Some time ago, I was meeting up with some friends to eat in Times Square, and they suggested we go to a diner called Cafe Edison, part of the Hotel Edison on 47th.

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My culinary expectations were pretty low (as you may have heard, Times Square has a couple of “tourist traps”), but my friends assured me that Cafe Edison was for locals. And as we walked in, it very much seemed that way: an unassuming lunch counter with stools, some booths along the wall, some tables in the back.

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But as we sat down, I quickly noticed something: the decor of the diner seemed surprisingly…opulent.

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For example, the column beside our table was covered in extravagant decoration:

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I turned back…

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…and saw that the motif continued around the walls…

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Then I looked up. I have to say, that is quite a ceiling for a hole-in-the-wall diner:

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Obviously, Cafe Edison used to be something else – but what was it? According to my friends, this used to be the Hotel Edison’s ballroom.

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I was pretty floored – it’s not every day you get to eat in a diner built into the ballroom of a hotel founded in 1931. Searching online for more info, it appears that this story is widely held to be true, though no one seems to know any specifics.

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There’s only one problem. The Hotel Edison’s ballroom still exists. Converted into a Broadway theater from 1950 – 1991, it was later restored, and actually looks quite similar to the photograph above taken in the 1940s:

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However, also pictured on the postcard is the hotel’s grand dining room…

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…and I believe we have a match. For comparison, the existing columns are those pictured on the right side above – the room has been cut in half just past the lunch counter:

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Cafe Edison was started by one Harry Edelstein in 1980. It quickly became a beloved hangout for Broadway producers, actors, and playwrights, who jokingly referred to it as the Polish Tea Room, in part due to its opulence (ala the Russian Tea Room), and in part due to its cuisine, a mix of Eastern European Jewish dishes and diner staples.

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I love how much of the original decor has survived, especially the wall molding. Look carefully, and you’ll find all sorts of neat details hidden in odd places:

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The center of the former dining room is now positioned over the lunch counter…

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…which still features the same chandeliers pictured in the old photograph:

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Another neat detail…

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A balcony in one corner:

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The second row of columns are still visible behind the lunch counter, where the dividing wall was installed:

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One of several heavily detailed columns…

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…spiraling down to its base:

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As you enter the Cafe Edison, you first come to an outer room with arched ceilings, which shows the true width of the former dining room.

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If you look closely in the corners…

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…you’ll find some neat murals from the original days of the hotel, now darkened with time (picture below heavily altered!):

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Among the Edison’s many fans is playwright Neil Simon, who set his 2001 play “45 Seconds From Broadway” in a fictional version of Cafe Edison.

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I’m thrilled to discover Cafe Edison, as I finally have a new entry on the short list of go-to Times Square restaurants. I definitely recommend a trip – the matzoh ball soup is said to be one of the best in New York.

Finally, after you finish eating, continue your time traveling back to old Times Square by swinging into the Hotel Edison next door.

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A recent renovation has given it a slightly more modern look…

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But just squint your eyes a bit, and it won’t take long for you to feel like you’re back in the 1930s:

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Be sure and head out via the hotel’s rear hallway:

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This was where Luca Brasi took his last walk in The Godfather:

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-SCOUT

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  1. Danielle Avatar
    Danielle

    Fantastic photos! PLUS… if you want a serious throwback in the Hotel Edison, don’t miss Vince Giordano’s Nighthawks on Monday and Tuesday nights, at Sofia’s (the Hotel Edison’s club). Some of the best 1920s traditional jazz you’ll hear in the country, in a true architectural gem. Time travel is possible! Keep up the wonderful work, Scout!

  2. Linda Danz Avatar

    A fave of ours for a long time. Weekends in tourist season is impossible though. I used to work in the area and had lunch at the counter alongside Jackie Mason!

    1. Dave Avatar
      Dave

      he’s awesome…When the weather is warm you can find him at LEAST twice a week eating outside at the Applejack Diner on Brodway and 55th.

  3. Katrink Avatar
    Katrink

    I haven’t been here for years – I’m so very happy to see it still exists untouched. A rarity in Times Square these days. Thanks for posting this!

  4. don Avatar
    don

    I have stayed at the Hotel St.James, the once seedy hotel used in the movie BIG, a few blocks away on W. 45th St. I will have to stay here next time in NYC.

  5. sara Avatar

    Love this place, eat here all the time. The soups are all very good, blintzes too. everything else is fairly standard. I love that they have a section right in the front that is roped off, for ‘VIP’. I’ve seen Neil Simon there quite a few times.

  6. Carol Gardens Avatar
    Carol Gardens

    The last reasonably-priced-dining-option-with-atmosphere holdout in the “new” Times Square. Been eating here since the 70s! I agree about the blintzes. I am actually kinda amazed you didn’t know about until now but happy that you have been introduced. And I have no idea who exactly gets to sit in the mysterious roped off section. I have seen so many actors in here (mostly character actors in the “Oh, look, it’s THAT guy!” variety.) PS: Vince Giordano’s Big Band plays in the basement restaurant Sofia’s and is totally worth seeing. The Edison Ballroom still exists and is entered from the street. I have gone to swing dance events there. This is also where the nude comedy revue “Oh, Calcutta!” plays for years and years…

  7. Carol Gardens Avatar
    Carol Gardens

    Should have been “played” for years. Trivia: One of the composers for “Oh, Calcutta!” was Peter Schickele (aka “PDQ Bach”).

  8. Lisa Avatar

    I travel to NYC a lot for work and have passed by this restaurant on many occasions. Now that you shown off how beautiful it is inside I will have to stop in and have lunch or dinner. Thank you again for such an awesome post. You certainly do a lot of research and your images are great.

  9. Old Skool Avatar
    Old Skool

    I wonder how many times I have been past here and never gone in. Thanks for opening the door. I would be willing to bet that those murals are covered in tar and nicotine like GCT’s ceiling was before the restoration.

  10. Santiago Avatar

    Great FInd.
    -S-

  11. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    Well the movie title certainly implies a dream…

    I’m betting almost everything you see in a Kubrick movie is deliberate.

  12. Dave Avatar
    Dave

    thanks! i’ve live for years on 54th between B’way and 7th and have a love/hate thing with the places around me for soup. Now that Stage Deli (pricey, but loved their chicken soup) closed I’m feeling a little lost again. And it’s harder and harder to find good Matzoh balls these days…

  13. KGordonMurray Avatar
    KGordonMurray

    My wife and I lunch at the Polish Tea Room at every chance. A wondrous representation of a rapidly fading NYC eating experience. Go. Now. While it’s still here. The food and prices are terrific. Always a friendly and attentive staff. Have never had a bad experience. And prepare yourself for the BEST matzoh ball soup in the city. It will haunt you. A large bowlful will set you back less than $5!

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  17. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    One of my favorite lunch spots for the past 15 years or so. The best matzo ball soup I’ve had, for sure…but I always had to figure a room that looked like this must have had a previous life, and you’ve answered my question for me. Thanks!

  18. Al Avatar
    Al

    And now it’s on its way out. 🙁 Another piece of what made NYC unique and wonderful gets cast onto the heap.

  19. Mod Betty / RetroRoadmap.com Avatar

    Waah!!! I just read they’re being forced to close!!! There’s a “Lunch Mob” on Saturday November 8 to protest. I’ll be there in spirit.

    THANK GOODNESS you did this writeup about the history of the place, especially because the place is now going to be history itself.

    Why bother visiting New York when it’s looking more and more like a generic suburban mall every day?

    SOB 🙁

  20. Christian Irizarry-Wiesemann Avatar
    Christian Irizarry-Wiesemann

    Are there any existing pics of the Edison Theatre Interior when OH! CALCUTTA! was running at their theatre? I would LOVE to see how they arranged their seating as a Broadway house, as I am most positive it did not look as classic as it does now or back in the 40s.