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  1. Clubs like Studio 54, Hurrah and Ice Palace 57 dominated the scene of the late ’60s and through the ’70s, when self-exploration was welcome under the fragmented light of a disco ball. Bell ...

  2. In the late ‘50s the attraction started to wear off and finally in 1966, the supper club closed. The cost of renovation to the fire prevention system proved too costly. Photochrome postcard, circa 1950s. The Hawaiian Room at the Hotel Lexington at Lexington Avenue & 48th Street, New York, NY. Image courtesy John Hemmer Archive.

  3. Feb 22, 2019 · Downtown Manhattan in the 1970s Was New Yorks Golden Era for Nightlife. A large group of young people stand gathered at the intersection of MacDougal and West 3rd Street in Greenwich Village ...

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  5. Jul 8, 2016 · The Tunnel might well have started the trend of making the most popular clubs in New York a) in Chelsea, b) in historic buildings ironically co-opted for neon graffiti 1990s-type purposes and c ...

  6. Lynn Goldsmith. 8/30. Brooke Shields and Debbie Harry, 1978, Getty Images. It’s 1977 in New York: lawyer in-training Steve Rubell and partner Ian Schrager have just decided to open a club. Its name? Studio 54. Located on 273 West 54th Street, right in the center of Manhattan, the pair could never have guessed how legendary the club would become.

  7. Gold and goldwork became a 1970s style signature: the favorite material of seminal `70s designer Aldo Cipullo, who sculpted it into smooth, tactile yet streamlined androgynous jewels to be worn all day every day; and loved too for its malleability and richness by New York celebrity jeweller David Webb, who drew on ancient and exotic influences ...

  8. The 1970s was the golden age of night clubs, discos and wild underground parties in the New York City. It was a time when cheap rent meant the artistic class ruled downtown Manhattan. People used to wear whatever they and they dance like beasts in full swing.

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