
There's quite the commotion on 23rd Avenue in Astoria for lunchtime on a Wednesday.
Cars are double parking, their occupants excitedly spilling out onto the street. Women of all ages are giggling a little as they say their hellos. Working men offer some "Nice to see yous" as they walk past. There is a lot of waving and a lot of surprised looks. And a lot of running.
"Don't move," says one man, rushing off to get his camera.
Another comes running over, carrying a jug of homemade wine and a stack of plastic cups, offering a taste to everyone around.
Through it all, Tony Bennett smiles. He stands graciously, hands deep in the pockets of his gray slacks until they're needed to greet someone again.
"See what I mean?" he says, laughing. "Would you ever get this in New York?
Tony Bennett loves Astoria, not just because it's where he's from, but because it's part of who he is. "I love this area because it's the firemen, policemen, the teachers, the secretaries - they make New York City wonderful," he says, as he walks across Ditmars Boulevard. "All these people who live here, they make the city work. They make it more interesting."
Bennett comes to Astoria and Long Island City a lot - to visit the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts, the public high school he helped found in 2001; to play tennis three times a week with his friend, restaurateur Mario Sirabella; and, on rare occasion, to visit his childhood home on 32nd Street where his famous rags-to-riches story began.
When Bennett gets to the house he grew up in, a modest, square, two-floor building, he points to the roof, where he used to raise pigeons, hoping that every once in a while they would lure a homing pigeon back to his coop. ("I would take that one homing pigeon and go to the pet shop and they would give me money to go to a movie," he says, laughing. "That's how I made some money.")
"I know Thomas Wolfe - the one from the '30s, not the newer one - says, 'You can't go home again,'" Bennett says. "But I find myself going home again and again. I come back here all the time." [More...]
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PHOTO: Tony Bennett in front of his childhood home by Ken Spencer/Newsday.