I hope for some last-minute reprieve or other miracle that will save a true NY gem. Definitely my favorite dining spot before a show, especially for comfort food: blintzes, matzoh ball soup and cabbage soup. Ahhhh.
Has anyone been to the Westway since they reopened? Has the menu become less dinerish and have prices skyrocketed. I liked it the way it was before and they had to go upscale it.
Pammylicious, I was at Westway this past week. I don't really think much changed post renovation, I just think the booths and tables were re done. Had an amazing bowl of matza ball soup for just $3.50, I think that's pretty great for midtown.
So sad. I've been doing to the Cafe since it opened - a respite from the insanity of the theater district, especially after a drive into the city, particularly in the winter months. Please sign the petition and help reverse another loss of old NYC...
Every generation has made the same complaint, but there's something distinctly creepy going on in NYC, similar to (but not identical to) what's going on in San Francisco.
Middle-class people, young and old combined, and minorities, are being squeezed out of the Village, Chelsea, Hell's Kitchen, the Upper West Side, even Harlem and Washington Heights.
Add to that the homogenization of retail by chains forcing out individual businesses, and you end up with a loss of the very individualism, ingenuity, entrepreneurship and creativity that have always made New York...well, New York
In New York, it's foreign money building upscale glass towers that house pieds a terre for people who don't even live here. In San Francisco, it's the tech industries chasing ethnic groups and young people out of the city. Different issues but the same net result: the overpowering blandness of money ruling.
It's not the same as it's always been. It's changing the essential quality and character of the city. For the worse.
Well said, PalJoey. Slowly but surely, our country is becoming one giant shopping mall filled with chain restaurants and big box stores. It's sad enough this happens in the suburbs, but when it is happening in NYC, it's horrendous.
I assumed since they just put so much into renovations, Westway either owns the property or just signed a very long term lease, which will make it safe for at least 20 years.
It is closing this weekend. I was in there last night after seeing Side Show and now regret it being only the 2nd time I've been there. And now that I recall, it was the only place in Times Square where one of the waiters had a real conversation with me when they weren't busy. It was very busy last night though. I mean they had to seat me at one of the smaller tables that get pushed together for larger parties with other people at the other 2, but it was fine. I actually did talk to those people about theater a little. It actually started because I had my playbill on my table when I got there. And it definitely is something I will remember and love for the rest of my life. Again, no other restaurant experience I've had in NY can compare.
I do hope that they can find another spot in the city to reopen. I still can't believe what they want to do to that place. The crowd in there makes me hope the new plan is a mistake. I know I probably won't return if it is too upscale and expensive. That's not me putting those kinds of restaurants down, but it isn't the kind of place I search for alone after the theater, if that makes sense.
"I don't want the pretty lights to come and get me."-Homecoming 2005
"You can't pray away the gay."-Callie Torres on Grey's Anatomy.
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Had what might have been my final bowl of matzoh ball soup last night at Cafe Edison. Favorite waiter "Manik" (spelling?) and I chatted, and I expressed my hope that the place can reopen elsewhere. If I can get back Sunday, it'll be cabbage soup and maybe some latkes for Chanukah. What a loss for the community. Personally, after many years of visits to the cafe, I will greatly miss it.