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Cocktails

Which Brooklyn Heights Watering Hole Is One Of The Best Dive Bars In Brooklyn?

February 23, 2014

Brooklyn Magazine published its list of the “Best Dive Bars in Brooklyn” this week and one of Brooklyn Heights’ oldest makes the list — Montero’s Bar and Grill (73 Atlantic Avenue).

Brooklyn Magazine: “We don’t have a lot of foot traffic,” the bartender here told us recently—at least not in this weather, when no one’s at the park or riding the ferry. Way down by the waterfront—one of the last remaining bars in an area that used to be full of them, to service all the longshoremen from the nearby shipyards—it’s a trek from any subway station, and that’s part of what it makes it appealing; also, there’s the cluttered decor’s nautical theme (the Times once called it a “waterfront museum with alcohol”), the no-nonsense booze (they don’t even have taps), and the classic, preserved interior, not to mention the famous and beloved neon sign out front. People make special trips just to get here, taking cabs or buses or long hikes, because it’s just that special.

Last year, Montero’s made headlines when one if its “historic” lifesavers went missing.

Do you agree that its one of Brooklyn’s best dives?


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/65658

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Arts and Entertainment

Winter’s Tale, The Movie That Virtually Shut Down Brooklyn Heights Is Out And The Reviews Are Not Pretty

February 17, 2014

Last February the production for Winter’s Tale, the movie based upon Mark Helprin’s 1983 novel and starring Colin Farrell, basically shut down Brooklyn Heights. But it sure was exciting to see fake snow spread along Hicks Street and a majestic white horse prepping its scene on Joralemon Street. Nothing beats Hollywood Magic, right?

So, were the NO Parking and Tow Away zones and the late night shoots worth it? Well faster than you can say “Remember Me“, the bad reviews have piled up.

The New York Times A.O. Scott says the flick turned out to be, “a lumbering white elephant rather than the flying white horse that is the novel’s magical mascot.”

Sci-Fi website io9 piles on saying, “every single scene is treated as the most heart-rending emotional heartgasm ever, to the point where you feel as though the movie is beating you across the head and shoulders with a pillowcase stuffed with rocks.”

Richard Roeper’s reveiw in the Chicago Sun Times is headlined “Winter’s Tale: An Old Fashioned Train Wreck Of A Film.”

The Onion’s AV Club says, “A film this awkwardly sappy comes only once in a blue moon.”

And the ultimate barometer of movie quality, Rotten Tomatoes, reports that only 15% of critics and 52% of audience members liked the film.

So, does it matter if a movie that shuts down that neighborhood is good or bad? Do the benefits (?!) of having films shoot here out weigh quality? Comment below!


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/65654

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Sports

St. Francis’ Martin, White Arrested; Jones, Santavenere and Mystery Player Status Unclear

February 16, 2014

On Friday, Mark Morales of the Daily News reported that St. Francis Brooklyn men’s basketball player Anthony White was arrested recently by the New York Police Department in response to domestic violence charges. White, 19, a sophomore guard for the small college located in Brooklyn Heights, was alleged on February 3 to have choked his 20-year old girlfriend and to have destroyed her personal property after accusing the woman of infidelity. According to the Daily News article, the victim further alleged that she had been the victim of a sexual assault in December 2012 by three St. Francis players.

One of the three players was identified as Terrier freshman Wayne Martin, who was accused of unwanted sexual advances. The charges against Martin, who played at South Shore High School and was not enrolled at St. Francis in 2012, were subsequently dropped.

According to George Arzt of George Arzt Communications, a spokesman designated by St. Francis to respond to media inquiries, the college will have no statement on this matter beyond Tuesday’s announcement from President Brendan J. Dugan, in which he acknowledged the suspension of five students “for allegedly violating the St. Francis College Code of Conduct.”

In a telephone interview on Friday, Arzt stated that because the charges against Martin were dropped, he will be available to play on Sunday, when St. Francis plays LIU Brooklyn in the annual Battle of Brooklyn contest that will be held at Barclays Center.

Arzt stated that White, who has been charged with assault and criminal mischief, will not be available for Sunday’s game. Furthermore, Arzt admitted that he was not certain of the status of suspended players Brent Jones and P.J. Santavenere, both juniors. It is possible that a decision regarding their availability will be made prior to tip-off.

According to Arzt, the fifth St. Francis student who was suspended was also on the Terriers’ squad, meaning that the rash of suspensions impacted more than one-third of the program’s players. That student, whose name has not be released, was suspended for five days but has apparently been reinstated.

For a small Catholic school that prides itself on adhering to precepts handed down from St. Francis of Assisi, accusations regarding arrests and sexual misconduct are both entirely out of character and a devastating distraction to what promised to be one of the more successful campaigns in recent memory.

“While the investigation is still going on, I’m not able to comment,” said Terrier Athletic Director Irma Garcia, who has been in charge of St. Francis Athletics since 2007. “I can’t say anything that could affect the investigation. The administration at St. Francis is committed to protect the rights and privacy of all the people involved.”


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/65649

From the Web

Food

Atlantic Avenue’s Chez Moi Welcomes Willy Ono As New Exec Chef And Now Serving Brunch Earlier

February 10, 2014

This dispatch just in from Chez Moi’s Patricia Ageheim as the eatery enters a new era under Executive Chef Willy Ono. If Ono’s Instagram feed is any indication, Brooklyn Heights is in for some eye popping cuisine:

We have had many requests to open earlier for brunch, finally we are able to accommodate! We will be serving brunch from 10am on Saturdays and Sundays instead of 11am as of tomorrow [2/8].
We are also excited to introduce Chef Willy Ono who after spending time in Europe working at iconic restaurants like Noma (named as best restaurant in the world 2010,11,12) and Mugaritz, went to the Big Sur as a Sous Chef at Sierra Mar. Now back in New York we are pleased to have him as our new Exectutive Chef. He has already made some popular additions to or menu, such as the roasted chicken with hay smoked sunchokes. More exciting specials to come!


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/65505

From the Web

Food

Brunch Comes To Red Gravy

January 16, 2014

This yummy dispatch just in from Eater:

EaterNY: Saul Bolton’s Italian restaurant, Red Gravy, has started serving weekend brunch. The menu includes things like pork belly with chickpea puree, and pasta carbonara. Brunch is served on Sundays only, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Have you tried Red Gravy?


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/65109

From the Web

Celebrity Residents

So What Is Lena Dunham’s Brooklyn Heights Apartment Really Like And Who Just Moved In With Her?

January 15, 2014

Brooklyn Heights resident/Girls creator and star Lena Dunham is the subject of the cover story in Vogue Magazine. In the piece we learn that her boyfriend, rock star Jack Antonoff of the band fun., has moved in with her. And while she spends several weeks each year in Los Angeles working on Girls post-production, she tells the magazine that she does not feel at home there and if she ever does, “someone should really worry about me.”

So what’s her Brooklyn Heights apartment like? Read on:

Vogue: Dunham’s apartment is quirky, well appointed, and—considering that she sits at the center of one of the most coveted television-comedy enterprises today—concertedly unostentatious. There’s a small galley kitchen, hung with a fading schoolhouse photograph of her grandmother in Connecticut and pepped up with a hot-pink Hello Kitty microwave. The dining area comprises a square four-person table. In the living room—large enough to fit a big TV, a couch, a desk, some shelves—she has hung work by her family and friends: Dunham’s mother, Laurie Simmons, is an acclaimed artist best known for her photographs of miniature, dioramic domestic scenes, while her father, Carroll Dunham, is a painter celebrated for his vibrant biomorphic abstractions and top-hatted figures with phalluses for noses. (More recently, he has been exploring the female anatomy; his daughter calls the abstract drawing in the dining area “the only work of his that I could hang without people being like, ‘So, what’s the deal with that penis on your wall?’ ”)

Nearby, Dunham has arranged what she refers to as her “salon wall,” a small selection of professional-type artifacts: fan letters from Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks; a birthday drawing from the New Yorker cartoonist and Girls producer Bruce Eric Kaplan; a portrait of Zosia Mamet by Jemima Kirke; and other cherished works. Much of the furniture in the apartment Dunham took from the Girls set.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/65113

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment

Albee Play Sheds Light on Brooklyn’s Hospital Crisis In New Brooklyn Theater Production

January 14, 2014

by Chip Brenner

“This is a semiprivate, white hospital,“ says The Nurse to a black man who has arrived with an accident victim in Edward Albee’s The Death of Bessie Smith, being presented by New Brooklyn Theater for a brief two-weekend run at Interfaith Medical Center Hospital in Bedford-Stuyvesant. It’s a line that draws laughs in response to the absurdity of the remark, but the issues in play are dead serious. The play, an early one-act effort by an earnest young writer who was to come to full maturity in such works as Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf and A Delicate Balance, serves in this pared-down production as a site-specific vehicle to bring attention to the crisis being faced by Interfaith, struggling for its existence amid a cost-cutting frenzy that has put paid to at least 12 facilities in the metro area, including Greenwich Village’s much-lamented St. Vincent’s and Cobble Hill’s Long Island College Hospital.

At Sunday afternoon’s 2:00 pm performance, a Standing Room Only crowd packed into a conference room off the entrance lobby of the hospital to see the work, which presents Albee’s imagined version of the great blues singer Bessie Smith’s death from injuries sustained in a 1937 car crash after being refused treatment at a whites-only hospital. It is structured in a series of eight scenes in which Ms. Smith does not appear–only hospital staff both white and African-American, with their acquaintances and family members, and Ms. Smith’s companion and driver at the time of the accident (in a fine performance by Edwin Lee Gibson). The script dates from 1960, and the sentiments are of that time—Mr. Albee does not shy from frequent and venomous use of the “N” word—and some of the poetic flights of the character known as The Intern (nicely interpreted by James Patrick Nelson) evoke Tennessee Williams, then at the top of his game.

Illuminating the Issues
Site-specific theatre can be an effective device in more ways than one. In some cases, the venue in which a play is performed can illuminate a script in unexpected ways when the artifice of a stage environment is abandoned in favor of a “real” setting. In another, more political sense, the use of an unusual site can serve to bring focus to issues of urgency.

Certainly that is the case with The Death of Bessie Smith, in which the performance was almost a curtain-raiser to the second portion of the event, a Q & A session in which the actors took a back seat to an array of activists and politicos. The gathering included Diane Porter, Secretary of the Board of Trustees of Interfaith; Jill Furillo, Executive Director of the New York State Nurses’ Association; Dr. Roland R. Purcell, a vascular surgeon at Interfaith, president of the medical staff and a member of the Board of Trustees; Annette Robinson, who represents New York Assembly District 56 and lives a scant two blocks from the hospital; Robert Cornegy, Jr., newly elected City Council member representing Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights; and Tremaine Wright, Chairperson of Brooklyn Community Board 3.

The panel was moderated by New Brooklyn Theater Board Chairman Jeff Strabone, who introduced the participants and prompted a discussion about Interfaith’s specific situation— hanging by a thread until March 7 on the latest of a series of one- and two-month extensions from the NYS Department of Health—as well as broader questions of race, class and access to health care. To a person, the panelists were veterans of the New York hospital wars, some of whose bona fides included being arrested last July with then-candidate Bill de Blasio over the impending closure of Long Island College Hospital.

The line of the afternoon belonged to Council Member Cornegy, who said that, as a community activist, he had thought he could engage in “an enlightened discussion” with the powers that be regarding maintaining and preserving community access to quality health care. He found otherwise. Cornegy called for a moratorium on hospital closings in the borough, a remark that was met with vigorous applause.

When the discussion returned to the topic of the Albee play and its relevance to the struggle for community input into vital health care decisions, Dr. Purcell noted that a successful campaign requires a multi-pronged strategy, and that the arts have a part to play in dramatizing conditions and educating an audience. Purcell is a doctor of color, a native Grenadan, and the irony of his presence on the panel, given the subject matter of the play, was not lost on the audience.

Edwin Lee Gibson in The Death of Bessie Smith Photo by Kristina Williamson

From Drama to Action

In a brief interview following the Q & A, 28-year-old Jonathan Solari, the director of The Death of Bessie Smith and Artistic Director of New Brooklyn Theatre, spoke about what drew him to the play: “I’ve been an admirer of Edward Albee’s for as long as I can remember, and this environment is a part of my community. New Brooklyn Theater serves Bed-Stuy. This is where our audience is, this is where our home is, and I feel that we as artists who are involved in the community have an obligation to speak to the issues that affect our audience.”
“It speaks to this situation differently to each audience member. We have nurses in here, we have community members in here, we have people from other boroughs. Everyone is viewing this play and can find their way into it through whatever lens they bring. Our job is just to stage it and to bring attention to this situation and hope that we inspire some kind of action from our audience.”

There’s no question that the production and its presence in the eerily quiet hospital has created a buzz. Perhaps it was the New York Times’ or New York One’s coverage—or perhaps it was Perez Hilton’s tweets—but the first weekend’s performances were SRO, and the remaining performances, Jan. 16 – 19, are sold out (check NBT’s web site for information, though; since all seats are free, some reservations may not be picked up: http://newbrooklyntheater.com).

And word has it that the production may find new life following these initial performances at Interfaith. It seems that other hospitals have been calling—the theatre is not yet at liberty to say which ones—and the requests are under consideration. But the playwright had given permission to produce the script at Interfaith under very specific restrictions, one of which is that no one is to be paid. The New Brooklyn Theater management feels strongly that the actors, many of whom are professional and are performing with the blessing of Actors’ Equity Association, must be remunerated if the play is to be mounted again. Stay tuned.

Top photo: Jessica Afton and Edwin Lee Gibson in “The Death of Bessie Smith.” Photo by Kristina Williamson.

From the Web

Food, News

#Forkgate You: deBlasio Eats Pizza With A Fork, Twitter Goes INSANE

January 11, 2014

Mayor Park Slope eats pizza with a fork and the Internets goes wild. With all this fuss you’d think the guy was behind this scandal.

From the Web

Health

Those Sick NYC Quits TV Ads Should End With The Bloomberg Nanny State

January 8, 2014

Mike Bloomberg, the former Nanny King of NYC, is no longer in power. Now that we’re on a new “adventure” with our new Mayor “Che” de Blasio, isn’t it time to end those sick, disgusting, exploitive NYC Quits television ads?

The latest round is particularly despicable and the folks featured in them deserve much better treatment than to be dragged out as the REASON YOU SHOULDN’T SMOKE. We live in America, people, and if you want to shorten your life a minute at a time with those demon coffin nails, have at it. Please don’t spend our public money on stating the obvious to those with free will. Ever hear of Darwin?

Go ahead NYC Quits, hand out those nicotine patches and help people — that’s a good thing. But for the love of all that is holy GET THOSE TV ADS OFF THE AIR. They only scare children and not smokers. And if scaring kids is your main goal then.. GFY.

What do you think? Comment away!

From the Web

News

Tale of the Tweets: #Hercules Comes To Brooklyn, deBlasio Shovels

January 4, 2014

Brooklyn loves a snow storm and now with a shovelin’ mayor the sky is the limit.. err sumthin’. The Tale of the Tweets:
(photo: @iGiammy)

From the Web