Russian Tea Room
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The Russian Tea Room is an
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Russo-Continental restaurant, located at 150 West 57th Street (between
Sixth Avenue Sixth Avenue, also known as Avenue of the Americas, is a major thoroughfare in the New York City borough of Manhattan. The avenue is commercial for much of its length, and traffic runs northbound, or uptown. Sixth Avenue begins four blocks b ...
and Seventh Avenue), between Carnegie Hall Tower and Metropolitan Tower, in the
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of
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.


History

The Russian Tea Room was opened in 1927 by former members of the Russian Imperial Ballet as a cafe and chocolate store. At the time of its opening, the restaurant mostly served tea and catered to Russian artists, particularly ballet dancers. It became famous as a gathering place for those in the entertainment industry. The founder is often considered to be Polish-born Jacob Zysman, but in that year, a corporation directory lists Albertina Rasch as the president, and her name appears along with ''Russian Art Chocolate'' and ''Russian Tea Room'', in early photographs of the shopfront at 145 West 57th Street. In 1929, the business moved across the street to its present location, which at that time was an
Italianate The Italianate style was a distinct 19th-century phase in the history of Classical architecture. Like Palladianism and Neoclassicism, the Italianate style combined its inspiration from the models and architectural vocabulary of 16th-century It ...
brownstone, built in 1875 by German immigrant John F. Pupke, a tea and coffee merchant, whose son later moved the large clan to
Long Island Long Island is a densely populated continental island in southeastern New York (state), New York state, extending into the Atlantic Ocean. It constitutes a significant share of the New York metropolitan area in both population and land are ...
, seeking a more relaxed lifestyle. By 1933, the
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n
émigré An ''émigré'' () is a person who has emigrated, often with a connotation of political or social exile or self-exile. The word is the past participle of the French verb ''émigrer'' meaning "to emigrate". French Huguenots Many French Hugueno ...
Alexander Maeef was running the Russian Tea Room and was the main personality associated with the restaurant for the next fifteen years. A group of investors took over the Russian Tea Room in the 1940s. In 1955, the restaurant was purchased by Sidney Kaye, a former teacher, who acquired his partners' stakes. The Russian Tea Room's clientele originally consisted largely of musical personalities. After the
New York Philharmonic The New York Philharmonic is an American symphony orchestra based in New York City. Known officially as the ''Philharmonic-Symphony Society of New York, Inc.'', and globally known as the ''New York Philharmonic Orchestra'' (NYPO) or the ''New Yo ...
moved from Carnegie Hall to
Lincoln Center Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (also simply known as Lincoln Center) is a complex of buildings in the Lincoln Square neighborhood on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It has thirty indoor and outdoor facilities and is host to 5  ...
, Kaye declined an invitation to relocate his restaurant to Lincoln Center. As such, the restaurant began to serve theatrical and film personalities, publishers, journalists, fashion designers, and artists. The Russian Tea Room was long advertised as "just six minutes and 23 seconds from Lincoln Center and slightly to the left of Carnegie Hall" because of its proximity to both venues.


Stewart-Gordon ownership

When Kaye died in 1967 at the age of 53, he left the restaurant to his widow, Faith Stewart-Gordon. In 1981, Harry B. Macklowe, the developer of Metropolitan Tower immediately to the east, planned a large office tower that would have included the sites of the current Metropolitan Tower, Russian Tea Room, and Carnegie Hall Tower immediately to the west. If the three sites were combined, this could allow a 51-story tower with . Macklowe had offered Stewart-Gordon $12.5 million for the building's air rights in 1982. However, Stewart-Gordon refused several offers to acquire her building, so Macklowe withdrew his bid for the Carnegie Hall Tower site in 1983. Though Stewart-Gordon subsequently considered selling the restaurant building, she ended up not selling the building or its air rights to Carnegie Hall Tower's developers. As a result, Metropolitan Tower and Carnegie Hall Tower are only separated by the Russian Tea Room, which is wide. The Russian Tea Room began hosting
cabaret Cabaret is a form of theatrical entertainment featuring music song, dance, recitation, or drama. The performance venue might be a pub, casino, hotel, restaurant, or nightclub with a stage for performances. The audience, often dining or drinking, ...
performances in the mid 1990s, hosting performers such as Karen Akers, Laurie Beechman, Andrea Marcovicci, Steve Ross, and Margaret Whiting during its first season.


LeRoy ownership

Warner LeRoy, who owned Tavern on the Green, bought the restaurant in June 1995 for $6.5 million. His company LeRoy Adventures and Vornado Realty Trust, operated by Steven Roth, each obtained a 50 percent stake in the Russian Tea Room. LeRoy shortly announced plans to renovate the restaurant. At the time, the Russian Tea Room typically served of beets, of caviar, of lamb, of sour cream, and of vodka per year. LeRoy hired David Bouley as the Russian Tea Room's executive chef in October 1995. The restaurant closed for renovation on December 31, 1995. LeRoy had planned to replace the existing restaurant with a new structure costing $12 million. He hired the firm of Harman Jablin to design a seven-story structure designed in a Russian eclectic style, with features such as a large acrylic Russian bear and a replica of the
Kremlin The Moscow Kremlin (also the Kremlin) is a fortified complex in Moscow, Russia. Located in the centre of the country's capital city, the Moscow Kremlin (fortification), Kremlin comprises five palaces, four cathedrals, and the enclosing Mosco ...
. The new structure would have contained a formal second-floor dining room, as well as banquet rooms on the third and fourth floors. Dishes, furniture, paintings, samovars, and upholstery from the restaurant were sold at auction in January 1996. Rumors circulated that LeRoy's declining health, impending divorce, and lack of funding had caused the restaurant's renovation to be delayed. By April 1997, the restaurant was scheduled to reopen in June 1998. Bouley quit in 1998 following a disagreement with LeRoy, and Fabrice Canelle was hired as the restaurant's new executive chef. The interior of the restaurant was demolished and rebuilt in late 1998. It cost $15 million to demolish the interior and more than $20 million to redecorate the restaurant. The Russian Tea Room reopened in October 1999. LeRoy indicated that the average customer would spend $45 on a meal; the cheapest items cost $20, and the Russian Tea Room did not enforce a formal dress code. By then, LeRoy's health was failing, and his company could not make payments on the substantial loans for the renovations. The restaurant's management had initially set a sales goal of $26 million during 2000 before lowering the goal to $22 million; ultimately, the restaurant only earned $17 million that year. Following several negative reviews of the Tea Room, LeRoy fired Canelle in April 2000 and promoted Renaud LeRasle, the Tea Room's chef de cuisine, to executive chef. LeRoy claimed that Canelle's work had declined after ''The New York Times'' wrote a negative review of the restaurant. Warner LeRoy died in February 2001, and his 22-year-old daughter Jennifer, the restaurant's director of operations, took over the Tea Room. ''Crain's New York'' and ''
Nation's Restaurant News ''Nation's Restaurant News'' (''NRN'') is an American trade publication, founded in 1967. NRN covers the foodservice industry, including restaurant A restaurant is an establishment that prepares and serves food and drinks to customers. Me ...
'' wrote that Warner's death caused the restaurant to decline even more, as his energetic
showman Showman can have a variety of meanings, usually by context and depending on the country. Australia Travelling Funfair, showmen ("showies") are people who run amusement and side show equipment at regional shows, state capital shows, events ...
personality had attracted guests. The restaurant's high overhead expenses made it difficult to turn a profit. Business, which was already slow after the Tea Room reopened, never recovered from the
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. During the fourth quarter of 2001, Vornado wrote off its $7.374 million stake in the Tea Room. The Russian Tea Room closed with little notice on July 28, 2002. Jennifer LeRoy said the restaurant had failed because "people didn't think of the Russian Tea Room as a place for parties". Other observers said Warner had tried too hard to emulate the operation of Tavern on the Green, which had both more customers and lower operating expenses.


Redevelopment attempts and reopening

After the restaurant had closed, the Tea Room filed for bankruptcy, and a judge scheduled an auction for the restaurant building. The
United States Golf Association The United States Golf Association (USGA) is the United States national association of golf courses, clubs and facilities and the governing body of golf for the U.S. and Mexico. Together with The R&A, the USGA produces and interprets the rule ...
(USGA) wished to buy the Tea Room building and convert it into a visitor center and golf museum, which would have replaced the USGA Museum in New Jersey. The USGA acquired the building in November 2002, bidding $16 million; the sale included all of the restaurant's furnishings, artwork, tableware, and decorations. The association planned to add interactive exhibits and golf memorabilia after removing the existing furnishings. A critic for ''The New York Times'' wrote: "Nothing could have brought it back to vigorous life, but the idea that the old place could become a golf museum is shocking." The USGA canceled its plan for a golf museum in June 2003, citing the high costs of renovating the Tea Room, and the association continued to operate its museum in New Jersey. The USGA resold the building in 2004 to Gerald Lieblich's RTR Funding Group for about $19 million. The sale included the
air rights In real estate, air rights are the property interest in the "space" above the Earth's surface. Generally speaking, owning or renting land or a building includes the right to use and build in the space above the land without interference by oth ...
above the restaurant building, as well as its name. Lieblich announced in 2006 that he had hired an executive chef and manager and that he planned to reopen the restaurant. The decor remained largely unchanged from LeRoy's renovation, although the Tiffany glass ceiling was removed, and the seats were replaced. Robins changed the restaurant's menu, serving dishes with less butter and fewer calories, and adapting many of the restaurant's dishes. The Russian Tea Room reopened on November 1, 2006. By 2009, the restaurant's vice president had added a children's tea menu, an express menu for business travelers, and a list of half-bottle wines. After the 2022
Russian invasion of Ukraine On 24 February 2022, , starting the largest and deadliest war in Europe since World War II, in a major escalation of the Russo-Ukrainian War, conflict between the two countries which began in 2014. The fighting has caused hundreds of thou ...
, the Tea Room's business declined when many people had boycotted businesses related to Russia, even though restaurant officials had condemned the invasion.


Design

The restaurant building was originally four stories high. The structure measures wide and extends the entire length of the block to 56th Street. The floors do not have load-bearing walls, allowing a flexible arrangement of furniture. During the 1990s renovation, the ground floor remained intact, but the upper stories were modified significantly. After the restaurant reopened in 1999, the first floor was designed in a similar manner to the original, with stag-head and firebird motifs; an ice sculpture was placed in the center. There was a bear-shaped revolving aquarium on the second floor. This story also contained green and red upholstery, a gold-painted tree with 35 glass eggs, and a Tiffany glass ceiling with 250,000 pieces of glass mosaic. The upper stories were decorated with a fireplace, bronze-painted domed ceilings, and blue walls. There was a double-height ballroom on the third floor and three private dining rooms on the fourth floor. The fourth story also contained a 3D model of troops in Moscow's
Red Square Red Square ( rus, Красная площадь, Krasnaya ploshchad', p=ˈkrasnəjə ˈploɕːɪtʲ) is one of the oldest and largest town square, squares in Moscow, Russia. It is located in Moscow's historic centre, along the eastern walls of ...
, Many of these decorations were salvaged from Maxwell's Plum, also operated by LeRoy. After 2006, the top two stories were used for catered private events, while the lowest two stories contained the restaurants.


Cuisine

A 1938 article in '' Vogue'' magazine cited the Tea Room as selling "authentic blinis, with caviar, melted butter, and sour cream, but only if you are wise enough to order ahead". When the Russian Tea Room reopened in 1999, it primarily served Russian and Georgian cuisine. Among the dishes served were pelmeni, fish, and hot
borscht Borscht () is a sour soup, made with meat stock, vegetables and seasonings, common in Eastern Europe and Northern Asia. In English, the word ''borscht'' is most often associated with the soup's variant of Ukrainian origin, made with red b ...
; the restaurant also sold 250 types of wine. By 2006, the restaurant's menu included borscht, as well as blinchiki with goat cheese, duck confit, and wild mushrooms. One of the most expensive dishes on the menu, Iranian caviar, cost . Other dishes, such as beef Stroganoff and chicken Kiev, were not listed on the menu but could be cooked on request.


Notable guests

''The Los Angeles Times'' wrote in 1983 that "As a lunch room it services the Manhattan headquarters of the major studios. ..Those in the know also know the importance—literally the ''significance'' within the inner sanctums of show business—of being seen there". When the Tea Room closed in 2002, ''Nation's Restaurant News'' wrote: "Over the years the celebrated restaurant was a haunt for the rich and famous". ''The New York Times'' wrote that the restaurant had attracted "agents, performers and power brokers in the cluster of entertainment businesses" in the area, but that the restaurant's popularity slowly declined as older patrons died. *
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* Rowan Atkinson *
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* Anne Bancroft * Tallulah Bankhead * Noel Behn *
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* Victor Borge * Lucrezia Bori *
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*
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* Nicolas Cage *
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* Sam Cohn * Michael Douglas * Mischa Elman * Kirsten Flagstad *
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* Ossip Gabrilowitsch * Jascha Heifetz *
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* Wanda Toscanini Horowitz * Lou Jacobi * Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis *
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* Fritz Kreisler *
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, worked as a coat-check attendant * Arthur Miller *
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* Mike Nichols *
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* Sidney Poitier * Rosa Ponselle * Anthony Quayle * William Saroyan * Arthur Rubinstein * George Segal * Alan Schneider *
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* Mitchell A. Wilson British comedian Rowan Atkinson married makeup artist Sunetra Sastry at the Tea Room in February 1990.


Reception

Bryan Miller of ''The New York Times'' said in 1992 that "beneath all the hype there is little substance", saying that the restaurant suffered from "inattentive and unprofessional" service despite being highly patronized. After the Tea Room reopened in 1999, it received several negative reviews. William Grimes of the ''Times'' wrote that the reopened restaurant was "appalling", saying: "More than ever, the Russian Tea Room is not about the food. ..The modern touches that anellehas introduced often seem peculiar, and the traditional dishes lack soul."
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of the ''
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'' wrote: "If you want opulence, it's here. If you want history, hurry over. If you want borscht, run! For your life." Architecturally, it was more positively acclaimed; the Tea Room received the Award for Outstanding Restaurant Design from the
James Beard Foundation The James Beard Foundation is an American non-profit culinary arts organization based in New York City. It was named after James Beard, a food writer, teacher, and cookbook author. Its programs include guest-chef dinners to scholarships for asp ...
in 2001. When the Tea Room reopened in 2006, several reviews noted that waitstaff often took their time delivering food and failed to respond to customers' repeated requests. ''Times'' food critic Frank Bruni regarded the restaurant as "good", saying that "in terms of food and all else, the Russian Tea Room doesn't add up neatly or quite make sense", although the high quality of the food was counterbalanced by poor service. A writer for the '' Columbus Dispatch'' said, "The lore (think boldfaced names and movie cameos) and decor are the reasons most people will come, but the food can be a draw as well" unless one was a vegetarian or was looking for the Tea Room's staple dishes. A writer for ''The New Yorker'' said the food "runs from serviceable ..to forgettably enjoyable", but the waitstaff were apathetic.


In popular culture


Artworks

* It is depicted in a painting by Beryl Cook.


Films

* Scenes from '' The Turning Point'', ''
Manhattan Manhattan ( ) is the most densely populated and geographically smallest of the Boroughs of New York City, five boroughs of New York City. Coextensive with New York County, Manhattan is the County statistics of the United States#Smallest, larg ...
'', '' Tootsie'', '' When Harry Met Sally...'', ''
Big Big or BIG may refer to: * Big, of great size or degree Film and television * Big (film), ''Big'' (film), a 1988 fantasy-comedy film starring Tom Hanks * ''Big'', a 2023 Taiwanese children's film starring Van Fan and Chie Tanaka * ''Big!'', a ...
'', '' The Smurfs'', '' Sweet Smell of Success'', '' New York Stories'', '' Unfaithfully Yours'', and '' The Extra Man'' were filmed at the restaurant.


Literature

*It is featured in Eve Babitz's ''Sex and Rage'' as a place where literary agents take authors out to lunch. * It is mentioned in Jay McInerney's novel '' Bright Lights, Big City''.


Television

*" The One Where the Monkey Gets Away" and "The One With the Evil Orthodontist" episodes of ''
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'' mentions it numerous times. *"The Wrath of Con" episode of ''
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'' was filmed there. *The "Dad" episode of '' Louie'' was filmed there, and in season 3 Louie meets his Uncle Excelsior there for lunch * In 1995, it was shown in '' The Nanny'' season 3 episode "Pen Pal". * It is used as a setting in the 2016-2017 season of ''
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''s intro, introducing Aidy Bryant in the scene. * In 2002, it was shown in the background of a scene in the season 1 episode "Tuxedo Hill" of '' Law & Order: Criminal Intent''. * It is the setting of a meeting in season 3 episode "Icebreaker" of the show '' Billions''.


See also

* List of restaurants in New York City * List of Russian restaurants


References


Further reading

* * *


External links


Official website


''
The New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'', October 22, 2006 * Fabricant, Florence
"Tea Room Coming Back"
''The New York Times'', October 4, 2006

''The New York Times'', September 11, 1988 {{Authority control Restaurants in Manhattan 1927 establishments in New York City Russian-American culture in New York City Russian restaurants in the United States Restaurants established in 1927 57th Street (Manhattan) Midtown Manhattan