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It Happened in Manhattan
Myrna Katz Frommer and Harvey Frommer
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It
Happened in Manhattan |
our review of the Frommers' It Happened on Broadway |
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No, this is not a quickie paperback rushed into
print after September 11.
The
Frommers book, subtitled An Oral History of
Life in the City During the Mid-Twentieth Century, is a loving look at a Manhattan
that now seems impossibly distant, a Manhattan whose citizens worried about open
admissions at City College and how they felt about the Beatles and whether they could
afford to live on the East Sidebut never about terrorist bombers. It is a Manhattan
now lost to us forever, a Manhattan to be recollected in tranquility and cherished as
never before.
The Frommers mid-twentienth century ranges from the early
post-World War II years to the mid-1970s, when the city nearly went bust. Like their
earlier books (It
Happened in the Catskills, It
Happened in Brooklyn, It Happened on
Broadway), this one is an oral history, an irresistible collection of interviews
with Manhattanites rich and poor, talented and ordinary, famous and unknown, clearly
united in their unanimous conviction that Manhattan was, is, and always will be the most
exciting place on earth.
Here is a New York in which the Third Avenue el still existed and
traffic on Fifth Avenue ran both ways, in which eleven daily newspapers covered the city
beat and Walter Winchell and Ed Sullivan covered cafe society; in which proper young
working girls still wore hats and white gloves and businesswomen couldnt get bank
loans; in which Lincoln Center was going up and Penn Station was coming down and SoHo was
still a dream in a gallery owners eye.
Here are Jewish kids growing up on the Lower East Side, black kids
growing up in Harlem, Italian kids growing up in the Bronx with Manhattan only a
fifteen-cent train ride away. Here are politicians and performers, priests and rabbis,
press agents and jazz musicians, restaurateurs and fashion designers and Tin Pan Alley
songwriters, all talking in that excited New Yorker way about what a great time they had
in their great city. You can almost see the hands waving.
Not many of these voices will be known to those unlucky enough never to
have lived in Manhattan. Jimmy Breslin and Pauline Trigere and Robert Merrill and Jane
Jacobs, most likely, but not that many others. Who but a Manhattanite will know Elaine
Kaufman as the owner of a restaurant called Elaines? Who outside of the advertising
business will recognize Jerry Della Femina? Who but a New Yorker will remember the
political ins and outs that brought us Robert Moses and Robert Wagner, Abe Beame and John
Lindsay?
It really doesnt matter. The voices of the unknowns, with their
tales of chocolate egg creams and 15-cent subway rides and standing room only at the old
Met, are as stirring as those of the famous.
Organizationally, the book suffers from a lack of focus, as is perhaps
inevitable with a subject so broad, and the authors affinities are far too obvious:
food is big, show biz is big, high fashion is big, sports are negligible, Wall Street is
non-existent. One looks for a little more high finance and a little less Toots Shor.
Still, it is peevish to carp about the content when all of it is so
fascinating. The presentation, however, merits carping. Although the cover is quite
handsome, the inside of the book is a mess. Many of the vintage photos are
simply bad: over-exposed snapshots, lousy architectural photography, irrelevant street
shots. If this were a visual portrait of 19th century Cleveland, one might
argue a dearth of material. But Manhattan since World War II? Surely the supply is
limitless. And was the art director actually trying
to imitate my high school yearbook? The photographs, good and bad, are junked up with
corny design techniques straight out of the 50s: vignetted shots fading into nothingness,
portraits in icky little ovals, andmost inexcusablefull-bleed photographs
inadequately screened back so that the text running over them is illegible. This is not a
book you want to try to read in a dim light.
Missing completely is what the book really cries out for, which is a map! Manhattan is ridiculously easy to
understand cartographicallyits an island, its long and skinny and flat,
its laid out on a gridand the non-native would be immeasurably helped by a
depiction of the relative positions, let us say, of Harlem and Central Park and Greenwich
Village.
As for that other thing that happened in Manhattan on September 11,
there is one tiny reference to the World Trade Center toward the end of the book by Daily News sports cartoonist Bill Gallo: I
always thought of buildings like heavyweight champions. The Empire State Building was the
champion. Then the Twin Towers came up, and you felt sorry for the Empire State Building.
That was still your champion.
And is once again.
-
Kendal Dodge Butler