The Copacabana @ IMVU

Copa Heritage

The original entrance to "The Copacabana"

The club "The Copacabana" was opened on 10th November 1940 by Monte Proser with the powerful backing of mob boss Frank Costello. Frank Costello put Jules Podell on the scene to look after his interests, and within a few years Proser was out and Podell was the official owner.

Harry Belafonte on the cover of January 1955 issue of "TAN" magazine

Podell originally had a strict "no blacks" policy. In 1944, Harry Belafonte was banned from the Copacabana. He was in the U.S. Navy at the time and was denied entry with a date. Eventually Podell was persuaded to change his policy and Belafonte returned in the 1950s as a headliner at the club.

Sam Cooke performed there on 8th July 1964, resulting in the LP Sam Cooke at the Copa, Sammy Davis Jr. shattered attendance records with his run in May 1964, and in 1965 The Supremes made their debut there in July, resulting in Motown Records booking The Temptations, Martha and the Vandellas, Marvin Gaye in the next few years.

Famous comedians Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis were performers at the Copa

Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis were frequent performers at the club, and did their last performance there as well, on 25th July 1956, which is seen in the 2002 TV movie, "Martin and Lewis".

This nightclub achieved a degree of notoriety due to an incident on 16th May 1957 involving members of the New York Yankees. One evening, Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, Hank Bauer, Yogi Berra, Johnny Kucks and Billy Martin of the Yankees, along with the wives of the former five arrived at the nightclub to celebrate Martin's birthday. Sammy Davis, Jr. happened to be the headliner.

Sammy Davis Junior shattered attendance records with his run in May 1964

During the performance, a group of bowlers, apparently intoxicated, started to interfere with Davis' act, even hurling racial slurs at him. This behavior incensed the Yankees, especially Martin, since his club roommate was catcher Elston Howard, the first African American to join the Yankees. Tensions erupted between the two factions, and the resulting fracas made newspaper headlines. Several of the Yankees were fined. One of the bowlers sued Bauer for aggravated assault, but Bauer was found not guilty.

Actor Tony Lip, who portrayed characters in Goodfellas, Donnie Brasco, and The Sopranos, began working at the Copacabana in 1961, where he served as maitre d' and supervisor. In the mid-1970s, the Copa became a discothèque. It was closed for three years in the 1970s after the owner died. In 1992, then-owner Peter Dorn moved the club from its original location of over 50 years, to 617 West 57th Street. Dorn charged landlord Nicola Blase with "not liking Hispanics," the stated reason for the move.

In 2001, the club was forced to move a third time to W. 34th Street and Eleventh Avenue on the west side of Manhattan, when its landlord terminated its lease early to build office towers on the site. It has presented mostly Hip-Hop and Salsa acts since then.

On 20th January 2007, the club announced that it would have to move by July 1 because its current location was condemned due to the planned expansion of the IRT Flushing Line of the New York City Subway.

30th June of the same year was the last night the club was open with El Gran Combo performing.

Source: Wikipedia, The Copacabana (Night Club), New York
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