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  1. 1. Studio 54 at the Westbury Music Fair. One of the most iconic disco clubs of the 1970s was Studio 54 at the Westbury Music Fair. This club was a branch of the famous Studio 54 in New York City and featured the same glitz and glamour that made the original club so popular.

  2. 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.

  3. Feb 23, 2010 · How about the Mud Club in Manhattan? Mickey Ruskin’s Ocean Club in Tribeca or Max’s Kansas City by Union Square? John Belushi’s bar in Tribeca (now covered over by Battery Park City)? Or the beach in Manhattan, also now covered over by BPC?

  4. Apr 6, 2024 · As you venture back to Long Island in the 1970s, imagine a vivid tapestry of memories where nostalgic tribute mingles with historical change. This was a decade marked by a unique blend of cultural shifts and technological advancements that brushed across the communities of New York’s beloved island.

  5. Jun 15, 2024 · Though Manhattan's notorious Studio 54 was the music's epicenter, nearby Long Island followed close behind, with new clubs opening almost weekly and no shortage of young dancers to fill them.

  6. Feb 26, 2016 · And then it includes nightlife photographs from the wild club scenes in New York in the 1970s and 80s as well, and going out to Fire Island in the summer.” The collection is irresistible – each image a witty and memorable souvenir from a time gone by, many of them so perfectly theatrical that it seems impossible they weren’t staged in the ...

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  8. Feb 22, 2019 · Club 57’s sparse, no-frills digs and eclectic entertainment, including debutante balls and pop-up art galleries, were a nod then to the anything-goes culture of its environ: the East Village.

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