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NYC Celebrity Sightings
By Sheridan Rogers
"You are sitting where President
Clinton had lunch," declares the hand-written note above a booth in Katz's
Deli, lower East side New York City. "Two hot dogs, pastrami sandwich,
fries, diet ginger and decaf coffee."
Pause a minute to take it in: TWO
hot dogs. PLUS a pastrami sandwich so thick with thin slices of hot spiced
beef you can't get your mouth around it.
Next to the note, there's a smiling
photo of Clinton looking hale and hearty. He'd been in a two hour meeting at
the famous grungy Jewish deli with a group of Congressmen and, according to
the manager, schmoozed everyone.
Recently Clinton's been seen at West
(Broadway and 84th Street) and he's also known to favour Sylvia's, a
touristy soul food joint in Harlem not far from his office.
It was in one of the booths at
Katz's that Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal met for the café scene in 'When Harry
Met Sally'. "Yes, Katz's have what she had!" says another note on the wall,
referring to Ryan's fake orgasm.
Celebrity spotting is part of the
New York buzz. It doesn't matter what end of town you're in, you're bound to
sight at least one or two. You don't have to go seeking them. They
materialise in front of you.
One night I was sitting in the cosy
lobby of the Algonquin Hotel, a charming hotel off Broadway well-known for
attracting theatre and publishing types, when I looked up to find Tony
Bennett suddenly standing in front of me embracing a fellow guest. His
lovely warm smile filled the room. He lingered a minute or two then turned
on his heel and went back into to The Oak Room to listen to the
oh-so-debonair Peter Cincotti, the 19 year-old jazz sensation who's been
wowing New Yorkers for the past few weeks.
Another night at Marseille, a noisy
red hot restaurant in the Theatre district, I was chatting away to my
companion when suddenly he looked up and exclaimed, "Hey, there's Marisa
Tomei! I'm sure it's her. She was in My Cousin Vinny and Someone Like You.
She's a Brooklyn kid, like me."
I turned around and saw a skinny
dark-haired woman talking animatedly to her friends. Later, I bumped into
her in the rather cramped Ladies Room.
Jackie Mason and Linda Lavin also
eat here and Kathleen Turner drops in for drinks.
"In New York you get jaded by it,"
the blithe young Italian waiter told us. "I only remember the ones who were
difficult."
Leonardo Di Caprio, it seems, is
everywhere. He hangs out at Café Habana, a small nuevo-Cuban diner in SoHo.
No pretensions here. The lime bar top is laminated, the stools silver and
blue and floor lined with bathroom tiles. But the grilled corn topped with
grated cheese and chilli powder and a squeeze of lime is tops and so is the
clientele which includes Sheryl Crow, Lenny Kravitz ( who made a video
there), Robert de Niro and Susan Sarandon (who lives just up the road in
Elizabeth Street).
Di Caprio and De Niro also frequent
Tribeca Bar & Grill (De Niro is co-owner), a large brick-walled bistro in
the trendy Tribeca area. You can perch on a stool at the warm round bar in
the centre of the restaurant, have a drink and eat your meal on a starched
napkin. If you're lucky you might spot Tom Cruise (when he's in town) or
Michael Jordan. De Niro's office is on the eighth floor and the Tribeca
Film Centre shares the building.
As in Sydney, celebrities flock to
what is new and hot, so if you've got money to burn you might check out the
latest restaurants like Craft, Otto, 66 or the more communal less expensive
Salt Bar.
Department stores are also good for
surprise sightings. In the homewares section on the seventh floor of the
very elegant Bergdorf Goodman store opposite the Plaza Hotel, you might see
Arnold Schwarzenegger in amongst the $US5650 boxed antique Limoges sets or
Meryl Streep hiding behind a hat.
Swish hotel lobbies (like The
Mercer, SoHo, and the W hotels in Union Square and Times Square) are not
only fun places to meet, but great for celebrity-spotting too. The W Hotel
in Times Square is worth checking out for its interior design alone - and
don't be perplexed if you feel you've stepped into a river when you enter
the downstairs lobby!
And for those who like to be seen,
then Blue Fin, the downstairs bar on Broadway is where to go. A sheer wall
of glass from floor to ceiling ensures you'll be spotted at any time of the
day!
FACT FILE
Katz - 205 East Houston (cnr
Ludlow) Subway: Second Ave/Houston Street Ph 212 254 2246
Sylvia's - 328 Lenox Ave
between 126th and 127th Streets Subway: 125th St. Ph. 212-996- 0660
The Algonquin - 59 W 44th
Street Ph. 212 -840 - 6800 Subway: 42nd St-5th Ave
Marseille - 630 9th Avenue
at 44th Subway: Times Square Ph. 212-333-2323
Café Habana - cnr Prince and
Elizabeth Streets, Nolita Ph. 212-625-2001 Subway: Spring Street
Craft - 43 E 19 St (betw
Broadway and Park Ave) Ph. 212 780 -0880 Subway: Union Square
Salt Bar - 29A Clinton St
(between Houston and Stanton Streets) Ph 212 979 8471
Subway: Second Ave
Otto - 1 5th Ave at 8th St.
Subway: 8th St/NYU. Ph. 212 674 2044.
66 - 241 Church St at
Leonard St, Tribeca.. Subway: Franklin St, Ph. 212 925 0202.
Tribeca Bar & Grill - 375
Greenwich St. Subway: Franklin Street. Ph. 212 941-3900
Mercer Hotel 147 Mercer
Street Soho Subway: Prince Street Ph.888-918-6060
W Hotel Times Square, 1567
Broadway (47th St) Ph 212 918 1400. Subway: Times Square
Begdorf Goodman, 754 5th Ave
Ph 212 753 7300 Subway: 5th Ave-59th/60th Street
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