New York City (March 2018)

My spouse and I visited New York City for the weekend in late March 2018. Initially, we had planned to visit Washington DC that weekend to see the cherry blossoms, but recent cold and snowy weather delayed the bloom, so we pivoted north to NYC. After scoring a last-minute dining reservation at Grant Achatz’s The Aviary at the Mandarin Oriental, we booked a room at the centrally located Hilton Times Square. To make our weekend even better, we won $40 lottery tickets to Kinky Boots, which remarkably starred Wayne Brady. Add in visits to two new museums, Gulliver’s Gate and Spyscape, and a yummy Szechuan Chinese lunch, and we had an excellent weekend! 

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New York City: McGee’s Pub (March 2018)



My spouse and I visited McGee’s Pub for drinks on a Sunday afternoon in late March 2018. McGee’s is open daily from 10:00 am until 4:00 am. You can make a reservation using the online Open Table system.


McGee’s is located in Hell’s Kitchen/Midtown West on 55th Street between Broadway and 8th Avenue. We were visiting the nearby Spyscape Museum, and we stopped at McGee’s afterward for some beverages.
The restaurant/bar space covers two floors, with the third/top floor hosting private event space. You can sit at the long wooden bar, or at one of the booths, some of which flank a gas fireplace. Many TVs ensure that you will never miss your favorite sporting event. 

A bit of television trivia: On the TV show called “How I Met Your Mother”, McLaren’s Pub, where Ted, Robin, Barney, Marshall, and Lilly often gather, was the inspiration for McGee’s. Reportedly, show creators used to drink at McGee’s when they worked for David Letterman on “The Late Show”. Today, On Location Tours works with McGee’s as a feature for their NYC TV and Movie Tour and offers a special 15% discount for tour participants. (However, please note that McGee’s looks nothing like the basement bar McLaren’s.)

We visited McGee’s for drinks only. However, although we didn’t dine there, we thought that the Irish pub food that we saw looked interesting and tasty, and we might return some time to try it.

We enjoyed our visit to McGee’s Pub.









New York City: Hilton Times Square (March 2018)



My spouse and I stayed at the Hilton Times Square for one night on a Saturday evening in late March 2018. We booked our stay online using the Hilton website. After we booked, an email offered a chance to upgrade our accommodations for a fee, which we did not accept. On the day prior to our stay, we used the online Hilton check-in feature, and we selected (and received) room 3702, a king corner unit.

(Note: This hotel is sometimes called the New York City Hilton. It should not be confused with the New York Hilton Midtown/Hilton New York, which is located on 6th Avenue between West 53rd and 54th Streets, where we stayed in April 2018; see our separate review.)

The main entrance to the Hilton Times Square is located on West 42nd Street between 7th and 8th Avenues; however, a quieter less-used entrance exists on West 41st Street. The closest tourist attractions include Times Square, Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum, Ripley’s Believe it or Not Museum, and a large complex of retail, dining, and entertainment (including a 25-screen AMC movie theater, an Applebee’s restaurant, and some souvenir shops). For transportation, the Port Authority Bus Terminal (with many subway lines inside) is nearby, and you can hail taxis and hire Ubers at the 41st Street entrance. (We had trouble hailing taxis in this busy location [they were all full/hired], but we were more successful with using Uber.)

The Hilton Times Square was built in 2000, although it was most recently renovated in 2013. The hotel has a modern facade containing geometric shapes in primary colors and a permanently lit grand marquee. The hotel lobby is located on the 21st floor, with guest rooms on floors 23 to 44. A small information desk/valet/luggage storage is located on the street level, from which elevators whisk guests up to the lobby floor. The two lobby elevators worked slowly; however, the bank of six elevators leading from the lobby to the guest rooms were some of the quickest we can remember. Hotel amenities include the Pinnacle Bar and adjacent Restaurant Above (both of which are a part of the busy lobby), a business center (in a conference room located off the restaurant), a fitness center (but no pool), meeting and event space, and a pantry where you can purchase forgotten items and snacks and drinks. Note that at the time of our stay in March 2018, this property did NOT charge an Urban Destination fee, but that may have changed. 

The hotel offers 460 rooms and suites spread across 22 floors. Guest rooms range from 330 to 360 square feet, which is large for Midtown Manhattan rooms, where the average size is about 200 square feet. Room categories include standard king or two queens, deluxe king or two queens, corner king or two doubles, allergy pure, handicap-accessible, and two one-bedroom suites (room size 625+ square feet). South-facing rooms overlook 41st Street toward the Empire State Building, Madison Square Garden, and the Freedom Tower; our corner room 3702 enjoyed such a view; however, in retrospect, we might have preferred a room number ending in 01 that overlooked bustling 42nd Street instead. Keep in mind that the higher your room, the less you can see of the street scene. Room decor includes an industrial theme including carpeting with a city design including streets and buildings, an interesting stretched canvas with memorable moments from the past 100 years, and a sculpture of cog wheels from a printing press. Rooms have desks and rolling chairs, flat-screen TVs, mini-refrigerators, and clocks. Peter Thomas Roth toiletries (shampoo, conditioner, body lotion, soap) are provided. Our room was huge and spacious despite its king-size bed with a nightstand on each side and a lounge chair/ottoman and side table. We also had a large closet and a nice-size bathroom with combination bathtub/shower and a rolling door. 

As Diamond members, we received not only points, but also vouchers for the complimentary buffet breakfast. Breakfast included the usual array of cold and hot items, including pastries, breads, and bagels, fruit, yogurt, hard-cooked eggs, scrambled eggs, frittata, sausage, bacon, potatoes, and blueberry blintzes. Juice, coffee, and water are served by wait staff. 

We enjoyed our stay at the Hilton Times Square. Although Midtown is not usually our neighborhood of choice, it was fun to stay amidst the touristy attractions and hordes of people in a large, attractive guestroom.






August 2019:







September 2019 (9-11):



Theatre: Kinky Boots (with Wayne Brady) (March 2018)

My spouse and I saw Kinky Boots (starring Wayne Brady as Lola) at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in late March 2018. We won $40 lottery tickets, and we chose seats E13 and E14 in the right box.
Kinky Boots is a Broadway musical that debuted at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in 2013. Its music and lyrics were written by Cyndi Lauper. The production earned a season-high 13 Tony award nominations and 6 Tony wins, including Best Musical and Best Score. In 2016, it won three Laurence Olivier Awards, including Best New Musical. The musical uses a twelve-piece orchestra consisting of keyboards, percussion, bass, guitars, reeds, violin, viola, cello, trumpet, and trombone.
Based on the 2005 British film Kinky Boots and inspired by true events documented in a 1999 episode of the BBC2 documentary television series Trouble at the Top. It followed the true story of Steve Pateman, who was struggling to save his family-run shoe factory from closure and decided to produce fetish footwear for men, under the brand name "Divine Footwear”. The musical adaptation Kinky Boots tells the story of Charlie Price. Having inherited a shoe factory from his father, Charlie forms an unlikely partnership with cabaret performer and drag queen Lola to produce a line of high-heeled boots and save the business. In the process, Charlie and Lola discover that they are not so different after all.
Act I
Charlie Price grows up as the fourth-generation "son" in his family business, Price & Son, a shoe factory in Northampton. Another young boy, growing up in London, is as fascinated by shoes as Charlie is bored by them, but in this case it is a pair of red women's heels that have attracted his attention, aggravating his strict father. Years pass. Charlie's father is aging and hopes that Charlie will take over the factory, but Charlie is eager to move to London with his status-conscious fiancée, Nicola, and pursue a career in real estate ("The Most Beautiful Thing").
Charlie has barely made it into his new flat in London when his father dies suddenly. Charlie hurries home for the funeral, where he finds the factory near bankruptcy. The factory makes good quality men's shoes, but they are not stylish and not cheap, and the market for them is drying up. Charlie is determined to save the factory and his father's legacy, though he has no desire to run Price & Sons himself. The workers, many of whom have known Charlie his entire life, do not understand why Charlie had moved away in the first place, and many are hostile and skeptical of the new management.
Returning to London, Charlie meets his friend and fellow shoe salesman Harry, in a pub, to ask for help with the factory. Harry can only offer a temporary solution and advises Charlie not to fight the inevitable ("Take What You Got"). Leaving the pub, Charlie witnesses a woman being accosted by two drunks. He intervenes and is knocked unconscious. He comes to in a seedy nightclub, where the woman he attempted to rescue is revealed to have been the club's drag queen headliner, Lola, who performs with her backup troupe of drag dancers, the "angels" ("Land of Lola"). Recuperating from his ordeal in Lola's dressing room, an uncomfortable Charlie notices that the performers' high-heeled boots are not designed to hold a man's weight, but Lola explains that the expensive and unreliable footwear is an essential part of any drag act.
Charlie returns to the factory and begins reluctantly laying off his workers. Lauren, one of the women on the assembly line, explodes at Charlie when given her notice, and stubbornly tells him that other struggling shoe factories have survived by entering an "underserved niche market". This gives Charlie an idea ("Land of Lola" reprise), and he invites Lola to come to the factory to help him design a women's boot that can be comfortable for a man ("Charlie's Soliloquy"/"Step One").
Lola and the angels arrive at the factory, and she is immediately unsatisfied with Charlie's first design of the boot. Quickly getting the women of the factory on her side, she draws a quick design of a boot, explaining the most important factor is by far the sex appeal ("The Sex is in the Heel"). George, the factory manager, realizes a way to make her design practical, and an impressed Charlie begs Lola to stay until a prestigious footwear show in Milan in three weeks' time, to design a new line of "kinky boots" that could save the factory. Lola is reluctant, since she is already receiving crass comments from some of the factory workers, but is flattered by Charlie's praise, and finally agrees.
Charlie announces that the factory will be moving ahead with production on the boots. He thanks Lauren for giving him the idea, and offers her a promotion. She accepts, and is horrified but thrilled to realize she is falling for him ("The History of Wrong Guys").
The next day, Lola shows up in men's clothes and is mocked by the foreman, Don, and his friends. An upset Lola takes refuge in the bathroom, and Charlie attempts to comfort her. Lola explains that her father trained her as a boxer, but disowned her when she showed up for a match in drag. The two discover their similarly complex feelings toward their fathers, and Lola introduces herself by her birth name: Simon ("Not My Father's Son").
Nicola arrives from the city of London, and presents Charlie with a plan for the factory that her boss has drawn up: closing it and converting it into condominiums. Charlie refuses, but is shocked to discover that his father had agreed to this plan before he died, presumably because Charlie was not there to run it. He refuses to sell, and soon the workers are celebrating as the first pair of "kinky boots" is finished ("Everybody Say Yeah").
Act II
Many of the factory workers are not enthusiastic about the radical change in their product line. Some of them, especially the intimidating Don, make Lola feel very unwelcome. Lola taunts him back, enlisting the help of the female factory workers to prove that Lola is closer to a woman's ideal man than Don ("What a Woman Wants"). Lola presents Don with a unique wager to see who is the better "man": Lola will do any one thing that Don specifies if Don will do one thing that Lola specifies. Don's challenge is for Lola to fight him in a boxing match at the pub. Charlie, remembering Lola's background, is horrified. Lola easily scores against Don in the ring but ultimately lets Don win the match ("In This Corner"). Afterwards, in private, Don asks why she let him win, and Lola replies that she could not be so cruel as to humiliate Don in front of his mates. She gives him her part of the challenge: "accept someone for who they are."
Charlie is pouring his own money into the factory to ensure it will be ready in time for Milan, and he is getting frantic that the product is not right, angrily forcing his staff to redo what he considers to be shoddy work. Nicola arrives, fed up with Charlie's obsession over the factory, and breaks up with him. Lola has been making some decisions about production and preparations without consulting Charlie. When he discovers that she has decided to have her angels wear the boots on the runway rather than hiring professional models, an overwhelmed Charlie lashes out at her, humiliating her in front of the other workers. Lola storms out, and the factory workers go home. Alone, Charlie struggles with the weight of his father's legacy and what it means to be his own man ("Soul of a Man").
Lauren finds Charlie and tells him to come back to the factory. It is revealed that Don has persuaded all the workers to return to work and to sacrifice a week's pay to ensure the boots can be finished in time for Milan. Charlie is astonished and grateful, and asks if Don has paid up on his wager by accepting Lola. Lauren explains that the person that Don has accepted is Charlie himself.
As he heads to the airport for Milan, Charlie leaves a heartfelt apology on Lola's voicemail. Meanwhile, Lola performs her act at a nursing home in her home town. After she leaves the stage, she speaks to her now wheelchair-bound father, who is dying in the home, and reaches a sense of closure ("Hold Me in Your Heart").
Charlie and Lauren arrive in Milan, but without models Charlie is forced to walk the runway himself. Lauren is thrilled by his dedication ("The History of Wrong Guys (Reprise)") but the show threatens to be a disaster. Just as all seems lost, Lola and her angels arrive to save the day. Lauren and Charlie share their first kiss, and the whole company celebrates the success of the "Kinky Boots" ("Raise You Up/Just Be").
Theatre Info
The Al Hirschfeld Theatre was designed for vaudeville promoter Martin Beck. In fact, the theatre opened as the Martin Beck Theatre with a production of Madame Pompadour in 1924. It was the only theatre in New York that was owned outright without a mortgage. It was designed to be the most opulent theatre of its time, and has dressing rooms for 200 actors. The theatre has a seating capacity of 1,424 for musicals. We previously saw Christina Applegate as the title role in Sweet Charity in this same theatre in 2005, and Kiss Me Kate here in 1999. In 2003, it was renamed the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in honor of the caricaturist famous for his drawings of Broadway celebrities. This is one of five theatres owned and operated by Jujamcyn Theatres, who purchased it in 1965 from the Beck family. In order to reflect how Hirschfeld’s career spanned the Martin Beck’s years of operation, a gallery was installed in the mezzanine which features 22 reproductions of the artist’s drawings portraying plays and actors who appeared at the theater.