Billy Reed© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedBilly Reed's was probably the first restaurant in America to serve Caesar Salad, and certainly popularized it as the press became aware that the stars eating there were consuming this "garlic" salad. At Billy Reed's, Judy Garland met Sid Luft (her husband from 1952 to 1965), a piano player named Cy Coleman (1929 to 2004) got his first job playing cocktail lounge music (before he went on to write songs such as "Witchcraft", "The Best is yet to Come", "Hey, Look Me Over", and "Big Spender",) and the world first got a look at a singer named Doris Day. Billy Reed himself was born in Waterbury, Connecticut. He left home at the age of 14 to work in a minstrel show, then worked in burlesque. At the age of 21, he was a member of the "Gordon, Reed and King" trio performing vaudeville at the Palace Theatre in New York. He wrote some gags for Bob Hope and Al Jolson, taught himself tap dancing, and did the first male tap-dancing routine in a talkie movie (dancing to "Tip-toe through the Tulips" with Ann Pennington in "Gold Diggers.") Later he also performed as part of a trio called "Jackson, Irving and Reed"; danced in films such as "Laugh Parade", Cole Porter's "Fifty-million Frenchmen", and "42nd Street"; and was dance director and assistant producer at the Copacabana during Monte Proser's time there. In the Second World War, Reed was in the navy. While stationed in Paris, he hit upon the desire to open in New York the type of café he'd seen in Paris, with both good food and good music. When he was discharged from the naval service at the end of the war, he parlied up enough cash to open the "Little Club" on New York's East Side at 70 East 55th Street on 26 February 1947. For the opening, he took a chance on an unknown singer named Doris Day. Doris was in between jobs. She had just finished up as lead vocalist for the Les Brown orchestra, and was about to appear in the film called "Romance on the High Seas." She appeared at the "Little Club" on her own as a soloist. She was a huge hit and helped to put Billy's on the map. Billy's club could seat up to 125 people. Outside, it had a peppermint-striped canopy (designed by Russell Patterson), which became the club's insignia. Open till at least 3:30 am, his club became the hangout for show business people. Billy's was known for its steaks and Caesar salad. The "Reed Cut" of beef was prime rib on the bone, served with baked potato (with sour cream or butter) and chives, and French-cut string beans, for $5.25 in 1957 (a lunch version cost $3.45.) In 1957, lunch prices started at $2.25, dinner from $4.00. The club also served squab with wild rice, capon soufflé, beef Stroganoff, and chicken in a champagne sauce. The kitchen, though, would of course do what it could to accommodate the stars. Julie Andrews always asked for a potato sandwich to be made for her: two pieces of buttered bread with a filling of sliced boiled potatoes, drizzled with more butter (melted), and seasoned with salt and pepper. The club's Maître d' was named "Roberti." Another of Reed's chief helpers, a man named "Maurice", left around January 1954. He was replaced by a Jan Woyczynski, a former captain in the Policy army. In 1955, Reed helped organize Christmas entertainment -- on site and in person -- for American servicemen stationed in Goose Bay, Labrador and in Thule, Greenland. In October of 1956, a water-main into the club burst, so Reed served champagne to anyone asking for water. Later Chronology of Reed's Life
O'Brian, Jack. Broadway Column - Doris Day at Billy Reed's. Salamanca, New York. Salamanca Republican-Press. 22 March 1947. See Also:Caesar SaladOther entries for: BiographiesAgnes Bertha Marshall, Ainsley Harriott, Alessandro Filippini, Alexis Benoit Soyer, Anthimus, Antony Worrall Thompson, Archestratus, Arnold Reuben, Athenaeus, Bartolomeo Scappi, Billy Reed, Catherine de Medici, Catherine Emily Callbeck Dalgairns, César Ritz, Charles Elmé Francatelli, Charles E. Hires, Charles Mason Hovey, Charles Ranhofer, Clarissa Dickson-Wright, Clementine Paddleford, Constance Spry, Delia Smith, Delmonico's Restaurant, Delmonico Potatoes, Dione Lucas, Egon Ronay, Elena Molokhovets, Eliza Acton, Eliza Leslie, Elizabeth Coleman White, Elizabeth Craig, Elizabeth David, Elizabeth Raffald, Fannie Merritt Farmer, Fanny Cradock, Francois Pierre de la Varenne, Francois Vatel, Gary Rhodes, Georges-Auguste Escoffier, Gino d'Acampo, Gordon Ramsay, Graham Kerr, Grimod de la Reynière, Harold McGee, Harumi Kurihara, Henry John Heinz, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Irma Rombauer, Isabella Mary Beeton, James John Howard Gregory, Jane Grigson, Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, Jean-Étienne de Boré, Jean-Pierre Clause, Jean Paré, Jennifer Paterson, John Cadbury, John Lawson Johnston, John Tradescant, Joseph Campbell, Josephine Garis Cochrane, Julia Child, La Maison Dorée, Laurie Colwin, Louis Eustache Ude, Louis Fauchère, Luther Burbank, Lydia Maria Francis Child, Madhur Jaffrey, Marcella Hazan, Margaret Costa, Marguerite Patten, Maria Parloa, Marie-Antoine Carême, Mars Family, Mary Randolph, Milton S. Hershey, Mithaecus, Nigel Slater, Nigella Lawson, Paul Blangé, Philip Harben, Pierre Blot, Pillsbury Bake-Offs, Platina, Raymond Calvel, Rufus Estes, Taillevent, Tate & Lyle, Thomas Laxton, Two Fat Ladies, Walter Tennyson Swingle, White Castle, William Cobbett |
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