All posts by abbymargulies

An ice water deluge and dead pigeons: comedian Judy Gold’s roommate horror stories

Judy-GoldEmmy Award-winning actress and stand-up comedian Judy Gold has appeared on "Celebrity Wife Swap," “Rachael vs. Guy: Celebrity Cook-Off” and “Chopped All-Stars." A former writer and producer for "The Rosie O'Donnell Show," she is also the creator of two one-woman plays, "The Judy Show—My Life as a Sitcom" and "25 Questions for a Jewish Mother." Gold has lived on the Upper West Side for 30 years, arriving in the city after graduating from college in New Jersey. She now rents a two-bedroom in the West 90s with her family, but before that, she had … Continue Reading ››

Professional organizer Lisa Zaslow shares the secrets to staying clutter-free

Lisa-ZaslowGetting organized in a New York City apartment is a nightmare. No matter how much of a minimalist you are, there's never enough space, and once things fall into disarray, summoning the mental energy to whip your place into shape can feel impossible.
Lisa Zaslow, the founder and organizational guru behind Gotham Organizers—who's been featured on HGTV, Martha Stewart Radio, and Fox & Friends, and in the New York Times and Real Simple magazine—has made a career out of helping New Yorkers confront these problems, with a service that offers hands-on in-home or office … Continue Reading ››

Graphic novelist Liana Finck on the perils of household items

Bintel BriefLiana Finck is a graphic novelist, cartoonist, and humorist, with an eye for quirky stories and funny personal anecdotes. She recently published the graphic novel A Bintel Brief, which brings to life the Jewish Daily Forward’s original advice column of the same name through cleverly illustrated stories that lend insight into the struggle of the Jewish immigrant population living on New York’s Lower East Side. Her home, a studio on the Upper West Side, is filled with unusual objects tied to her personal history, including a matchbox full … Continue Reading ››

HGTV’s Egypt Sherrod on the curious attitude of NYC’s “property virgins”

egyptsherrodThere are few tasks more daunting than setting out to buy your first home, especially for the average New Yorker facing ever-so-steep price tags on teeny-tiny places. In a nod to the ubiquity of the experience, HGTV created the series "Property Virgins," dedicated to documenting the travails of being a first-time buyer. Each week, viewers can catch real estate guru and host Egypt Sherrod​ guiding real estate newbies through their first purchase, helping them to strategize, plan, and ultimately buy a home that’s the right size for them (and their wallet). Sherrod, who … Continue Reading ››

For Woodlawn Cemetery’s history chief, a coffin serves as coffee table

Susan OlsenSusan Olsen has a keen eye for what others might consider morbid. The director of historical services at The Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, the city's largest, Olsen has long focused on historic objects, homes and monuments in her work. Her career has involved stints as the chief of the Bureau of Historical Museums within the Florida Department of State and the director of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Pope Leighey House, among other positions. She's currently co-curating an exhibition commemorating Woodlawn’s 150th anniversary, which will open at Columbia University’s Wallach Art Gallery this September.
Among the most eye-catching possessions in her one-bedroom rental in the Bronx is her coffee … Continue Reading ››

Virginia: Primland Resort Review

Spread out across 12,000 acres of rolling hills, Primland is a destination for golfers, foodies, hunters, and relaxation-seekers alike.
feature_room-service_primlandThis past summer, I fled the steamy streets of New York City for Primland, a luxurious eco-friendly resort in the heart of Virginia’s moonshine country. Primland sits on 12,000 acres of hunting land pocketed between the headwater of the Dan River and the sloping Blue Ridge Mountains. Once site of the country’s largest packaged firewood exporting business, today the land is lush and serene, crisscrossed with winding hiking trails, a perfectly manicured golf … Continue Reading ››

Norman Mailer Speaks to America From Beyond the Grave

A new authorized biography and collection of essays show why the literary figure has been so mythologized, reviled, and revered. This summer, I spent a string of rainy days exploring Norman Mailer’s Brooklyn Heights home—or to be precise—an exact replica of it, re-constructed and assembled in the artist Matthew Barney’s studio in Long Island City. From the dining-room table set on a faded carpet, to Mailer’s own library neatly installed on aging bookshelves, no detail had been overlooked. The simplicity of Mailer’s home stood in stark contrast to the flourishes that Barney, whose gallery I work for, had added—massive slabs of glistening salt, a feast caught in decay, a decadent golden throne enshrined in a room all its own—elements that in many ways conjured the spirit of Mailer, or Mailer’s work, even more than the actual interior of his home. There, I watched as Barney filmed a movie based loosely on Mailer’s Ancient Evenings, but which, more significantly, was inspired by the mythology of Mailer himself.

Shades of Greying

Oh My AmericaSara Wheeler O My America!: Six Women and Their Second Acts in a New World (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013)

“The youth gets together his materials to build a bridge to the moon, or, perchance, a palace or temple on the earth, and, at length, the middle-aged man concludes to build a woodshed with them,” wrote Henry David Thoreau. A lament, yet one that bubbles with latent wisdom. What is middle age for, after all, if not living a life infused with the lessons of youth? A … Continue Reading ››

Kubrick’s Lost Holocaust Film

America’s greatest Jewish director was haunted by the Nazi horror—too much to address it directly in film

ACCESSION NUMBERThe subject he most wanted to make a film about, Stanley Kubrick once said, was the Holocaust—“But good luck putting all of that into a 2-hour movie.” Kubrick, who directed 13 feature-length films, including 2001: A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange, and The Shining, was fascinated by manifestations of power in his films but was deeply fearful of its existence in the real world. Born in 1928 on the cusp of World War … Continue Reading ››

Thinking Outside the Shoe Box

The new head of Jacques Levine footwear looks to revive his family business—by going beyond slipper

jacques_levineTwo years ago, Sam Calvanio found himself at a Passover Seder seated across from an older woman who asked what he did for a living. “I run a slipper company,” Calvanio answered. The woman cast him a dubious look and scoffed, “What are you, Jacques Levine?” Calvanio smiled and responded simply, “Actually, yes.” Calvanio is the 28-year-old director of Jacques Levine, a footwear brand whose name may not yet resonate with today’s young women but was instantly recognizable … Continue Reading ››