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February 10, 1948. Washington, D.C. "Potomac Electric Power Co. -- commercial kitchens, restaurants and lighting. Mayfair Restaurant dining room." You'll come for the food and stay for the flattering indirect illumination. 8x10 acetate negative by Theodor Horydczak. View full size.
I would love to have a gig in this place.
I had my first mixed drink here, a sloe gin fizz. This would have been in the late 50s.
There are special direct lights above where the jazz combo would sit. There's an upright bass (lying down) and two bandstands. What would the third instrument be? Wes Montgomery on guitar? I'd love to have that classic microphone, too! Can you imagine Rosemary Clooney standing behind it, crooning for the diners?
I want this entire space for my kitchen. Talk about Streamline Modern personified! Not only is there a piano, but there are 2 music stands, and a bass fiddle lying on its side, waiting for the next set. Boy, do I wonder what the colors were.
I would *love* to see this in colour - those maps must have provided a fabulous backdrop to the rest of the room.
but I sure would love to have one of those matchbooks neatly tucked into the ashtray!!
While it was fashionable at the time, especially in a postwar modern restaurant, that acoustic ceiling tile is seriously scary in our circa 1905 house. We had it in our master bedroom, and I joyfully tore it off in one of our first remodeling projects.
Ten years later, I still haven't removed it from my home office, but doing so is definitely in the queue.
This was apparently taken on the occasion of a major remodeling project. On Nov. 29, 1947, the Mayfair (F Street at 13th NW) advertised that it was closing for four weeks for renovation.
"You'll come for the food and stay for the flattering indirect illumination."
For a moment I was puzzled by the black round objects on the tables, before realizing they were ashtrays. Things sure were different back then.
The map segment painted on the back wall, to the right of the grand piano (speaking of which, how many casual restaurants have those today?) is apparently the work of a geographically challenged artist. Peru to the north of Venezuela?
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