stardiner

Archive for the ‘Diners’ Category

DJ Matinee at the Star Diner was a big success!

In diner, Diners, Diners Roadside, doo wop, history, Juke Box, oldies radio, Rhode Island, vintage on December 1, 2009 at 2:44 am

Ronnie & The Satellites StadiumCabaret[1]

Ronnie & The Satellites

Ronny and the Satellites - Dream of You

Ronnie and the Satellites sounded just like back in the day as they belted out the tunes they are famous for like Last Night I Dreamed and Bunny Lee. A jam packed crowd in the dining room at the Star Diner on 10/22/09.. Radio Oldies DJ’s and several memorable Doo-Wop era singers were in attendance for Ronnie and the Satellites ‘Deja Vu Debut Preview’. The consensus of everyone who attended is that they are ready hit the road again singing to audiences and young and older and it all happened at Rhode Islands Number One Oldies Diner Doo-Wop Pit Stop’ the Star Diner.
Event Photos:

Ronnie and The Satellites

Ronnie and The Satellites

Ronnie and The Satellites

Ronnie and The Satellites

Virginia Anderson and her husband Lesley Anderson of The Dubs

Virginia Anderson and her husband Lesley Anderson of The Dubs

George T. Smith (right) Dell Paddget (Center) of the Castaleers with Joe Fiske of Ronnie & the Satellites.

George T. Smith (right) Dell Padgett(Center) of the Castaleers with Joe Fiske of Ronnie & the Satellites.

 

Castaleers - That's why I cry.

3W Seeburg Jukebox

3W Seeburg Jukebox

Cal Raye - My tears start to fall

DW5

DJ Bob Spicer WLLI-FM (Right) with Jerry Raymond of Cal-Raye

Ronny and the Satellites - Last Night I Dreamed

Star Diner expands hours & our menu is online.

In antique cars, classic cars, diner, Diners, Diners Roadside, doo wop, history, Juke Box, Narragansett, oldies radio, Providence, Rhode Island, Rumford, vintage on October 17, 2009 at 6:54 pm

The Star Diner’s customers spoke and we listened. We have decided to expand our hours to meet the needs of our customers and  our menu is now online.

 

To see our menu & hours click here

The Star Diner in East Providence, recently restored by its owners,is one of the winners of the Rhody Awards announced Friday. The Providence Journal / Bob Thayer

The Star Diner in East Providence, recently restored by its owners,is one of the winners of the Rhody Awards announced Friday. The Providence Journal / Bob Thayer

Providence Journal

Rhody Awards honor historic preservation

 

10/20/2009 01:00 AM EDT

 

Journal Arts Writer

 

A classic 1950s diner, a preservation specialist who works with the Narragansett Indian tribe, and a modernist church designed by the pioneering architect Pietro Belluschi are among the winners of this year’s Rhody Awards, which honor outstanding historic preservation efforts around the state.

The awards were announced Friday by two of the state’s leading preservation organizations: Preserve Rhode Island and the Rhode Island Heritage and Preservation Commission.

Among the projects receiving an award were two from the mid-20th-century: The Star Diner (1951), an East Providence landmark that was recently restored by its owners, and the Church of St. Gregory the Great (1960), a modernist icon on the campus of the Portsmouth Abbey School.

Other winners include the Newport Restoration Foundation, which won for its restoration of the historic Almy-Cory House in Portsmouth; the City of Providence, which won for its eco-friendly restoration of the Nathan Bishop Middle School; and John B. Brown III, a preservation specialist who won for his efforts to protect the historical legacy of the Narragansett Indians.

All 12 of this year’s Rhody Award winners will be honored at the annual Preservation Celebration on Thursday, Oct. 29, at 5:30 p.m. at Hope Artiste Village in Pawtucket. For more information on the Preservation Celebration and the award winners, visit the preservation commission Web site at preservation.ri.gov.

Preservation Award

Quent Sandford displays the Rhody Award. Photo:Denise J. R. Bass

http://www.preservation.ri.gov/pdfs_zips_downloads/news_pdfs/091015rumfordPR.pdf

A revitalized Rumford – Renovated landmarks honored by the state

In diner, Diners, Diners Roadside, history, Juke Box, Providence, Rhode Island, Rumford, vintage on October 16, 2009 at 4:21 am

Preservation CelebrationA revitalized Rumford
Renovated landmarks honored by the state

George Morse
EAST PROVIDENCE, RI. – There’s a lot of history in East Providence, but two Rumford locations have recently been singled out by the Rhode Island Historical Preservation and Heritage Commission for their work in renovating two of the area’s most recognizable buildings.

Last week, the Star Diner on Newport Avenue and Rumford Center on Newman Avenue were two of out of nine spots from around Rhode Island receiving preservation project awards from the state commission.

Rumford Center, now a 10-building commercial, residential and retail complex, was originally built as Rumford Chemical Works in 1856. In its heyday, the facility manufactured and shipped baking powder across the country and even around the globe, earning the nickname of “kitchen capital of the world.” It also included more than 300 acres of working communities and farms to sustain facility employees, known by most as the Village of Rumford.
By the late 1960s, however, the former Chemical Works had fallen into disrepair. In 2006, the facility was purchased by PK Rumford LLC, who spent the next couple of years rehabilitating the lot into the 8.3-acre space it is today.

Inside the facility, nearly every wall is covered with photos from the former Chemical Works, illustrating everything from cooking competitions to pickup football games between factory workers. Scattered around the center grounds are also relics of the past, including scales and other industrial items that serve as constant reminders of where the facility started.

Colin Kane, principal with PK Rumford, said there are both sentimental and economic reasons for preserving the facility’s history.

“We are firm believers in adaptive re-use and preserving these great places, the bones of a community. Without Rumford Chemical, there really wouldn’t be a Rumford neighborhood,” Mr. Kane said.

As for the economic reason, Mr. Kane said the availability of state and federal grants aimed at preserving historical places like Rumford Chemical were certainly a plus.
Additionally, Mr. Kane said the project would not have been possible without the help of the city’s historical society, who provided a large amount of background information and material.

“They deserve the credit as much as we do,” he said.

Feeding Rumford since 1951

Just down at the road, at the Star Diner, co-owner Quentin Sanford Jr. (who runs the restaurant with his sister Bethany Sanford-Smith) said it was an “honor” to receive the award. He also said it makes the years of work that went into renovating the classic-style American diner worth it.

The Star Diner was originally built by the DeRaffelle Diner Manufacturing Company based in New York. First delivered to East Providence in 1951, the Star Diner was known as Keenan’s Diner until 1964. From this time until 2000, when Mr. Quentin and his sister purchased it, the diner was the China Star restaurant.

But when Mr. Quentin and his sister got involved (the two also co-own and operate the Handy Hill Creamery in Westport), the goal was always to bring the diner back to its original condition.

Though a few booths and stools had been replaced, Mr. Quentin was able to use a few items found in the basement to replicate the diner’s original interior, although no photos from the diner in the 50s or 60s have been found.

Why the passion for this type of project?

“I guess it’s because there’s not too much of it left,” Mr. Sanford said.

Today, the diner is a far cry from the chain restaurants that sit up and down Newport Avenue. The individual jukeboxes at each of the restaurant’s booths feature 50s and 60s pop music, including Bobby Darin, Elvis Presley, Otis Redding and Wilson Pickett.

On the menu is classic American cuisine, like meatloaf, hot dogs and clam strips — “comfort food,” as Mr. Sanford describes it.

Star Diner 140 Newport Ave. Rumford, RI.

Star Diner 140 Newport Ave. Rumford, RI.

Family diner is rising Star

In diner, Diners, Diners Roadside, history, Narragansett, Providence, Rhode Island, Rumford, vintage on September 24, 2009 at 5:21 am
The blueberry pancakes with a side of bacon are to die for at the Star Diner in East Providence.The Providence Journal / Bob Thayer

The blueberry pancakes with a side of bacon are to die for at the Star Diner in East Providence.The Providence Journal / Bob Thayer

Family diner is rising Star

01:00 AM EDT on Thursday, March 19, 2009

By Gail Ciampa

Providence Journal
Journal Food Editor

EAST PROVIDENCE — There just aren’t nearly enough cute diners like the Star around. You must understand how very lucky we are to have the Star with its friendly atmosphere, solid diner food and tableside juke boxes.

Quentin Sanford and Bethany Smith, the brother and sister owners and proprietors, bought the diner back in 2000. Then it was the China Star, affectionately called the “China dinnah” according to Sanford. The diner was originally delivered to the site in 1951 from DeRaffele Manufacturing in New York to become Keenan’s Diner. The Chins, owners of the Mee Hong in Providence, bought it in 1964 and made it a Chinese restaurant.

So Sanford and Smith became only the third owners of the landmark. But the pair already had a family business, the Handy Hill Creamery, an ice cream shop and clam shack on Route 88 in Westport, Mass. They worked there day and night during the summer season, like their parents did before them. But when the weather chilled, up Newport Avenue they went to work on the Star, which was in need of every sort of updating and repair, including remodeling the kitchen and doing state fire-code upgrades. They did most of the work themselves and, well, it took a while — eight years’ worth. They even gave a small addition, called the “Tarry room,” a facelift.

The Star opened just last month, but it feels like they’ve been doing this forever, which of course they have. Already it’s had a starring role in Showtime’s series Brotherhood, which is shot locally. But perhaps more importantly, it has become an affordable, comfortable place to have some eggs and bacon or a nice slab of homemade meatloaf.

The counter seats and booths were busy on a Saturday morning, but still our bottomless cups of coffee and tea remained filled, with smiles. Our food included a perfect omelet with linguica and Swiss cheese ($7.50) complete with excellent spicy home fries and toast (choice of white, wheat, rye or pumpernickel). Blueberry pancakes ($3.50 for a short stack of two large ones that were more than enough for any breakfast) were fluffy and moist and loaded with those antioxidant berries that keep me healthy. A side of bacon ($2.50) was nice and crisp.

We could have sat forever with our hot drinks and all the friendly bustle around, but instead I returned for lunch midweek. It was quieter that day but the food arrived just as fast and hot as at breakfast. The large slice of meatloaf was covered in gravy — not homemade and a little salty — but with some outstanding mashed potatoes as real as they come. The meatloaf tasted of sage and was satisfying in that way diner food always is, with all that comfort in every bite.

An open-faced turkey sandwich offered up lots of real turkey breast on white toasted bread. The stuffing and gravy were ordinary but both dishes came with good helpings of mixed vegetables with corn, carrots, red peppers and green beans. They offer bottomless sodas, too.

Desserts include puddings like tapioca (such a diner stalwart) and pies. I just don’t know who has room for sweets after all the savory dishes.

The diner only serves breakfast on Sundays from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. but stays open late Thursday, Friday and Saturday for dinner until 8 p.m. There are daily specials (meatballs on the day of my lunch visit) and a regular menu with fish and chips (served on Wednesday, Friday and Saturday only), clam strip roll, baked ham dinner, liver and onions and a chicken finger plate. Sandwiches include pastrami, open face roast beef, BLT and grilled cheese. Hot dogs and hamburgers are on the menu, as are salads.

This summer the Sanfords will be running the diner as well as their ice cream shop and clam shack. And aren’t we all glad. Bill of fare

A breakfast for two at Star Diner might look like this:

Coffee … $1.50

Tea … $1.50

Linguica omelet … $7.50

Short stack of blueberry pancakes … $3.50

Side of bacon … $2.50

Total … $16.50

Tax … $1.32

Tip … $3.30

Total bill … $21.12

Bill of fare

A lunch for two at Star Diner might look like this:

Iced tea … $2.25

Soda … $2.00

Open-faced turkey sandwich … $6.99

Meatloaf dinner … $6.99

Total … $18.23

Tax … $1.46

Tip … $3.80

Total bill … $23.49

Star Diner, 140 Newport Ave., East Providence, (401) 434-8899, stardiner.wordpress.com. Cash only. Casual. Take-out or dine in. Parking lot. Wheelchair accessible, highchairs. Opens daily for breakfast at 7 a.m.; closes 1 p.m. Sunday; 2 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; and 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Breakfast $2.95-$7.50; lunch and dinner $4.95-$7.59. No liquor license.

Studebaker Club meet at the Star Diner

In antique cars, classic cars, diner, Diners, Narragansett, vintage on September 9, 2009 at 11:02 am

 

stude4

 

August 16th – Studebaker Automobile owners gathered at the Star Diner for a late morning breakfast at 11:30AM.  After leaving the diner the Studebakers cruised up Newport Ave. to Slater Park.

The Ocean Bay Chapter of the Studebaker Drivers Club is the largest and oldest continuous operating chapter of the Studebaker Drivers Club, Inc. in New England.Its roots go back to the mid 1960’s when a small group of Studebaker enthusiasts would gather periodically at the Museum of Transportation, in Brookline Massachusetts, to display their Studebakers and hold chapter organizational meetings.

The Chapter was originally charted as the “Massachusetts-Rhode Island Chapter” of the Studebaker Drivers Club Inc. in 1967. The Chapter later changed its name to the “Ocean-Bay Chapter” taking the nicknames of Massachusetts “Bay State” and Rhode Island “Ocean State”.

Today the Ocean Bay Chapter has now grown to approximately 175 members serving Studebaker enthusiasts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, with members throughout New England. The chapter holds regularly scheduled chapter meetings each month in locations throughout Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Every effort is made to move the monthly meeting locations around in the two states to give everyone a chance to attend a meeting in their general location. Ocean Bay has hosted numerous very successful Zone Meets over the years from Plymouth to the Berkshires. In 1990 the chapter hosted the Studebaker Drivers Club’s 26th International Meet, July 15th to the 21st, in Marlboro Massachusetts. Some 400 Studebaker built automobiles attended the meet together with SDC members from all over the globe.

The chapter also publishes a bimonthly newsletter, the “Studegram”. It is packed full of information for its members concerning Monthly Meetings, Stories, Articles and Classifieds. The Studegram has won numerous Studebaker Drivers Club awards over the years.

1955_Studebaker_ad

Your next meeting or social event.

In antique cars, classic cars, diner, Diners, Diners Roadside, history, Narragansett, Providence, Rhode Island, Rumford, scooters, vintage on July 27, 2009 at 3:46 am

Call the Star Diner for your next corporate event, social gathering or party. The Star Diner is an authentic vintage diner serving Rhode Island since 1951 and serving the food diners are famous for.  Our dining room addition has  seating of up to fifty five  people.

Star Diner – 401-434-8899

Public invited to ‘History of the R.I. diner’

In diner, Diners, Diners Roadside, Rhode Island, vintage on July 26, 2009 at 3:08 am

Woonsocket Call

07-26-2009

Public invited to ‘History of the R.I. diner’

By JON BAKER

LINCOLN — It wasn’t coincidence but pure luck how Dr. Tom Shaker and Daniel Zilka became friends, not to mention authorities on Rhode Island diners.

“Daniel had already started the formation of the American Diner Museum in Providence back in 1996, and I had been a diner enthusiast all my life,” said Shaker, not only a member of the museum’s Board of Directors but also the communication arts department head at Franklin’s Dean College.
“I used to visit diners every weekend, and during one stop, I read in a diner magazine about Daniel doing some work in that realm, so I contacted him.”
Joked Zilka, an architectural conservator from Lincoln: “We broke bread at the Modern Diner in Pawtucket, and chewed and chatted. We discovered we had some mutual interests, and, obviously, the diner was the clincher.”
Over the last four years, the tandem has conducted numerous presentations, naturally coined “The History of Rhode Island Diners,” and will do so again on tomorrow (7 p.m.) at EPOCH Assisted Living, 1 Butler Ave., Providence.
The public is invited to the free event, which will feature film clips of diners in the movies, photographs of area diners past and present and songs about the unique eateries. They also will discuss such “hot spots” as Haven Brothers, Silver Top and the Seaplane, etc.
While Shaker always had an interest in the subject, Zilka just happened upon it.
“I was in graduate school at the University of Vermont, studying architecture and historic sites preservation, and I took a particular interest in roadside architecture,” said Zilka, 53, during a break in restoring the Saylesville Finishing Co.’s former main office building, which he owns. “I loved checking out drive-in theaters, diners, old gas stations, creameries, motels and ‘dive’ bars.
“I like rehabilitating these old places. Why? Why not?” he continued. “The materials that this (Saylesville) building are made of are much better than contemporary materials. I mean, the foundation is granite, the walls are brick and there’s oak trim inside. It’s a beautiful old building. The same holds true for diners.”

**

If someone has a question as to a certain diner’s background, chances are excellent Zilka or Shaker can answer it. And, make no mistake, the duo have fun doing it.
“Yeah, we’ve read a couple of books on the subject, so I guess you could say we know what we’re talking about,” Zilka laughed. “Honestly, I’ve been to 600 diners all over the United States, India, England and Canada … Fact is, the definition of a diner is it must be built in a factory, then transported to a permanent site.
“It must have a counter, stools and possibly booths, and all cooking must be done directly behind the counter,” he added. “The word ‘diner’ is a derivative of the railroad dining cars, and they should resemble them in styling and design.”
Not far from the old Bleachery sit the remnants of the former Russell’s Diner of Quincy, which Zilka claimed was built in 1940 by the Worcester Lunch Car Co. The windows now boarded up and paint peeling, Russell’s was a famous place for people to grab a scrambled egg-and-bacon breakfast or a grilled cheese at lunch.
“Russell’s was moved to Amesbury, Mass and became part of a truck stop in the 1970s, but when the truck stop went under, it became a laundromat,” he said.
Shaker, at 50 an always-smiling Woonsocket resident, admitted he and Zilka have traveled the East Coast and points west to provide help, or purchase diners for restoration.
“A couple had bought some property at a former private summer camp, and found this old building,” Shaker recalled. “They asked us to check it out, and we discovered it was a diner from the 1920s. They wanted to know if it was worth saving, and – obviously – we said it was.
“We get a lot of calls from folks who want to save diners that were relocated to properties they purchased,” he added. “We go out and try to identify marks to learn who made them and when.”

**

Both men noted that thousands statewide don’t know the “diner” concept originated in Providence in 1872, thanks to Cumberland resident Walter Scott.
“He created the first lunch wagon,” Zilka said. “Scott worked as a pressman for the old Providence Star, and he needed more income, so he originally carried around a basket of sandwiches, pies and coffee and sold them in between shifts. He also went into private men’s clubs.
“The business did so well, he quit his job and started selling his items full-time,” he continued. “Eventually, he put everything into a horse-drawn wagon, and every night he parked it outside the old Journal building.
“When we give our multi-media presentations, we communicate with the audience, because they have very vivid memories of the diners they used to go to. We feed off that.”
Contributed Shaker: “One of the first things we do is ask people what diner they remember, and they shout out dozens of names. We ask them their recollections, and inform them about those spots.
“We also discuss some of the old diner lingo, like ‘Adam and Eve on a raft,’ ‘Pigs in a blanket,’ ‘ Two sinkers and a cup of mud,’ ‘Walk a cow through the garden, and put legs on it,’ etc. Of course, I’m not going to tell you what they mean. If people want to know, they should come to our presentation.”
Zilka”s favorite five diners around the state: Modern Diner; Star Diner in Rumford; Jigger’s in East Greenwich; The Prairie Diner (built in 1926 and formerly located at the corner of Prairie and Public avenues in Providence); and Liberty Elm in the capitol city.
Shaker preferred to mention his New England Top Five: Almac’s and Shawmut in Fall River; Modern Diner; Capitol Diner in Lynn; and Wilson’s in Waltham.

**

As a sneak preview, Zilka offered up some fun facts about the famous Modern Diner.
“It was built in 1940 by J.B. Judkins Co. in Merrimack, Mass.” he stated. “It was moved to Dexter Street in Pawtucket that same year, and there was a threat to demolish it in 1978 due to urban renewal, but then it was moved again to East Avenue. It’s been there ever since.
“I like it because it’s got that 1930s’ streamline styling – the ‘Machine Age’ look; very few know this, but it’s one of only three existing Sterling Streamline models in the world,” he said. Shaker added, “It’s the first diner listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It’s a national treasure.”
Now that Star Diner on Newport Avenue has reopened, Zilka explained it used to be named “Keenan’s,” and was built in 1950 by the DeRafelle Dining Car Co. of New Rochelle, N.Y. Keenan’s later became a Chinese food restaurant before being renamed “Star.”
“It did quite a business decades ago because of the Narragansett Park racetrack,” Zilka stated. “All the jockeys used to hang out there. In fact, they built a dining room to handle all of them, and called it the ‘Terry Room’ – the word ‘terry’ refers to ‘tack.’ The best way to describe it? Standard model.’”
The pair also are involved with locating a permanent American Diner Museum at Heritage Harbor Museum in Providence, and assembling a “virtual” (online) exhibit. They also work with the New Hope Diner Project, where youths at the R.I. Training School and area high schools (East Providence, Smithfield) preserve old diners.
“For me, diners have always been a huge part of my life,” Shaker said. “They were places to go to get a sense of community, a hometown flavor, and meet the locals.”
Stated Zilka: “It’s a great equalizer for the masses. Everyone gets the same type stool, and everyone is welcome in a diner, regardless of race, creed or religion. They’re terrific places.”

Rumford diner transformed into movie studio

In Diners on February 8, 2009 at 4:06 am

Pawtucket Times

Broadly speaking, this scenario played out recently in the now-vacant, but soon-to-open Star Diner at 140 Newport Ave. in Rumford. The occasion was the shooting of a short film called “Manifest Breakfast” that is being jointly produced by two local film companies, Optic Sugar Films of Providence and Jawdoc Productions of Cranston.
Any passers-by to the Star Diner last Wednesday or Thursday night could have witnessed such bizarre sights as dishes being smashed, coffee cups mysteriously overflowing, a “customer” staring at a static-filled TV screen and some “cops” who are walking a decidedly different kind of beat. The scenes were all part of a new experimental visual effects film that the producers are hoping to bring to a national audience.
“Manifest Breakfast” stars Marc Vos, Sarah Lewis, Courtney Jones and Big Jon Pierce. The film is written and directed by Nick Beaubien, produced by Anthony Ambrosino, Nicholas Delmenico, and Charles Kane, with cinematography by Stu Chudy and Christopher Garrison.
Anthony Ambrosino of Jawdoc Productions said that had met Nick Beaubien during a previous film project. He said that when he read Beaubien’s screenplay, he thought it would provide a good basis for a film that, besides telling a story, showcases the dazzling visual effects that can be generated with state-of-the-art computer editing equipment.
Ambrosino said the plot line is loosely based on a young couple, a sort of modern-day “Bonnie and Clyde,” who have robbed a bank, parted ways, and then agreed to meet at a certain time at the diner. The man shows up at the diner as planned, but then starts to experience some pretty strange occurrences that make him question his sanity.
“It’s kind of like, ‘What does a person see the moment he goes insane?’” Ambrosino said, in describing the fantastical scenes. Without giving away the plot, the man has experienced a traumatic event and, without even realizing it, has gone to the diner to seek peace and protection.
Ambrosino, who runs the Pawtucket Film Festival, said that both his production company and Charles Kane’s Optic Sugar, do filmmaking. He said that Optic Sugar specializes in the post-production work such as editing and special effects, while his Jawdoc Productions is more involved in the business and production end of the film process. This is the first time the two have collaborated on a film project.
Both producers are hoping to “wow” audiences with visual effects and animation that enhance the live action scenes shot on location. The continued advancements in digital technology are giving celluloid “a run for its money,” according to Ambrosino. “The pairing of digital video cameras with the latest non-linear editing systems is continuing to give filmmakers Hollywood films on a small town budget,” he said.
Ambrosino credited Beth Smith, the owner of the Star Diner, for being supportive and welcoming to the film crews. He said he had been scouting out different locations for a diner, and the first one he found was in deplorable condition, and the owner wanted to charge a hefty rental fee. “He wanted us to clean it up, and still pay the full fee,” Ambrosino said. The Star Diner, which has been recently renovated in preparation for its grand opening next week, proved to be a much more suitable choice.
Ambrosino said the producers plan on showing “Manifest Breakfast” at the upcoming Pawtucket Film Festival, now in its 10th year. After that, they will enter it into local film festivals, and then shop it around to the larger, nationally known ones such as Sundance and others that cater to films with special effects.

The Star Diner is restored and open for business in East Providence

In Diners on February 8, 2009 at 2:50 am

star-diner-00713

Providence Journal
The Star Diner is restored and open for business in East Providence
February 2nd, 2009
The Star Diner on Newport Avenue in East Providence finally opened today. Bethany Smith and Quentin Sanford, brother and sister, bought the diner in 2000 from the family who ran the China Star Chinese restaurant at that location since 1964. Smith and Sanford took the past eight-plus years to restore the diner to its original diner style researching where to get the original booth seats restored, for instance. The diner was used as a location in the past season of the Showtime drama ‘Brotherhood’.
Providence Journal video by Mary Murphy.