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Celeb Spotting in NYC
Hi everyone - just wondering where the best spots are to catch a glimpse of a celeb or two in NYC? Thanks guys.
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In general, if you try to spot a "celebrity," you'll fail.
On weekends in the summer, you'll fail (they leave town & avoid weekend crowds). Your best bet is the West Village on a weekday, or Bar Pitti/Da Silvano at dinner time on a weekday. But, please, don't bother any celebs if you see them. One of the big benefits to living in Manhattan is the relative anonymity. |
One more spot frequented by "celebrities" on summer weekdays:
Nello's on Madison Avenue. Lunch & dinner. |
You never know where or when a celebrity may pop up, even in the summer.
One summer afternoon I spotted Dustin Hoffman briskly walking uptown in the Lincoln Center area, and one muggy August evening I made eye contact with Woody Allen at Third Avenue and East 57th Street. However, I lived in NYC for over 30 years (11,000 days) and made only about 50 such serendipitous celebrity sightings. Most of the celebrities I saw were in performances of one kind or another. |
One thing a Ny'er does is not bother celebs and most of them come ehre so they can be left alone.
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Just keep your eyes open in neighborhoods like Soho, the village, Chelsea, upper west side, Park Slope Brooklyn. Plenty of celebs live in these places, and if you see them it will be grocery shopping, picking up drycleaning, etc
BTW, we're not talking about Brad & Angelina types. Lots of TV and theater actors, musicians etc. And yes--act like a New Yorker--notice them, wait till they pass, then confirm with other passersby--"yes, that was really him/her/them!" |
Agreed that you're most likely to see celebs where they live - unless you know a specific person is filming in the city - then you can track the production.
And others are correct about leaving them alone. If you catch a celeb in a public moment (at the stage door or on the red carpet) you can ask for an autograph. But otherwise - it's not kosher to bother them. (When I lived on the east side Woody Allen shopped in my supermarket - and I saw him at least 2 dozen times - and no one ever bothered him.) If you talking about celebutards - rather than NY based celebs - then you need to hang out at the trendiest hotels (really boring sitting in the lobby til all hours) or at a club (practically impossible to get in - unless you're on "the list"). |
The Waverly Inn on Bank Street. Go have a drink at the bar. There are celebs almost every night.
I have seen Dustin Hoffman, Sarah Gilbert, Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman, and Harrison Ford walking around by Gramercy Park. Harvery Keitel, Rachel Weiss and Robert DiNiro shopping in Soho, Hayley Mills on 1st Avenue and tons more. But the best place to find them is in the audience of an off-Broadway show. I have seen Jerry & Jessica Seinfeld, Sarah Jessica Parker, Nicole Kidman, Toby McGuire, Anne Bancroft and Mel Brooks, Victor Garber, Cynthia Nixon, Paul Newman & Joanne Woodward, Bernadette Peters, Oprah Winfrey, Queen Lattifa, and too many more to name. The hard part is actually recognizing them on the street. |
If you want to see where celebrities have been recently spotted it's fun to check out the NY Post Celebrity Sightings Star Map click on the link here: http://www.nypost.com/gossip/gossip.htm and scroll down a little on look on the left side of the page for the link to the map.
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If you HAVE to approach them, you might want to try waiting outside the studios where Letterman or Regis & Kelly are filmed -- when the celebs exit, they usually expect to have a few fans hanging around hoping for autographs.
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One known reliable place is lunch at
Michael's, 24 W 55 St. Reservation a must, you will not be seated in front room but you will def. see Hollywood & media folk...walk slowly to the back room! |
It's easy to see celebrities in NYC. Just look in the TV Guide. In the mornings go stand outside of the news shows in Rockefeller Plaza and Times Square. If Letterman is filming go stand outside by the stage door to Ed Sullivan theater a little after 5pm. If there's people standing around they will tell you who is getting ready to come out.
Using these methods we've seen: James Brown, Diane Sawyer, J-Lo and that dancer she was married to, Tom Cruise, Al Roker, Katie Couric and other news people. One time we were there and that guy was standing on top of the pole. We saw him dive off into a pile of boxes. |
I am terrible at remembering faces so based on what you have all said above about bothering 'personalities' can you still ask them for directions if I met one on the street & would they be upset if you failed to recognise them. If I did recognise them should I then acknowledge who they are?
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My brother explained the NYC celebrity-meeting rule: If you make eye contact with a famous person, raise your eyebrow or look a question ``are you who I think you are?''. The celeb responds by nodding slightly and casting down eyes to signify ``yes.'' Then you both go on your way. |
Good advice. It happened to me twenty-five years ago on 57th Street, just west of Fifth Avenue. In a beautiful red coat and nodding was Kitty Carlile, OBM.
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johngerard, here's a true story: When my (now ex) boyfriend first moved to NYC in the early 80's, he was a little lost getting to an interview in the Village. He saw two older men standing by a phone booth, so he asked them which way to Lafayette Street. Both men looked at him incredulously, as if they weren't sure he was for real; realizing he really was asking for directions, they pointed him in the right direction and he was on his way. Half a block later, he stopped in his tracks - he realized he'd asked Woody Allen for directions!!
Same BF, different story: In the mid-90's on his way to lunch one day at his job in SoHo, a woman asked him for the time. In the moment it took him to look at his watch and reply, he realized it was Judy Davis. He did as capxxx indicated - gave her a knowing grin but nothing more - and she thanked him and was on her way. So I guess the question-asking can go both ways! ;) (I myself am particularly terrible at recognizing celebrities, so I know what you mean! I'm really proud of myself when I do figure it out.) |
You can always hang at the Broadway stage doors after a show to see the celebs that exit. As unlikely as it may seem with all the press, we have seen quite a few celebs at Joe Allen's. Last spring it was Ed Norton, Martha Plimpton, and Cyndi Lauper all on the same night.
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I spent an hour at a bar with my husband and another couple, watching tv and eating burgers and soup. We were all waiting for the movie to start next door. We shared fries. Laughed and chatted about relationships, kids, dogs, etc. Then my husband said to the woman, 'you know, you look like Marilou Henner.' And she said, 'I am Marilou Henner.' Then we all picked ourselves up off the floor and went to the movie.
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My oldest friend's wife was in India with her friends. And one of her friends knew a wealthy woman who had a very lavish dinner for them. A white Rolls pulls up and my friend's wife was the closest to the door and greeted the new guest. "Hello I'm Connie and you are?"
"You can call me Michael." It was Mick Jagger. |
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