New York City (July 2018)


My spouse and I visited New York City for the weekend in late July 2018 in order to attend a bachelor/bachelorette weekend. We were celebrating the impending nuptials of our sister/sister-in-law, and Manhattan was a convenient place for the key players to meet because three of them live there permanently, with a fourth an occasional resident. But others drove/flew in from Boston, Atlanta, and Pennsylvania. We were able to take a half-day of vacation on Friday afternoon, so we arrived in the city in time to have a light lunch and relax at the hotel before leaving to attend a cocktail party (which was really more of a dinner, with all the great food) at a friend’s amazing apartment. On Saturday, some of the group went for pampering at the Ancient Aire Baths, and others went to the Yankees game. On Saturday evening, we all met up for a fantastic family-style meal at Barbuto; afterwards, we continued our celebration at The Roof[top] bar at The Viceroy. We were on our own on Sunday, so we planned to have lunch and then drive home; however, we won Broadway lottery tickets, so we changed our meal plan and grabbed a good sushi lunch before we went to the show. It was nice to join friends for a great weekend in the city!


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Theatre: Summer: The Donna Summer Musical (July 2018)

My spouse and I attended Summer: The Donna Summer Musical on a Sunday afternoon in late July 2018. We won tickets to the performance in the Broadway lottery, which allows you to purchase last-minute unsold seats (this time in the orchestra left section) for only a fraction of the cost of a regular seat ($40 versus $200).

Summer: The Donna Summer Musical is a musical based on her life, featuring music and lyrics written and sung by her and others. The musical opened on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in April 2018. She is often called the “Queen of Disco”. A five-time Grammy Award winner, Summer was the first artist to have three consecutive double albums reach No. 1 on the United States Billboard 200 chart and charted four number-one singles in the US within a 12-month period. Summer has reportedly sold over 100 million records worldwide, making her one of the world's best-selling artists of all time. She also charted two number-one singles on the R+B charts in the US and a number-one in the UK. Summer earned a total of 32 hit singles on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in her lifetime, with 14 of those reaching the top ten. She claimed a top 40 hit every year between 1975 and 1984.

Songs from the musical include I Feel Love, Love to Love You Baby, I Remember Yesterday, MacArthur Park, Heaven Knows, No More Tears (Enough Is Enough), On the Radio, I Love You, Bad Girls, She Works Hard for the Money, Dim All the Lights, Unconditional Love, Stamp Your Feet, Hot Stuff, Last Dance
LaDonna Adrian Gaines was a girl from Boston with a voice from heaven, who shot through the stars from gospel choir to dance floor diva. But what the world didn’t know was how Donna Summer risked it all to break through barriers, becoming the icon of an era and the inspiration for every music diva who followed. While influenced by the counterculture of the 1960s, Summer became the lead singer of a psychedelic rock band named Black Crow and moved to New York City. Joining a touring version of the musical Hair, she left New York and spent several years living, acting, and singing in Europe, where she met her first music producers.
Three actresses (including two Tony Award winners) play Donna Summer, taking us through her tumultuous life, tempestuous loves, and mega-watt musical hits. Spend the day in her electrifying universe!
Summer died on May 17, 2012, from lung cancer (attributed to 9-11 dust because she never smoked), at her home in Naples, Florida. In 2013, Summer was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In December 2016, Billboard ranked her as the 6th most successful dance artist of all-time.
Lunt-Fontanne Theatre
Opened in 1910, the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre was originally named The Globe, after Shakespeare’s theatre in England. It had a retractable roof to enable the theatre to stay cool and remain open during the summer. For nearly two decades, the theatre housed a variety of plays and musicals, until 1932 when it was turned into a movie house.
In 1958, the theatre was gutted and rebuilt in its present configuration as a legitimate theatre. It was renamed in honor of America’s foremost husband-wife acting couple, Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, who starred in its first production “The Visit”. Theatregoers can enjoy a selection of photographs from their private collection on display throughout the lobby areas.

The Lunt-Fontanne currently has 1,505 seats and is one of The Nederlander Organization‘s nine Broadway theatres.
















New York City: Kodama (July 2018)



My spouse and I dined at Kodama for lunch on a Sunday afternoon in late July 2018. Kodama is open daily from 12:00 noon until either 10:30/11:00/11:30 pm, depending on the night of the week. The restaurant also offers delivery and takeout during those same hours. 

Kodama is located in Midtown West/Hell’s Kitchen/Theatre District on West 45th Street (between 8th and 9th Avenues), across the street from the Al Hirschfeld Theatre (which is currently showing Kinky Boots). Kodama’s management also operates a more casual counter-service outlet called Black Sushi, located on 8th Avenue (near the corner of West 45th Street), and connected to Kodama by way of a back hallway. (The restaurants share the same restrooms, which are located on the casual-dining side.) The restaurant’s owner is a Korean-born chef who came to the US in order to open a Japanese restaurant on Long Island and a sushi-catering business in Manhattan. He later took ownership of Kodama, which at 25+ years old, is one of the oldest Japanese restaurants in NYC. 

Kodama gets its name from tree-inhabiting spirits in Japanese folklore. The interior space of Kodama includes a drinks bar (which was unoccupied when we visited), a sushi bar (which was very popular), and stand-alone blonde-wood tables. Hanging lanterns, prints, and Japanese memorabilia decorate the ceiling and walls.

Kodama serves Asian cuisine, including both cold and hot and raw and cooked selections. If you don’t eat sushi, sashimi, or rolls, rest assured that you can get other entrees such as teriyaki (which arrives on a hot stone plate), rice, curry, noodle, and tempura dishes. One unique thing that Kodama serves is black rice, a more nutritional version found in Korea, Japan, and Southern China and available for only a small upcharge. To start, we shared some steamed dumplings. As our entrees, we ordered one sushi sampler and an order of tempura (which included a side of white rice). Dessert (some sort of berries atop a mascarpone custard) was yummy, although it was still frozen a smidge. My spouse enjoyed a Sapporo from Kodama’s full bar, but I only ordered an iced tea, although I was pleased when it was served in a sort of Ball jar mug with a decorative metal cutout lid. The sushi rolls named after Broadway shows (Kinky Boots, Mamma Mia, Spider-Man) seemed to be popular. 

We enjoyed our lunch in the Theatre District, where we often struggle to find a decent restaurant before a performance; we found our answer at Kodama.