Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Online campaigns saving some favourite NYC businesses

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NEW YORK, United States (AP) — The boarded up windows and For Rent signs are all over the place in Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood, where restaurant­s are closed and businesses shuttered. Nearby, the Broadway theatres are all dark.

But the economic darkness brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic has had a few bright spots: A couple of wellloved venues have received financial boosts to help them make it through, thanks to online fund-raising campaigns and even a telethon.

Married couple Tom and Michael D’angora, who live in Hell’s Kitchen, first started a Gofundme campaign on behalf of the West Bank Cafe/

Laurie Beechman Theater.

It raised more than $340,000 after a streaming telethon that included performanc­es by many of the Broadway actors and singers who frequent the West Bank Cafe.

“I’ve spent some of my most delicious, my most insouciant, my most important times right here,” celebrated veteran actor Andre De Shields, who was performing in “Hadestown” before the virus hit, said during the telethon, before handing venue owner Steve Olsen a check. “We don’t want this lovely piece of heaven on earth to ever go away.”

“We were a couple of weeks from really running out of money, and going out of business,” Olsen said prior to the campaign.

But now, he’s optimistic the venue he opened in 1978 can stay open until indoor dining and live performanc­es return to the city.

Since then, the D’angoras have started another campaign for jazz club Birdland, raising over $180,000. Owner Gianni Valenti predicted he would be able to stay open until the pandemic is over.

It’s “very heartwarmi­ng to see the response we’ve had”, Valenti said.

“I read through the list of people and I just love the fact that they care about Birdland, about the music and about what it means to New York that we all keep it going and hopefully down the road we’re back to normal,” he said.

 ?? (Photos: AP) ?? Steve Olsen, owner of West Bank Café, reads the specials over the phone for a to-go customer in the empty restaurant, Saturday, January 9, 2021, in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood of New York. The boarded-up windows and “For Rent” signs are all over the place in Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood. Nearby, the Broadway theater are all dark. But the economic darkness brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic has had a few bright spots. A couple of well-loved venues have gotten financial boosts, thanks to online fund-raising campaigns and even a telethon.
(Photos: AP) Steve Olsen, owner of West Bank Café, reads the specials over the phone for a to-go customer in the empty restaurant, Saturday, January 9, 2021, in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood of New York. The boarded-up windows and “For Rent” signs are all over the place in Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood. Nearby, the Broadway theater are all dark. But the economic darkness brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic has had a few bright spots. A couple of well-loved venues have gotten financial boosts, thanks to online fund-raising campaigns and even a telethon.
 ??  ?? Steam rises from a dish as customers eat a meal on the sidewalk outside a restaurant, Sunday, 10, 2021, in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood of New York.
Steam rises from a dish as customers eat a meal on the sidewalk outside a restaurant, Sunday, 10, 2021, in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood of New York.
 ??  ?? A pedestrian walks past a boarded-up bar on Sunday in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood of New York.
A pedestrian walks past a boarded-up bar on Sunday in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourh­ood of New York.

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