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Tag Archives: Faces
First Draft: Neighborhood Faces: Astrologist tells the time of SoHo’s Evolution
A gaunt woman sits in a corner on the second story of 180 Prince Street in SoHo. Her unruly silver hair hasn’t surrendered all its ebony. Her black shirt is adorned with golden buttons, a black choker lines her neck. Her bony hands gloss over a set of tarot cards set before her. Above her head hangs one of her husbands pieces; a large painting of an orange man in a turban.
There is only one table on the second floor. It is reserved for the restaurant’s resident tarot card-reader, Nancy Stark. Stark, 77, has been conducting tarot card and palm readings over the heads of Raoul’s Restaurant patrons for 24 years. She has watched SoHo evolve. Her lens through which she has watched has been from across a small table on the second floor of Raoul’s.
She finishes up a reading with a young woman who had come to see her from the bar below. They exchange a handshake-ridden “thank you.”
“But I’m not good with dates,” Stark says over the light of a single votive sitting on her table large enough for a dinner party of one.
Raoul’s, a famed French bistro to the businessman and a cherished local niche to the SoHo resident, recently celebrated their 43rd anniversary.
“I have been married over 30 years. I don’t know exactly how many years, but it’s been over 30,” says Stark of her husband, Barry.
Barry is a retired architect, now a painter and poet.
A graduate of Cooper Union in the East Village, wife and mother of one son, Stark has been reading palms and conducting tarot card readings for 48 years. Keep in mind her “dates” disclaimer.
Nancy Stark emigrated to from Chile to New York at age 13. Her father was already in Manhattan, prompting her family to follow. Her family is full of “spiritualists,” says Stark.
On the recently implemented hike in Cooper Union tuition for students entering in 2014, Stark says, “It’s criminal. It was one of the last schools that you could enter based on merit alone. It’s ridiculous.”
“It’s funny,” says Stark. Her hands dance atop the white tablecloth.
“I used to get a lot of young women. Now I get a lot more mothers and men asking questions about business, their personal life. We’re all human. Without love, we are nothing. Love, health, and material security.”
The employees of Raoul’s, especially the longtime staff, know Nancy.
“She is a cat lover, and she’s a longtime vegetarian,” says server Catherine.
Working late on a Monday night, Catherine describes Nancy’s quirks.
“She’ll greet me like this,” Catherine says before throwing her palms up in the air like that of a kitten and clasping her fingers up and down, meowing.
On SoHo, Nancy is blunt about the decline of what was once a vibrant neighborhood. Although a resident of Chelsea, Stark travels down to SoHo Sunday through Wednesday to set up her table up the winding staircase of Raoul’s.
“In the 90’s, [Raoul’s] was popping. Jumping. The parties were everywhere. When the money was plentiful, the neighborhood was wild. There were so many personalities, so many celebrities. I met some,” says Stark. “There was a lot of action. It was all very exciting… very, very exciting. A lot of that joie de vivre.”
“Now,” Stark says as her hands dance downward from the air toward the table, “it’s not as wild. I think after September 11th, that was the demarcation. It was a very sobering time. Since then, it’s just been a sobering time. But it has been for the whole economy, hasn’t it been?”
Stark believes that SoHo has gone through a maturation that may be a depression, reflected largely in the economy.
At 11:30, Nancy packs up and goes home. She will usually finish at 11 o’clock, making exceptions only when a customer calls in advance.
“I take a cab,” Nancy says, her folder of fliers in hand.
“Coming down here is one thing, but I take a cab when I go home.”
Posted in Profiles, ProfilesDRAFTS
Tagged Faces, Rebecca Ungarino, SoHo
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Gerald A. Eposito, Community Board District Manager
Gerald A. Esposito was the youngest District manager that New York City has ever had and has held that position in Williamsburg for the past 35 years. Esposito has received many awards from community groups for his work. He stays actively involved with his neighborhood by being part of fraternal organizations and alumni associations
His biography on NYC.gov states, “With a sharp mind, quick action and a keen knowledge of process, he helped guide the Community Board through the city’s myriad of complex issues and resolved many problems with service delivery, budget and planning, building partnerships and problem resolution. ”
I want to interview him because he should know a lot about Williamsburg and any issues this neighborhood may have. Also he is involved in the improvement and progress of Williamsburg. There are many questions that I want to ask him like the following:
(1)Throughout your 35 years of service as District Manager, what is your biggest accomplishment? Biggest regret?(2)What is your opinion on the new condominiums that are being built in Williamsburg?(3)What is an issue that Williamsburg struggles with?
There are many people that I hope to interview as well. Some of my possible sources will include, the staff members that work with him, Williamsburg residents and community groups/organizations.
Posted in Profiles
Tagged Faces, Margarita Lappost, Williamsburg
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Neighborhood faces – SoHo
SoHo is rich in old establishments. Old galleries, old cobblestone streets that contrast with the paved roads of midtown, old buildings converted from factories into luxury apartment buildings, and old restaurants. The restaurant I work in has been at its Spring Street and 6th Avenue location for 17 years, and emulates the stuck-in-time vibe of SoHo.
A woman named Michelle, between 60 and 70 years old, is a retired longtime server at the restaurant I have been with for almost one year. She has also lived in SoHo her entire life. Michelle worked at Aquagrill from their opening in 1996 until about 2008, and places a twist on the classic female New York City server persona: bubbly and friendly, with a touch of feisty quirk and jaded warmth. She has that “I know what I’m doing” way about her. I will be interviewing Michelle as the face of SoHo, for I believe she embodies the SoHo that many older longtime residents recall: stylish and artistic and less crowded than what the neighborhood today.
As she has agreed to speak with me, although we have yet to set up an interview, I will be asking Michelle what she believes the future of SoHo holds, how she believes the neighborhood has changed, and ask about anecdotes she may have of the neighborhood over the years. I would love to ask her where she was during 9/11, for SoHo is in close proximity to the Towers. The angle I’d like to take is asking Michelle about “old SoHo vs. New SoHo” with a focus on the “cronut” phenomenon as a metaphor for the overcrowding of the neighborhood. As a retiree from the food industry, she has to have some opinion about the craze over a $5 pastry. She has no children, but she has been married to her husband for many years, so I will ask to speak to him as well about Michelle. She has friends in the area who I will also ask to speak with, and I have the feeling she takes classes or lessons of some kind, so I will ask to speak with her instructors about Michelle and perhaps their encounters with her in SoHo.
I will definitely be asking to take a few pictures, as she is a beautiful older woman with very thin features and an interesting way about her that I am eager to explore. I would love to get some shots of her in her apartment, perhaps.