Lisa Bloodgood concedes. Indeed, the onetime landing sits tucked behind a corrugated metal shed at the end of Meeker Avenue, boxed landward by industrial parking lots, and a stained concrete retaining well overlooking the creek. Paving stones are scattered amid the dark rich soil, and a massive iron framework emerges partway from the ground, enmeshed with the roots of a venerable elm tree. Continued on page 12
AmeriCorps workers Sue Naina (left) and Susette Taveras examine a table top for splinters.
ABOVE: A Wowfulls ice cream and waffles customer receives a signature cone at Smorgasburg. INSET: AmeriCorps worker Mohammed Naimah Samiha puts the finishing touches on a park bench. Eagle photos by Andy Katz
Smorgasburg is held every Saturday from April to October along the sound flank of East River State Park.
Thursday, May 11, 2017 • Brooklyn Eagle • 11
Riverkeeper’s Sixth Annual Sweep Brings Spit & Polish to Hudson River & Tributaries
Amina Stanton of Newtown Creek Alliance handles paving stones.
Sarah Lilley and Damian Lawyer discuss their progress in Penny Bridge Park.
Continued from page 11 “We saw some workers on their lunch breaks,” Bloodgood went on, “and we asked them would they like to come here on their breaks if there were places to sit and eat. They told us they would.” “Penny Bridge Park,” as the volunteers working there have tentatively named it, is the humblest of potential recreation spaces — maybe 1,000 square feet almost completely hidden from the landward approaches, with basic amenities — but a first-class view of Newtown Creek. “There are so few actual approaches to the bank here on the Brooklyn side,” Newtown Creek Alliance Project Manager Willis Elkins pointed out. By early summer, when volunteers expect the new mini-park to be complete, it will join the Newtown Creek Nature Walk and North Brooklyn Boat Club’s Living Dock as the only public access points to the south bank of Newtown Creek. Riverkeeper began in 1966 when fishermen along the Hudson River, alarmed by deterioration of water quality from Albany to New York City, gathered to form the Hudson River Fisherman’s Association to patrol for environmental polluters and urge stricter environmental legislation. Today, Riverkeeper continues to work on behalf of the Hudson River and all of its tributaries. The organization recently celebrated New York state’s decision to close the Indian Head Nuclear Reactor set on the lower Hudson River below West Point well ahead of its scheduled shut down on 2022.
AT RIGHT: Riverkeeper volunteer Josh Jupiter gets help in sweeping the river’s edge at East River State Park.
AmeriCorps workers gather around the final picnic bench to sign their names on the underside. 12 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, May 11, 2017
Eagle photos by Andy Katz
A Special Section of BROOKLYN EAGLE Publications
May 11-17, 2017
By the Sea, By the Sea, Sights to See in Coney
BESIDES THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE, THE MOST PHOTOGRAPHED SIGHTS IN our borough can be found in Coney Island: The Instagram-worthy boardwalk, beach and amusement rides like the Wonder Wheel (photo above). And landmarked Childs Restaurant (photo at right), which is part of Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk, is starting to look photogenic as its renovation proceeds. See pages 7-9INB. INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan
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MYBROOKLYNCALENDAR.COM Calendar Events May 11-17 Arts DUMBO Open Studios Artists across the waterfront neighborhood will welcome the public into their studios and workspaces. Studios range from artists who have worked in DUMBO for decades to those participating in artists residency programs, including the SharpeWalentas Studio Program, Triangle Arts Association and Smack Mellon. Artists in the community include Mary Mattingly, Chitra Ganesh, Jerry Kearns, Peter Drake, Tom Fruin, Sharon Butler, and Jeanine Oleson, among many more. When: Saturday and Sunday, May 13-14 Where: DUMBO/Various Locations Do What I Want: The Experimental World of Arthur Russell Twenty-five years after Arthur Russell’s death, BAM Visual Art, Russell’s estate and Tom Lee (Russell’s partner) present a selection of materials belonging to the late composer, cellist and electronic music pioneer. This first-ever public exhibition features more than 150 pieces of original ephemera and reproductions, including a selection of Russell’s own notes, scores, photos, test pressings, show fliers and album covers alongside never-beforeheard recordings from the artist’s personal working tapes. When: Daily, through May 14 Where: Fort Greene/BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building (30 Lafayette Ave.) American Reclamation A solo exhibition of photographs by Stephen Mallon. When: Wednesday through Sunday, through May 14, 1-6 p.m. Where:Wiliamsburg/Front Room Gallery (147 Roebling St.) Francesco Simeti: Swell Francesco Simeti presents “Swell,” a theatrical installation that explores human impact on the environment. When: Thursday through Saturday, through May 27, 2-6 p.m. Where: Park Slope/Open Source Gallery (306 17th St.) Triad: Yevgueniya Baras, Mike Cloud and Zachary Wollard “Triad” brings together the work of Yevgueniya Baras, Mike Cloud and Zachary Wollard, all 2015-16 residents of the SharpeWalentas Studio Program. In the painting practices of each, notions of iconography, history, language and material coalesce in startlingly personal ways, offering a refreshing take on discourses surrounding contemporary painting, community and inner worlds. When: Thursday through Saturday, through May 28, 1-6 p.m. Where: Fort Greene/Five Myles (558 St. Johns Place)
“American Reclamation” will be on exhibit through May 14 at Front Room Gallery. Image courtesy of the artist and Front Room Gallery The Battle Days/Alex Sewell The exploration and representation of cultural identities, the attachment to childhood totems and the use of semiotics are at the core of some of Sewell’s recent works, exhibited in the PlusSpace. When: Thursday through Sunday, through May 29, 1-6 p.m. Where: Crown Heights/Five Myles (558 St Johns Place) Sounds Unseen Between December 2015 and May 2016, Sarah Hickson photographed “The Calais Sessions,” a live music project among musicians living in the UK, the “Jungle” camp in Calais and La Grande Synthe in Dunkirk. For the refugees she met, “The Calais Sessions” provided a welcome opportunity to tell their stories, to play and share the music from their homelands, or to pick up an instrument and join with other musicians. “Sounds Unseen” chronicles the evolution of this remarkable collaboration and celebrates a vital human connection forged through the common voice of music. When: Tuesday through Sunday, through May 28; Tuesday through Friday, 1-6 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. and 5-7 p.m. Where: DUMBO/St. Ann’s Warehouse (29 Jay St.) 27 Years in the Alps A series of new paintings by Peter Gergely in a solo exhibition. The landscapes of “27 Years in the Alps” are the result of 27 years of a love affair with the Alps of northern Italy. When: Thursday through Saturday, through June 2, 6-8:30 p.m. Where: Sunset Park/Tabla Rosa Gallery (224 48th St.) Sights in the City During the summer of 1980, under the direction of his photographer father, Jamel Shabazz armed himself with a Canon AE1 SLR camera and began to photograph the landscape of his native New York City. Composed of color and black-and-white photographs taken between 1980 and 2016, many of which have never been published, “Sights in the City” is the testament of Shabazz’s visual journey. When: Tuesday through Saturday, through June 17, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/United Photo Industries Gallery (111 Front St.)
2INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of May 11-17, 2017
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY! Come Celebrate this Mother's Day SUNDAY, MAY 14TH With us here at Nanatori!
Week of May 11-17, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • 3INB
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Star Wars ay’ at Ro o’s Ta os
Here’s a look at some of the unique Star Wars-themed artwork that filled the walls of Rocco’s Tacos, 339 Adams St., on “Star Wars Day,” May 4. INBrooklyn photos
INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of May 11-17, 2017
GREAT PHOTOS FROM AROUND THE CITY — AND AROUND THE WORLD — APPEAR EVERY BUSINESS DAY IN THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE.
OUR WORLD IN PHOTOS: ATHINA VASILAKIS AND HER DAUGHTER GEORGIA JOKE WITH ONE another as they blend the baklava filling in preparation for the recent Mediterranean Festival in Beaumont, Texas. They and other members of St. Michael’s Antiochian Orthodox Church made trays of Greek baklava for the ninth annual event, which continues to draw large crowds seeking out the sights, smells, tastes and experiences of Mediterranean culture and cuisine. In addition to food, traditional dance and music is offered each year, tours of the church are available throughout the day, and there are children’s activities. Photo by Kim Brent/Beaumont Enterprise via AP
Week of May 11-17, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • INB
--- CROSSWORD ---
(See answers on page 14.)
HOW TO PLAY: Fill in the grid so that every row, every colmn, and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: You must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column, or 3x3 box.
See answers on page 14. 6INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of May 11-17, 2017
Landmarked Childs Restaurant Is Looking Good
This is Childs Restaurant, which is part of Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk.
INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan
It’s Part of Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn
This landmark on the Coney Island boardwalk is starting to look good. Renovators have made great strides on the restoration of Childs Restaurant, which was constructed in 1923. The forbidding face of Neptune, god of the sea, peers down from the terra-cotta ornamentation on the stucco façade of the Spanish Colonial Revival-style building. The once-glamorous seaside restaurant at 3052 W. 21st St., which was designed by architects Dennison & Hirons, is being restored because it’s an integral piece of a new concert venue that made its debut last summer. Ford Amphitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk, as the new entertainment complex is called, also has an open-air component with a roof and 5,000 seats. Go to brooklyneagle.com to see a new photograph of it. The open-air amphitheater roof looks like a gigantic white tent. According to Birdair, the Buffalo-based company that built the roof, it consists of a PVC membrane exterior and a PVC
membrane liner with two acoustical curtains supported by structural steel arches. PVC, or polyvinyl chloride, is a water-resistant, fire-resistant plastic. The venue’s stage is inside the Childs Restaurant building. The stage is visible to the outdoor audience thanks to 50-foot-tall doors on the side of the building. This year’s upcoming concert season, which is scheduled to start on June 16, will include performances by Motown greats the Temptations, the Four Tops, Mary Wilson of the Supremes and Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, country star Toby Keith and rock innovators Echo & the Bunnymen and Violent Femmes. Live Nation is the amphitheater operator. The city-owned property is leased by a joint venture of real-estate developer iStar and nonprofit Coney Island USA. By the way, the Childs Restaurant amphitheater project also includes a one-acre playground, picnic area and grassy hill called Seaside Park. Its design was led by landscape architecture firm Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates.
We’re Waiting for the Makeover Of Coney Island’s Shore Theater
A Tax Lien on the Surf Avenue Property Was Recently Paid By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn
Coney Island’s summer season will soon begin. And the Shore Theater is still sitting there, empty and desolate-looking. When will the long-vacant — if you don’t count the presence of homeless squatters a few years ago — Roaring Twenties movie palace finally get a makeover? The neo-Renaissance Revival-style commercial property that was once the pride of Coney Island has belonged to Pyotr Yadgarov since December 2015.
That’s when his real-estate firm Pye Properties purchased 1301 Surf Ave. for $14 million through Shore Tower Group LLC with Pyotr Yadgarov as member, city Finance Department records show. There is one piece of promising news to report about the iconic seven-story theater and office building. In March, a tax lien on it dating back to 2002 was paid and discharged, Finance Department records indicate. Otherwise, things are quiet at the golden-brick, stone and terra-cotta building on the corner of Surf and Stillwell avenues. Continued on page 8INB
Week of May 11-17, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • 7INB
Coney Island Sights Everybody Loves to Photograph Beach, boardwalk and Wonder Wheel — three popular photo subjects in one image.
By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn
People love to photograph Coney Island icons — especially the Wonder Wheel. INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan
In the spring, the temperature in Brooklyn goes up and down like Coney Island’s landmarked Cyclone roller coaster. And the other day, it went waaay up, like the seats on Coney
Island’s landmarked Parachute Jump when it was still a functioning ride. The 85-degree weather gave everybody a sneak peek of summer at the People’s Playground, which is one of the Atlantic Ocean beachfront neighborhood’s nicknames. Continued on page 9INB
We’re Waiting for the Makeover of Coney Island’s Shore Theater
Continued from page 7INB We reached out to Yadgarov with a query about what steps he has taken to get the Shore Theater’s restoration and adaptive reuse underway. He hasn’t answered. A posting on his company Pye Properties’ website suggests his current plans for 1301 Surf Ave.
“The vision is to make the Shore Theater the future cultural epicenter of Coney Island via music, theater and live events,” it says. Plus, there’s a rendering of the building showing a marquee over its front door with the words “Shore Hotel” spelled out in red letters. It’s the same drawing that surfaced last summer on brokerage firm Commercial Acquisitions Realty’s website. At that time, a broker at that firm told Eye on Real Estate he was marketing 3,500 square feet of first-floor retail space with an asking rent of $75 per square foot at the building. We couldn’t find the Shore Theater listed on Commercial Acquisitions Realty’s site when we looked for it the other day.
Mermaids Are Dancing on the Ceiling The Shore Theater was designated as an individual city landmark in 2010, so any exterior alterations planned by Pye Properties must be approved by the city Landmarks Preservation Commission. As is the case with most landmark designations, the property’s exterior is protected from demolition but not its interior. It will be up to Yadgarov to decide whether to preserve eye-popping decorative details inside the historic movie theater. The auditorium has a dome that’s 150 feet in diameter.
There’s a mezzanine where mermaids are dancing on the ceiling — decorative plaster mermaids set in sea-green diamonds. See brooklyneagle.com for photos Coney Island historian Charles Denson took of the movie theater’s interiors in 2006. The building was designed by preeminent theater-architecture firm Reilly & Hall and built in 1925. It originally belonged to Chanin Construction Co. Loew’s operated the movie theater for much of its five-decade run. It was designed for movies and live performances — and notables including Al Jolson and Jerry Lewis appeared on its stage. Near the end of its days as a movie theater, it was a porn palace. The building’s previous owner, Horace Bullard, purchased it in 1979. By that time, the movie theater was closed. The late real-estate investor amassed a portfolio of Coney Island properties — including the Thunderbolt roller coaster, which the Giuliani Administration illegally tore it down in 2000. Bullard, who wanted to turn the Shore Theater into a hotel and casino, died in 2013. His daughter Jasmine Bullard was president of his company Kansas Fried Chicken Inc. in 2015 when it sold the Shore Theater to Yadgarov.
The Shore Theater, on this prominent Coney Island corner, is in need of a fix-up.
INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan
8INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of May 11-17, 2017
When you are ready to move out of NYC, or a vacation home close to NYC, here are 10 Top Reasons you should talk to me: 7) Home of Pleasantville Country Club, which boasts a 9-hole, double-tee course, complete with locker rooms. Afterward, relax and dine at Unique Affairs Restaurant, catering to all tastes, overlooking the built-in pool and 3,000-sq-ft. condos (Look for Another Reason Next Week!)
Coney Island’s beach is a hot spot for selfies on a summer-like day. That’s the Cyclone roller coaster in the background. Continued from page 8INB At every turn, there were people taking pictures of iconic rides like the landmarked Wonder Wheel and Boardwalk businesses like Nathan’s. They snapped selfies on the beach, where folks wore swimsuits though red “No swimming” flags were flying. They photographed the shoreline while standing on crowded Steeplechase Pier. Here are a few of our pix from that fine, freakishly warm day. See brooklyneagle.com for more. Pleasantville: New community of townhomes. Featuring 3 bed/3bth. Well designed kitchen with large center island opening up to breakfast area and family room. Well appointed master suite. 2300 sq ft and up starting under $800,000.
Steeplechase Pier is packed with people fishing and taking photographs. That’s the Parachute Jump in the background. INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan
GET YOUR LISTING SEEN BY THOUSANDS OF LOCAL EYES!
The wet sand works like a mirror, reflecting the beach walkers on Coney Island.
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Week of May 11-17, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • 9INB
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MYBROOKLYNCALENDAR.COM Continued from page 2INB Rites of Spring Art, music, prose. When: Saturdays and Sundays, through June 18, 1-6 p.m. Where: Red Hook/BWAC (499 Van Brunt St.)
the creation of enigmatic artworks that bring the forgotten past into the foreground and reanimate minor artifacts of history into transformative assemblages. When: Thursday through Saturday, through June 18, 12-5 p.m. Where: Clinton Hill/Tillou Fine Art (59 Cambridge Place)
Kajahl: Obscure Origins This exhibition presents a focused survey of Kajahl’s portraits, which combine iconography from African, Asian, European and Pre-Columbian traditions. The fusion of these symbols results in
S.B. Walker: Walden Walker’s photographs illustrate the way this once pristine landscape is now viewed and used. Using a large format camera, Walker captures both the grandeur and the cotidian 100 years after Thoreau. When: Tuesday through Saturday, through June 23, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Janet Borden, Inc (91 Water St.) Multilocational See multilocational artworks by Natalia Nakazawa and Cecile Chong. Multilocational is defined as “of, pertaining to, or being present in more than one location.” It subtly plays on the words multicultural or multinational, or “of mixed ancestry or residence.” When: Fridays, through June 25, 3-6 p.m. Where: Park Slope/Old Stone House (336 Third St.) Georgia O’Keeffe: Living Modern This exhibit takes a new look at how the renowned modernist artist proclaimed her progressive, independent lifestyle through a self-crafted public persona, including her clothing and the way she posed for the camera. The exhibition expands our understanding of O’Keeffe by focusing on her wardrobe, shown for the first time alongside key paintings and photographs. It confirms and explores her determination to be in charge of how the world understood her identity and artistic values. When: Wednesday through Sunday, through July 23, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. (Thursdays, 11 a.m. - 10 p.m.) Where: Prospect Heights/Brooklyn Museum (200 Eastern Parkway) Forged Worlds This outdoor photography exhibition showcases work by seven artists whose photographic practices revolve around the physical construction of fictional landscapes. Installed on a fence beneath the Manhattan Bridge, this photo installation invites viewers to take a closer look and perhaps allow themselves to be carried away — if even for a moment — in thoughts and lands so strange, yet so familiar, so close to home. When: Daily, through July 31, 2017 Where: DUMBO/Manhattan Bridge (Adams Street, Plymouth Street and Anchorage Place) Truman Capote’s Brooklyn: The Lost Photographs of David Attie In the spring of 1958, a young photographer named David Attie was led through the streets of Brooklyn Heights and to the Brooklyn waterfront by an unexpected guide: 33-year-old Truman Capote. The images Attie took that day were to illustrate Capote’s essay for Holiday magazine about his life in Brooklyn. Decades later, these largely unseen photographs are being exhibited for the first time. When: Wednesday through Sunday, through July 31, 12-5 p.m.
Where: Brooklyn Heights/Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont St.) Next Stop: Second Avenue Subway Tracing nearly 100 years of history, the New York Transit Museum’s newest exhibit explores how the Second Avenue line fits into New York’s past, present and future transportation landscapes. When: Tuesday through Sunday, through Sept. 3, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. (Saturday and Sunday hours, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.) Where: Downtown Brooklyn/New York Transit Museum (Corner of Boerum Place and Schermerhorn Street) Infinite Blue The works of art in “Infinite Blue” feature blue in all its variety — a fascinating strand of visual poetry running from ancient times to the present day. In cultures dating back thousands of years, blue — the color of the skies — has often been associated with the spiritual, but also signifies power, status and beauty. The spiritual and material aspects of blue combine to tell us stories about global history, cultural values, technological innovation and international commerce. When: Wednesday through Sunday, through Nov. 5, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Thursdays, 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Where: Prospect Heights/Brooklyn Museum (200 Eastern Parkway)
Books & Readings Friends of Brooklyn Heights Annual Benefit The 23rd Annual Benefit for the Friends of Brooklyn Heights Library, honoring Linda Fairstein, a New York Times bestselling author and former prosecutor. She will be discussing “Killer Look,” the latest book in her bestselling “Alexandra Cooper” series of crime novels. When: Monday, May 15, 7 p.m. Where: Brooklyn Heights/Brooklyn Heights Library (109 Remsen St.) Book Launch: Melodie Winawer, “The Scribe of Siena” Melodie Winawer will discuss her debut novel. The book follows a time-traveling neurosurgeon from the 21st century who discovers love and a plot to destroy Siena in medieval Italy. When: Wednesday, May 17, 7 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Power House Arena (28 Adams St.)
Educational Hot Glass, Cold Beer Guests for “Hot Glass, Cold Beer” will receive a unique handmade drinking glass, which will overflow with free beverages while they watch our talented team show off their glass manipulation skills. Demonstrations in glassblowing, neon-bending and flame-working. Continued on page 11INB
10INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of May 11-17, 2017
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“Hot Glass, Cold Beer” will take place at Brooklyn Glass on Saturday, May 13. Continued from page 10INB When: Saturday, May 13, 7-11 p.m. Where: Gowanus/Brooklyn Glass (142 13th St.) Nothing About Us, Without Us: The Road to Self-Advocacy Becoming a self-advocate is a lifelong process. Hear from self-advocates from a variety of backgrounds, including mental health, developmental and physical disabilities, foster care and more. Learn what it means to be a self-advocate, how people become self-advocates and how you can support them. Panel discussions will be followed by small group breakouts with light refreshments. When: Monday, May 15, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Where: Grand Army Plaza/Central Library (10 Grand Army Plaza) NYTM Train Operators Workshop Drop by the computer lab to take control of a New York City subway car and operate it over virtual miles of track, using some incredibly realistic software. Limited capacity. When: Saturday and Sunday, May 13-14, 3:304:30 p.m. Where: Brooklyn Heights/New York Transit Museum (99 Schermerhorn St.) Gowanus’ Triple Bypass: Change Through Art, Design and the Environment Once an artery of commerce and industry, the Gowanus neighborhood has become emblematic of change and the forces impacting the Brooklyn experience: grassroots arts, environmental remediation and real estate speculation. Join us for a fast-paced discussion with experts playing pivotal roles in these arenas, including Abby Subak, Jared della Valle, Owen Foote, David Briggs and Philip Silva, and look at how shifting flows of creativity and capital are redefining this historic artery. Moderated by Joseph Alexiou, author of Gowanus: Brooklyn’s Curious Canal When: Wednesday, May 17, 6:30-8 p.m. Where: Brooklyn Heights/Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont St.)
Where: Brooklyn Bridge Park/99 Plymouth St. Show & Tell: Mothers, Mementos & Memories Celebrate your mother at “Mothers, Mementos and Memories,” a free Mother’s Day-themed “Show & Tell” event in support of StoryCorps. Like childhood “show and tell” days, you are invited to bring an object that reminds you of your mother, mother-figure, grandmother or aunt, like a photo, piece of jewelry, card, letter, teacup, apron, rolling pin, or a recipe. When: Sunday, May 14, 3-5 p.m. Where: Park Slope/Old Stone House (336 Third St.) Ed Center Open Hours The Ed Center is open for free, drop-in hours four afternoons each week. Get to know Brooklyn Bridge Park with the 250-gallon aquarium filled with critters from the East River, a 10-foot scale model of Brooklyn Bridge Park, crafts, a reading corner, and much more. When: Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays Where: Brooklyn Bridge Park/Environmental Education Center Family Bowl Bring the whole family and get your bowl on. When: Saturday and Sunday, May 13-14 Where: Williamsburg/Brooklyn Bowl (61 Wythe Ave.)
Family Fun Paint the Owls Children ages 3-10 years old are invited to paint the metal cut-out owls along the gate of the children’s playground. When: Saturday, May 13, 11 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Where: Bay Ridge/Owl’s Head Park (67th Street and Colonial Road) Kids Drawing andPoetry Workshop Kids can join artist Jesse Chun at 99 Plymouth St. for a workshop on drawing, poetry and combining the two. When: Saturday, May 13, 11 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Brooklyn Historical Society presents “Gowanus' Triple Bypass: Change Through Art, Design, and the Environment” on Wednesday, May 17. Among the speakers will be David Briggs (above), principal of Loci Architecture and executive director of Gowanus by Design. Image courtesy of Loci Architecture
Week of May 11-17, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • 11INB
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