Just finding us? Start with Part 1 of our Taxi Driver examination to avoid confusion!

Continuing along where we last left off, Travis takes Betsy to Times Square for their ill-fated movie date. Exactly where they are is tough to place as they walk along Broadway/7th Ave, but based on the median, I believe they’re at the corner of 45th & Broadway (note that this section of Broadway is now closed off to traffic as a pedestrian walkway):

 

TD - 050a - corner

TD - 050b - corner

Travis takes Betsy to the Lyric, a former 42nd Street playhouse and movie theater.

TD - 051a - sign

TD - 051b - sign

The actual show Travis brings Betsy to see is not the above-advertised Sometime Sweet Susan, but actually, a 1969 Swedish sex educational film called Language of Love. Currently, the Hilton Theatre is gearing up for the 2010 release of the Spider-man musical.

TD - 052a - theater

TD - 052b - theater

In this photo, you can see the full Lyric facade. Originally designed as an opera school, the Lyric opened as a theater in 1903, with 1,350 seats, 2 balconies, and 18 box seats. In 1934, it was converted into a movie theater to survive the Depression. At some point along the way, it became a porno theater. In 1994, the Lyric and neighboring Apollo theater (on the left) were demolished to make way for a theater combining the two. Major architectural elements were carefully removed and re-installed in the new building, which currently is known as the Hilton Theatre.

TD - 052c

Shortly after the film begins, Betsy storms out of the Lyric (would she have the same problem with Spider-man: Turn Off The Dark?).

TD - 054a - door

TD - 054b - door

Travis desperately tries to talk with Betsy, offering us a glimpse across the street of what I believe is the New Amsterdam theater (like the Lyric, it had been converted from a theatrical stage to a movie house during the Depression and was in shambles by the time Disney leased it in 1993).

TD - 055a - leaving

TD - 055b - leaving

If you look closely, the theater across the street is playing Clint Eastwood’s The Eiger Sanction:

TD - 056a - across

TD - 056b - across

Travis later stops at McAnn’s Bar, a location I cannot find anywhere. There are several McAnn’s in the city, but none of them have addresses that match the building numbering (McAnn’s should be 692 or 694…). Any ideas?

TD - 058

Travis makes a call to Betsy to apologize, and amazingly, this scene was shot in a place where I spend a good amount of time when working on films: the lobby of the Ed Sullivan Theater building which, in addition to the Letterman studio, also houses the Mayor’s Office of Film. It’s looking quite a bit different these days, but I like that they left the metal phone book holder:

TD - 059a - phone

TD - 059b - phone

Angry, Travis storms around the corner out the front door:

TD - 060a - phone

TD - 060b - phone

Travis tries unsuccessfully to talk to Betsy at the campaign office, and while we’ve already covered the location in detail, I wanted to note the oddly-named restaurant across the street, “Aunt Fish” (no longer around, of course).

TD - 061a - window

TD - 061b - window

Travis then meets up with his buddies at the Belmore Cafeteria, a former grease joint on the corner of 28th & Park. Sadly, the owner sold the property in 1981, and a bland highrise was built in its place:

TD - 062a - belmore

TD - 062b - belmore

An angled view of the new building:

TD - 062c - belmore

Travis steps outside with fellow cabbie Wizard for a discussion about guns. We get a quick glimpse north (the building on the right past the Belmore is now Les Halles, the restaurant owned by TV personality chef Anthony Bourdain):

TD - 063a - Belmore

TD - 063b - Belmore

The reverse view shows a fight on the street – you can make out a pretty neat subway globe lamp. Meanwhile, a McDonalds is now on the corner.

TD - 064a - Belmore

TD - 064b - Belmore

Across the street, more changes:

TD - 065a - Reverse

TD - 065b - Reverse

Travis continues to follow Betsy, and parks outside her building on Broadway between 62nd & 63rd streets. Across the street, you can see the AAA building entrance, and how it looks today:

TD - 066a - aaa

TD - 066b - aaa

Travis decides to check in on Iris, the young prostitute he met outside the Variety. He parks his car on 13th Street between 2nd & 3rd Aves to wait for her. It took me a good ten minutes of searching for that red door before I realized it doesn’t exist anymore:

TD - 068a - Parked Cab

TD - 068b - Parked Cab

If you haven’t noticed, one of the key aspects that makes Taxi Driver a quintessential New York movie is that the city geography makes sense. When Travis takes Betsy to a coffee shop, for example, they head a few blocks south from the campaign headquarters at 62nd Street to a grease joint at 58th. When Travis brings Betsy to the porno theater, we see them walk a logical path down Times Square to 42nd Street. And here, when Travis reunites with Iris, he goes right around the corner from the Variety Theater, where he first met her.

TD - 069a - Street Walk

TD - 069b - Street walk

The door marked ROOMS is at 202 East 13th Street (oddly, everyone remembers this entrance, even though nothing ever happens here):

TD - 070a - hotel

TD - 070b - hotel

Travis follows Iris along, passing this great wall ad for Endicott Johnson, a New York-based shoe manufacturer. The electronics store on the right is now Cafe Deville.

TD - 071a - Corner

TD - 071b - Corner

Travis then speeds off, passing Gothic Cabinet Craft. Hooray! Something that still exists! The sign’s different, but it’s still the same business over 30 years later.

TD - 072a - gothic

TD - 072b - gotheric

I take pride in correctly guessing the location of this next shot immediately, in which Travis is picked up by the gun dealer. The only clue in the photo is that tuft of green up the street, but it’s enough to give it away as Madison Square Park, placing Travis somewhere along 5th Ave (actually at 19th street):

TD - 073a - Fifth Ave

TD - 073b - Fifth Ave

As the cab comes around the corner, we get a quick look at a diner advertising “coffee shop – fountain service.” This is now a Sephora.

TD - 074a - sephora

TD - 074b - sephora

Yes! Another business still around! Same hardware store on 19th street as Travis heads off in the cab.

TD - 075a - hardware

TD - 075b - hardware

Travis then attends a political rally, and I can’t place this one. I was thinking it might even be in Brooklyn, with the view of the Manhattan Bridge and those warehouse-like buildings in the background. Any guesses?

TD - 076 - Rally

I have absolutely no idea where the R&M Super Market is (where Travis first uses his new gun).

TD - 077 - R&M

Travis then attends a second political rally. This was easy to locate, as the first shot features street signs (38th & Seventh Ave). Note the new fancy glass on the left…

TD - 078a - Upshot

TD - 078b - Upshot

In this next shot, the only change is the DONT WALK and street signs. Look carefully and you’ll see what 33 years does to a wall advertisement.

TD - 079a - Bldg

TD - 079b - Bldg

One last view of Seventh Ave:

TD - 080a - Bldgs

TD - 080b - Bldgs

Travis is quickly asked to leave by a cop, and while most of these places are gone, the Spanish Taverna restaurant still exists:

TD - 081a - Taxi

TD - 081b - Taxi

Based on the reviews, I definitely need to try this place one night (though don’t be fooled by the exterior – dishes range from $20-$40!).

TD - 082a - Taverna

TD - 082b - Taverna

Yet another corner diner is gone – this time, The Center has been replaced by Health King. Note that everyone is looking and smiling at the camera (Travis is driving too fast to notice during the film):

TD - 083a - Corner

TD - 083b - Corner

One final look at how Seventh Ave has changed:

TD - 084a - Taxi

TD - 084b - Taxi

Back to 13th Street again, and Travis meets up with Iris. The place on the corner has been serious renovated and is now Hea, a Japanese restaurant:

TD - 087a - corner bldg

TD - 087b - corner bldg

Across the street, another view of Gothic Cabinet Craft:

TD - 085a - gothic

TD - 085b - gothic

Travis gets out and chats with Iris:

TD - 088a - street walk

TD - 088b - street walk

Again, we see the infamous ROOMS entrance…but no one ever goes in!

TD - 089a - street walk

TD - 089b - street walk

Travis has a chat with Iris’ pimp, played by Harvey Keitel. The scene takes place outside of 204 East 13th Street.:

TD - 090a - door

TD - 090b - door

In this reverse shot, we get a look across the street (the buildings have all since been torn down):

TD - 091a - reverse

TD - 091b - reverse

After a deal is reached, Iris and Travis continue down the street…

TD - 092a - walkaway

TD - 092b - walkaway

…to 226 E 13th Street. Things are looking cheerier these days:

TD - 093a - house

TD - 093b - house

A tilt up shows the rest of the building:

TD - 094a - upview

TD - 094b - upview

Travis later takes Iris to a diner. Any ideas on where this might be?

TD - 095a

The street vendor on the right makes me wonder if this is on St. Mark’s (man, does that brick look familiar). Good to know that Gino’s Italian Ices have been around so long.

TD - 095b

Travis goes to the Palantine rally at Columbus Circle in what proves to be a failed attempt to assassinate the candidate:

TD - 096a - Rally

TD - 096b - Rally

The angel statue featured is still around:

TD - 097a - Statue

TD - 097b - Statue

As Travis flees the scene, we get a glimpse of the old Gulf + Western building on the corner, later to be stripped down and completely renovated into the Trump International Hotel (along with steel globe).

TD - 098a - Corner

TD - 098b - Corner

After the bloody shootout on E 13th Street, the film concludes at the St. Regis Hotel at 55th Street & Fifth Ave. I like the new black awning:

TD - 099a - Regis

TD - 099b - Regis

Travis chats with his cab buddies…

TD - 100a - Chats

TD - 100b - Chats

…then meets Betsy in a cab to end the film.

TD - 101a - Regis

TD - 101b - Regis

As evidenced in these past three installments, quite a lot has changed in New York since 1976. Personally, I don’t look back nostalgically on the grittier New York of the late 1970’s. As I never experienced it first hand, I believe it’s dangerous and naive to romanticize something the city has worked so desperately to rise up from. In 1976, a large portion of New York’s population people simply didn’t care, and the city suffered for it. If you pine for this level of apathy, there are plenty of other American cities going through some pretty bad rough patches you could move to, and I promise the rent will be much cheaper.

In 2009, people care. A byproduct of people caring is a city that is safer, more g-rated, more expensive, more museum-like. I agree that such an environment leaves very little room for growth, artistic or otherwise – frankly, you CAN’T have a Belmore diner at the corner of 28th & Park anymore (if you owned the place, would you not sell the property for countless millions?). While I dislike the fact that so many of the FAR more interesting locations in Taxi Driver have been replaced by Duane Reades, McDonald’s, Starbucks, and Sephora’s, I can only look at it as part of the unfortunate social evolution of New York. Ultimately, if New York City didn’t want them, they wouldn’t exist for long.

Regardless, as I stated at the beginning of this series, New York is as much a character in Taxi Driver as Travis Bickle, and Scorsese can’t be praised enough for giving it so much screen time.

TD - 102

I’m taking a little break from these labor-intensive then-and-now’s, but definitely let me know what movie you’d like to see covered next. And one last time, if you’ve made it this far, think about subscribing to our RSS feed or Twitter account (if you haven’t already) for future updates!

-SCOUT

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  1. keke Avatar
    keke

    Travis takes Iris to the coffee shop that was called Disco Donuts. It was the corner of 14th st and 3rd Ave I think. It disappeared sometime around 1985.

    1. Ramblin' Pete Avatar
      Ramblin’ Pete

      Yes!… when you ask:
      “Travis later takes Iris to a diner. Any ideas on where this might be?”
      I immediately thought that it was the south-west corner of 14th St. and 3rd Ave.
      Keeping with the accurate geography within the film itself, too.

      I remember watching shows like “the Nancy Drew Mysteries” as a kid, which were supposed to take place
      in my native NYC , and thinking “whoa…this does NOT look right!” Vancouver or Toronto just did not cut it.
      Maybe now with all the chains it’s easier to pass off an ersatz New York.

      Gotta applaud Scorsese for showing New York as it really was (albeit showcasing the darker side).
      I grew up in the seventies just a few blocks north of 13th St.
      Great series by the way!! Fantastic!

      My suggestion? The original Bad Lieutenant was filmed only 20-odd years ago, but plenty has changed since then!

  2. Sean Avatar
    Sean

    Hey- I just found this site and I love it !

    Just a correction- You got the location wrong for the first pic on this page (Travis and Betsy on a date). They’re not in Times Square, they’re at Columbus Circle, right on Broadway and 60th Street. Across the street is the Gulf and Western building. Notice that the traffic is going in both directions, which happens on Broadway once you past Columbus Circle heading uptown. They’re walking right in front of the old Colisseum, which is now where the Time Warner Center is.

    My favorite “Taxi Driver” NY memory- early in the film, there’s a shot of the cab driving by the Coronet & Baronet theaters, which used to be on 3rd Avenue and 59th Street. I was watching the film in that very theater when it opened in February 1976. Travis drives right by the very theater I was in !!

    How about “Midnight Cowboy” next ?

  3. fraught Avatar
    fraught

    Good for Disco Donuts. It was right there on the corner next to the Variety Arts. For a long time in the window there were pictures from the movie. I watched it change and disappear knowing a landmark was being lost. Scout is right about the movie’s locations being cohesive and trackable. It would stand to reason that Travis would not take Iris too far from her corner. From where they were she could see her whole territory.

    Suggestion, maybe Breakfast at Tiffany’s. Not too labor intensive but some interesting camera angles in the Seagram building shots.

  4. NK Avatar
    NK

    Thanks for a great read. If you’re taking requests, I’d love to see similar pieces on MEAN STREETS, SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESS, and DO THE RIGHT THING!

  5. […] York City On Location – From Taxi Driver to 2009 – http://www.scoutingny.com/?p=1114 […]

  6. […] > An interesting project by a location scout visiting New York locations from the film Taxi Driver, here and here and comparing them to now here […]

  7. Michael Benabib Avatar

    Good work.
    A cafeteria Travis meets with the Peter Boil character is shot on Park Ave south at 28 – 29th Streets. There used to e a diner there which was replaced by a high rise on the NE corner of 28th and Park.
    Bellmore cafeteria…
    http://www.disobey.com/ghostsites/labels/Taxi%20Driver.html

  8. Tailor Made Avatar
    Tailor Made

    This is great! In 1978, years before VCRs and DVDs, my friend borrowed a projector and a print of “Taxi Driver” from the school’s movie club and we watched it like twenty times over a weekend. It was my first experience being able to dissect a film almost frame by frame. A shot that you did not include was the Variety Arts Theater on 3rd Ave between 13 and 14th St (across from 111 3rd Ave where my brother lived in the 70s). That was torn down a few years ago and is now a fancy schmancy glass and steel high rise. … I just saw that #44 Fraught mentions The Variety. And Disco Donuts. I bought my morning coffee there every time I visited my brother.

  9. Harris Avatar
    Harris

    Absolutely love your series (well, okay… I absolutely LOVE your site, your posts and photography). I’ve subscribed for a while and this last one for some reason sent me over the top and I had to say, “Hat’s off to you for the taking the time to share your knowledge and love for NYC!” Kudos!

  10. nesta Avatar
    nesta

    The building in the background across 13th St when De Niro is talking to Keitel (now a vacant lot) was the back of the Jefferson theater: http://cinematreasures.org/theater/1357/

  11. […] A New York City film location scout revisits locations from the movie Taxi Driver (1976) and compares them to what’s there now. (Part 2, Part 3) […]

  12. […] NYC of Taxi Driver, then and now: parts I, II, and III. Comments (0)Tags: Andy Warhol, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Daryl Hall, John Oates, Witold Rybczynski […]

  13. michael Avatar
    michael

    FYI, Anthony Bourdain doesn’t own Les Halles, he was executive chef there for a few years.

  14. Guido Avatar

    I remember the SE corner of 3rd Ave. & E. 13th St. ( photo TD – 071a – Corner) as being the location of Paragon Sporting Goods.
    I believe the ‘Army & Navy’ in the lower half of the mural is a reference to that store. I bought a leather flight jacket there back in the “gritty 70’s.”

    1. ricky Avatar
      ricky

      It was called Hudson’s. Paragon Sporting Goods has been on Broadway and 19 forever.

  15. Kanger Avatar
    Kanger

    Just read through all 3 articles. Great job. Taxi Driver is my favorite movie and I’m always finding myself recognizing locations when walking around NYC.

  16. TFG Avatar
    TFG

    Awesome footage. I lived at 226 E 13th in the early 90s, when Dinkins was still mayor. My friends across the way lived at 204. Nice apt. Don’t let the facade fool you. Moving into that block, it was a prerequisite that you watched Taxi Driver. Back in the day it was still gritty and dealers used to have fights over corners. Now I see a sushi restaurant at the formerly abandoned building corner where the dealers used to duke it out. Amazing. I’m not gonna deny I miss the old NY. It had much more character.

  17. NY er Avatar
    NY er

    McAnn’s is definitely 692 3rd Avenue. Do you see the bottom of a fire escape, partially obscuring the 690 address to the left? It is still there, in the same position. You can see part of the tree on the left side and that is still there as well. A slightly earlier frame in the film shows a cellar in front of McAnn’s, that is still there. You also still have the three doors in a row – 690, 690 and 692. As someone said, the NY Times said a McAnn’s used to be on 692 3rd Avenue, it is now a Muldoon’s.

  18. Tamara Busch Avatar
    Tamara Busch

    Thank you for a wonderful view of NY – I’m an avid movie viewer and NY walker and have been in most of the neighborhoods and streets featured in the movie. Loved how you were able to mention the realism of being on 62nd and walking to a coffee shop on 58th Street. “The Devil Wears Prada” is the biggest offender of magically walking across 42nd Street from the Conde Nast building and ending up in Chelsea.

    “Michael Clayton” had it last scenes at the NY Hilton and I was cheering in the movie when the cab driver was in line with someone leaving 6th Ave.

    This is an amazing site! Kudos!

  19. Ronin Avatar
    Ronin

    You’ve probably heard this one a million times but it would be amazing to do a similar photo essay with “The French Connection.” The car chase has been documented pretty extensively; what never gets covered are all the cat-and-mouse scenes that happen on foot — the shadowing of Sal on his way to meet Charnier; the cozy restaurant where Charnier and his henchman dine while Popeye and Cloudy freeze their asses across the street; the flower shop where Charnier loses Popeye — it’s a rapid-fire mosaic of Manhattan street tableaux circa 1971. Maybe I should shut up and get started…

  20. spurn Avatar
    spurn

    Don’t know if anybody has mentioned this yet… I live in the neighborhood and the restaurant Travis takes Iris to dinner was a place on the corner of 14th and Third called Disco Donut. When I moved to the neighborhood it was already famous for its inclusion in the movie. There’s nothing there now; after Disco Donut closed it was a mom and pop drug store called Robin Raj Discount (which has sinced moved one lot down on Third). I really miss the Variety Arts as well, even though in the 80’s it had become a gay porno theater it eventually became an off Brodway theater and music venue (the band They Might Be Giants did a weeklong residency there in the 80’s that I saw) before they tore it down. It was the only theater I knew of in Manhattan that still had a separate box office (about the size of a large phone booth) in the middle of the sidewalk in front of the building, the way theaters did in the 20’s.

    Thanks for doing this… keep it up!