New York City (April 2018)

My spouse and I visited New York City for the weekend in mid-April 2018. Originally, we had planned to visit the Hudson River Valley (to see Storm King), but when we were making those plans, we also developed a “Plan B” in case the weather wasn’t cooperative to visit the outdoor sculpture park. Our Plan B was to visit NYC, and in preparation, we submitted our names for some of the Broadway lotteries. The weather was predicted to be favorable, so our Storm King plan was a go. But on the day of our departure, we learned that we had scored $45 lottery tickets to see both parts of Angels in America. So we quickly changed plans and visited NYC. We ate at Danji (where we had dined previously in May 2016), McHale’s, and Nobu Fifty-Seven. And we saw Angels in America, Parts I and II, which each last four hours. We had a 2-hour break between parts, and each part offered two 15-minute intermissions. We were at the theatre from 1:00 pm until 11:00 pm! It was a “dark” and “heavy” show, but enjoyable to see Nathan Lane and Andrew Garfield. The following day, we won tickets to see Escape to Margaritaville, a musical that incorporates Jimmy Buffet songs – the light, fun show was just the right counterpoint to the play that we saw the day before. We stayed at the Hilton Midtown so that we could try another Hilton property in the city (we still have quite a few to go!). We had a great spring weekend in the city!
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Theatre: Escape to Margaritaville at the Marquis Theatre (April 2018)

My spouse and I saw Escape to Margaritaville at the Marquis Theatre on a Sunday afternoon in mid-April 2018. We won the lottery rights to purchase tickets for $40 each, and we received seats D1 and D3 in the left orchestra section, four rows from the stage. 
Escape to Margaritaville is a musical that features Jimmy Buffett songs. The plot revolves around a part-time bartender and singer who falls for a career-minded tourist. The show features music and lyrics by Jimmy Buffett. It premiered on Broadway at the Marquis Theatre in February 2018, prior to a March 2018 opening night.
Act One


Tully works as a singer for the bar at Margaritaville, a run down hotel on a small island in the Caribbean, along with his "island family": Brick, the bartender, Jamal, the busboy, and Marley, the owner, and JD, a local beach bum who spends his days at the bar. Tully regularly has affairs with female guests with no intention of continuing the fling beyond their time at the hotel ("License to Chill").

In Cincinnati Ohio, Rachel and Tammy prepare to go on vacation at Margaritaville before Tammy gets married. Her fiance, Chadd, forces Tammy to go on a diet of carrot juice and sunflower seeds, so she can lose weight for the wedding, which infuriates Rachel. Chadd has Tammy promise not to cheat on him, and his friends warn the two women of the land sharks. Tammy and Rachel laugh their warning off and travel to the hotel ("Fins").

Rachel is disappointed with the condition of the hotel, even though Tammy is just happy to be in paradise. Tully flirts with Rachel, who is more concerned about work, and has Brick bring tequila shots, to which Rachel questions if it's the appropriate time to start drinking. Tully, Brick, J.D., and the patrons insist that ("It's Five O'Clock Somewhere"). Tully and Brick take the women's bags to their room, along with some margaritas. Rachel insists going up to the volcano in order to obtain a soil sample. Brick offers to drive them up in his run down convertible ("Ragtop Day").

On the way to the Volcano, the car breaks down, and the four search for another way up. Brick and Tammy hit it off, while Tully continues to flirt with Rachel, where she informs him of her experiment to use potatoes as an alternative energy resource and how it takes up much of her time, leaving her no time to relax ("It's My Job").

On the beach, JD tells guests stories about his life and his buried treasure, which Marley dismisses as lies. After being ordered to leave the guests alone, JD begins to sing a song that she disapproves of and invites the guests sing along ("Why Don't We Get Drunk").

Back on the trail to the volcano, Tully tries to get Rachel to relax and enjoy the island by teaching her how to play guitar ("Three Chords"). Tammy and Brick discuss their childhoods and how their parents had very high expectations for them, finding amusement that they had become the people their parents frowned upon ("We Are the People Our Parents Warned Us About"). The two almost kiss before Tammy reveals that she is engaged. Later that night, Tully reveals to Rachel that he grew up in Maine, where his father wanted him to continue the family line of fisherman. He arrived at the island to get away from the cold weather, pollution, and irritations of society. Rachel, finding herself charmed by him, kisses him ("Son of Son of a Sailor").

Back at the hotel, everyone is recovering from the previous night of drinking and partying ("My Head Hurts, My Feet Stink, and I Don't Love Jesus"). Tully and Rachel prepare to go snorkeling, and Marley notices something different about Tully. He then admits to her that he thinks he's in love with Rachel. After swearing that she wouldn't tell anyone, she tells some guests, and word spreads around the hotel. Tully and Rachel spend the rest of the week in bed and on the beach, causing Tully to miss work. Brick tries to help Tammy from giving into her urge to sleep with him. On her last night on the island, he suggests they do something to distract her and the two decide to get tattoos, with Brick needing to be drunk due to his fear of needles. On the morning they leave, Rachel and Tammy discuss how the past week has changed their views of the future ("Medley: Coconut Telegraph/Last Mango in Paris/Cabana Daydream/Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes").

Tully decides to tell Rachel how he feels, but she and Tammy leave before he can. Brick discovers that his tattoo on his stomach is of Tammy's face, admitting to Tully that he has feelings for Tammy. The two lament about their failed romances, while JD looks for a salt shaker for his shrimp ("Margaritaville"). The island begins to rumble, signaling the volcano is about to erupt, sending Margaritaville into chaos. 
Act Two

Jamal wonders where he will go after evacuating the island as the patrons panic, Marley tries to keep everyone calm, Tully and Brick pack the boat with whatever they can, and JD grabs a shovel ("Volcano"). After everyone is onboard of the evacuation boat, Marley notices JD is missing, and Jamal reveals that he saw him heading into the jungle. Tully and Brick go to find JD, despite Brick's objections.

In the jungle, Tully tells Brick to think of things that make him happy in order to control his fear ("Grapefruit-Juicy Fruit"). The two find JD, who is digging up his buried treasure. The two insist that the treasure isn't real, as they believe he just makes up his stories. The two are shocked when JD digs up a chest as Marley arrives, revealing she had to let the boat leave due to the guests panicking. JD has Marley take them to his plane, which she hid due to his pilot license being revoked. At the airport, Tammy and Rachel prepare to take off and Rachel learns that funding for her experiment has been denied, much to her dismay.

Up in the air, JD flies Marley, Tully, and Brick to safety. Tully and Brick go through JD's treasure and find pictures and journals, learning that JD moved to Europe, married an actress, and had a son. His wife and son were killed when a bomb went off, while JD survived, losing an eye. JD tells the two that even though he's been through tragedy, he's had a good life ("He Went to Paris"). Tully reveals to JD that he hoped the treasure would be money that he could give to Rachel to help fund her experiment. JD tells Tully that the real treasure is what is in the heart and the memories of all the good times. He insists that Tully tell Rachel that he loves her, to which Tully has JD fly them to Cincinnati.

At a bar in Cincinnati, Tammy and Chadd's rehearsal dinner is underway. She prepares to go eat a cheeseburger, but Chadd has set up a vegetarian buffet for her, due to her diet. She fantasizes about eating a cheeseburger, when Brick enters and urges her to quit her diet ("Cheeseburger in Paradise"). Chadd sees them eating the burgers and tells Tammy that he can't love her if she's fat, causing Tammy to punch him and call the wedding off. JD and Marley discuss about the time they slept together ten years ago, and admit that they have feelings for each other. Tully enters and tells Rachel that he loves her, to which Rachel isn't sure how to respond. Tully plays a song to remind her of their time together on the island (“Tin Cup Chalise”). She admits that she has feelings for Tully, but they are too different and that a relationship probably won't last. She leaves and Tully is approached by Ted, a talent agent, who insists that Tully can become famous with his mix of country and beach music.

Over the course of three years, Brick and Tammy get married and have a daughter; after being denied by numerous banks, Rachel finally gets funding for her research; JD and Marley become a couple, rebuild Margaritaville, and have a daughter, and Tully becomes an international music star ("Love and Luck"). Tully returns to Margaritaville to perform for the hotel's re-opening and notices Rachel in the crowd. The two catch up and realize they are still in love with each other ("Come Monday"). A year later, Brick and Tammy receive an invitation to Tully and Rachel's wedding and first class tickets. Tully, Rachel, Tammy, Brick, JD, and Marley think about how much their lives have changed in the past few years as the wedding is being prepared and the guests arrive ("A Pirate Looks at Forty"). The two are married and everyone celebrates at Margaritaville ("One Particular Harbor").

Marquis Theatre
Opened in 1986, the Marquis Theatre is one of the newest Broadway theatres. Located inside the Marriott Marquis Hotel, it was designed to provide maximum comfort for audiences and actors while conveying a feeling of intimacy. The venue features an expansive backstage, high ceilings, state-of-the-art acoustics, wide aisles, comfortable seats, ample restrooms, and parking. Since its opening, the theatre has showcased a series of hit musicals including Me and My Girl, Gypsy, Man of La Mancha, The Goodbye Girl, Damn Yankees, Victor/Victoria, Peter Pan, Annie Get Your Gun, and Thoroughly Modern Millie. The Marquis has 1,611 seats and is one of The Nederlander Organization's nine Broadway theatres.





















New York City: Nobu 57 (April 2018)



My spouse and I dined at Nobu 57 for lunch on a Sunday afternoon in mid-April 2018. This location of Nobu is open for lunch and dinner daily. You can make a reservation using the online Open Table system.

Since 2005, Nobu 57 has occupied the first two floors of an office building on (surprise!) West 57th Street (between 6th and 5th Avenues) in the Midtown West/Central Park South. The original Nobu opened in 1994 in Tribeca (modeled after Nobu’s first American restaurant Matsuhisa in Los Angeles). Nobu 57 is the twelfth location of this expansive, world-wide international chain, which includes outposts in Dallas, Honolulu, Houston, Lanai, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Malibu, Miami, Newport Beach, Palo Alto, San Diego, Washington DC, London, the Bahamas, Melbourne, Manila, Beijing, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, Perth, Tokyo, Budapest, Ibiza, London, Marbella, Milan, Monte Carlo, Moscow, Montenegro, Mexico City, Capetown, Doha, and Dubai. Nobu also operates hotels in several locations including Las Vegas, Manila, Miami, Palo Alto, Ibiza, London, and Marbella.

The Nobu 57 space is well-outfitted, with a two-story high bar on the first level (previously a ski store) that offers a long drinks bar and low lounge seating, and a grand staircase that leads to table, booth, semi-booth, and sushi counter seating on the expansive second floor. A small alcove near the kitchen service area offers a long table that seats about 8 guests, and a private event room is also available. Bamboo rings set in tiles decorate the walls, and rattan fishing nets cover the windows to create a dark, chic atmosphere.

Chef Nobu Matsuhisa offers a large menu of Japanese cuisine. We started with the grilled shishito peppers and some drinks (a Pepino, a non-alcoholic cocktail made with cucumber, lychee, pineapple and lemon [tasty, but primarily cucumber and not the other flavors] and a Sapporo beer) while we perused the menu. We ordered one sushi sampler, which began with miso soup and a small salad followed by a platter of about 8 pieces of sushi and one spicy tuna roll. We also ordered the prix-fixe lunch menu, which offered a few snacks (nori rice crisps, slow-cooked vegetables, grilled edamame [served atop hominy kernels], two pieces of crudo [yellowtail and tuna], avocado hand roll, mini Nobu taco), followed by a cup of miso soup, a small green salad. My entree choice was white fish lightly fried in tempura batter, garnished with jalapeno, and set in a delicious pool of ponzu sauce made with a sweet amazu Japanese vinegar. For dessert, we shared the blueberry monkfruit panna cotta from the prix-fixe menu, which included creamy vanilla panna cotta layered with fruit foam topped with airy chocolate cake cubes and sprinkled with pistachios – yum!

We enjoyed our brunch at Nobu; we liked sitting at the sushi counter, and both our sushi and the food on the prix-fixe Sunday lunch menu were tasty.






















New York City: Hilton Midtown (April 2018)



My spouse and I stayed at the New York Hilton Midtown (previously called the Hilton New York) for one night on a Saturday evening in mid-April 2018. We booked our room online using the Hilton website. After we booked, an email offered upgraded accommodations for a fee, which we did not accept. We also did not check in online prior to our stay.

(Note: This hotel was previously called the Hilton New York. It should not be confused with the Hilton Times Square/New York City Hilton, which is located on West 42nd Street between 7th and 8th Avenues, where we stayed in March 2018; see our separate review.)
The New York Hilton Midtown is located on 6th Avenue between West 53rd and 54th Streets between the Theatre District and Central Park. The hotel seems to occupy an entire city block, with at least five different entrances; the main entrance is on 6th Avenue, but there is one entrance on 53rd, two on 54th, and one sort of mid-block at the parking garage. It boasts notable guests including hosting every president of the United States since JFK, plus Elvis in 1972 and The Beatles in 1964, being the location for the first hand-held cell telephone call in 1973, and the place where Donald Trump made his victory speech in 2016. 

The hotel offers two bars (the Lobby Lounge and Bridges Bar; note that the Minus 5 ice bar that opened in 2013 closed earlier this year), a grab-and-go counter-service market called Herb ‘n Kitchen, an Executive Lounge for Hilton HHonors Gold and Diamond members, a fitness center, and a business center. A Bluemercury beauty and spa chain is one of the shops on the street level of the hotel, and a souvenir shop is also available at the hotel. Service at the front desk during both check-in and check-out was brusque and business-like, even bordering on unfriendly and unhelpful. There is a separate line for Hilton Honors members; however, the regular line moved much more quickly. The two lines at the Herb ‘n Kitchen were ridiculously long whenever we passed. For example, we stood in line for more than 20 minutes just to buy some bottled drinks. (The market is well-outfitted and offers a wide variety of drinks, snacks, and other sundry items.) Despite there being at least four cash registers, and about six staff members present, they operated only two of the check-out stations. We think that if each line contains more than 15 guests, that staff should have opened another registers to absorb the crowd. 

Note that this property assesses a $25 per night “Urban Destination” charge that covers your internet (which we would have received free anyway as HHonors members), a $15 credit at either the Lobby Bar or Bridges, and a $10 credit at Herb ‘n Kitchen. If guests are staying for multiple nights, we believe that the credits can only be used per day; you cannot pool/accrue them to use cumulatively for one transaction at each venue. We have recently begun to see this charge pop up on other (but not all) New York Hilton-owned properties: our stay at the nearby Times Square Hilton just one month earlier did not assess this charge; however, a stay at the Doubletree Times Square in February did. The charge does not seem to be location-based or brand-based, so we are not sure why some Manhattan hotels charge it and others do not. The hotels charge you $25 per day, but then refund it in the form of food and drink (for which you will surely spend more than $25; it seems like a way to encourage guests to spend more money). 

The hotel offers almost 2,000 rooms (including 47 suites) spread across 47 floors. (It is reportedly the largest Hilton hotel in the United States.) Rooms are available in the following categories: City Room (with one or two beds), Skyline room (with one or two beds), Urban Room (queen, king, or two doubles), accessible rooms, and Executive Suites (with one or two beds). Based on the map posted on the back of our door, it looked like rooms at the end of each long hallway (numbers ending in -08, -09, -38, and -39) are a bit larger, and rooms ending in numbers -01, -02, and -46 are a bit smaller. We had room 3231, a double-bedded room located toward the middle of the floor and overlooking West 53rd Street. We generally reserve a king-bed room, but a room with two doubles was the only type available when we checked in early on a Saturday morning. 

Our room seemed large and spacious for a city hotel room. It contained two double beds with a nightstand between the two; the nightstand offered a clock with a place to charge a mobile phone, although it did not fit our Samsung devices. (The nightstand also offered charging plugs on both sides.) Note that the beds were DOUBLE beds, not QUEEN beds. If you have a party of four adults, two adults in one DOUBLE bed might feel a little cozy. On the other hand, the room offered plenty of space. Opposite the beds was a long furniture piece that held the flat-screen TV and also offered desk space (with a rolling chair) and drawer space (some of which was taken up by the empty mini-refrigerator). A closet unit near the door offered hanging space, extra bedding, and an iron and ironing board. A small lounge chair, matching ottoman, and side table were positioned near the window nook. The bathroom was a decent size, with a combination bathtub/shower, toilet, tiny sink, and vanity. The single sink offered some counter space around and beside it, and recessed wall shelves provided additional storage space.

We had a good stay at the New York Hilton Midtown; we particularly liked the size of the rooms.