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Busboys and Poets

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View of Busboys and Poets' downstairs interior

Busboys and Poets is a restaurant, bookstore, lounge and theater in Washington, DC, founded in 2005 by Andy Shallal. A second location opened in Shirlington in 2007 and a third location opened in Washington, DC in 2008. It has been described as a haven for writers, thinkers and performers from America's progressive social and political movements.[1]

Establishment

Busboys and Poets lies two blocks from U Street, a commercial corridor in Northwest Washington, known as "Black Broadway" in its heyday. Concerned that his creation of a trendy artistic space would clash with U Street's traditional identity, Shallal reached out for support from community leaders, neighborhood groups, church organizations, schools and radio stations prior to opening the location. Shallal obtained a loan from black-owned Industrial Bank, located at 11th and U streets. Shallal also decided not to charge rent to Teaching for Change, which runs the bookstore area, until it turned a profit.[2]

The name refers to American poet Langston Hughes, who worked as a busboy at the Wardman Park Hotel in the 1930s, prior to gaining recognition as a poet. Rejected ideas for the restaurant's name include Writers Block Cafe, Broken Bread Cafe and White Rabbit Cafe, the latter inspired by The Matrix.

Interior stairs and counter

Shallal painted the giant civil rights movement-themed mural covering one wall of the restauarant, titled Peace in Struggle Wall. He refuses to sign the mural, saying this would be a "final gesture" that would preclude him from making revisions later. The collage depicts civil rights icons including the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Nelson Mandela. It features the words of Langston Hughes, "Let America be America again / Let it be the dream it used to be."[3]

Busboys also occupies the same building as the Langston Lofts, built by PN Hoffmann in 2005, and the theater hall is called Langston Room. Plays performed at Busboys include "Fear Up, about Guantanamo Bay, "Operation: Dreamland" about the occupation of Fallujah from the perspective of an American soldier. It has also hosted a screening of the Guerilla Film Festival.

Busboys is a microcosm of the U Street renaissance, drawing together black, white, gay, straight, young and old alike. The name is a tribute to Langston Hughes, who was working as a busboy at the Wardman Park Hotel in the 1930s when he slipped three of his poems to a patron. The guest was the famous wordsmith Vachel Lindsay, who proclaimed in the papers the next day his discovery of a “Negro busboy poet.” [4]

Reception

Shallal had said he would keep Busboys running even if just broke even, but it proved a success from the beginning, even without committing an advertising budget. C-SPAN, NBC News and ABC's "Good Morning America" all filmed segments inside the restaurant within the restaurant's first few months. Kevin Zeese, manager of Ralph Nader's 2000 presidential campaign and director of Democracy Rising, related to The Hill, "Boom! It just became an incredibly important landmark for the community. It definitely has a progressive feel to it; it's in the 'hood, not disjointed from the community like the National Press Club and Capitol Hill are."[4] Shallal said of the restaurant's popularity, "I've opened many restaurants, [but] this is the first time that people came in and got it right away."[5]

The Busboys clientele has included Nader, Cindy Sheehan, Tom Hayden, Harry Belafonte, Amiri Baraka, Rep. Maxine Waters, Rep. Lynn Woolsey, Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee, Anthony Shadid and Dave Meggyesy, a former St. Louis Cardinals linebacker who quit the NFL in protest of the Vietnam War. Additionally, onetime Washington Wizards center Etan Thomas has performed his poetry at Busboys. Minnesota Senator, Al Franken spoke in Busboys and Poets' Langston Room, Howard Zinn, Alice Walker, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her daughter, actor Matthew Dillon, modern hip hop artist Keri Hilson and other celebs have either ate or hosted an event.

Busboys and Poets entrance sign at the CityVista location

The menu offers both American and international dishes. Among the American foods are burgers and pizza, including an Oceanic pizza featuring mussels, shrimp and leeks. Ethnic offerings include falafel, panini, meatloaf, lasagna and falafel wrap. The menu offers numerous options for vegetarians and vegans.

Shallal initially hired a chef, but changed his mind a week before opening, believing the food called too much attention to itself. He brought the chef over from Mimi's to train the kitchen staff, and Shallal contributed his own recipes.[2]

Expansion

Shallal has launched two additional restaurants in the Washington area. Shallal has said of his intent to launch a similar but differently-named restaurant, "I'd like to incorporate Zora Neale Hurston into the name. I like taking literary [authors] and using them as springboards." One location is scheduled to open in summer 2008 in the CityVista project at 5th and K streets; the other is planned for early 2011 in the Arts District Hyattsville.[6] His newest, Eatonville Restaurant opened in June 2009 and has created even more buzz in the Historic U Street Corridor. Cast of The Color Purple and Danny Glover have been to Eatonville Restaurant.

References

  1. ^ D.C. Restaurant Becomes Hub of Anti-War Activity, Voice of America, September 23, 2005.
  2. ^ a b Rainbow Room: The Busboys and Poets Controversy, Todd Kliman, Washingtonian, December 1, 2005.
  3. ^ The Muralist, David Montgomery, Washington Post, May 1, 2006.
  4. ^ a b Busboys and Poets: everyone welcome, Geoffrey Greene, "The Hill", June 17, 2009. Cite error: The named reference "The Hill" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. ^ Arab Americans Give Back to Their Country, Jamie Kim, Washington Report, December 2005.
  6. ^ Shallal to launch third Busboys, a new concept, Erin Killian, Washington Business Journal, July 13, 2007.