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4 Black Women Who Mixed Fine Dining, Fashion and Art in New York

The dining rooms created by these restaurateurs weren’t just eye-catching; they were stages for their owners’ personal stories.

​The dining rooms created by these restaurateurs weren’t just eye-catching; they were stages for their owners’ personal stories.   

Four Black Women Who Mixed Fine Dining, Fashion and Art in New York

These four restaurants were synonymous with their owners, all serving their takes on soul or Southern food. Before they arrived, a craving for soul food meant heading uptown to Harlem for takeout containers or sitting down at Sylvia’s, opened by Sylvia Woods in 1962 near the famed Apollo Theater.

These newer places continued the story, bringing worldly, upscale takes on Southern food downtown. Each space was a view into a world curated and inspired by its creator. And each, in its time, offered some of the most coveted seats in the city; their legacy can still be seen in the number of restaurants today highlighting Black stories. Budding entrepreneurs like Melba Wilson and Marcus Samuelsson were inspired to build their own restaurant empires by seeing these pioneers build theirs.

Below, friends of these trailblazing women and guests of their restaurants share memories of what the chefs and their restaurants meant to them.


Alberta Wright

ImageA black-and-white photo of a woman in a floral dress and a head wrap looking to her left in a clothing store while other people shop.
Alberta Wright owned her own vintage clothing store, Jezebel, before opening a restaurant with the same name.Credit…Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times

Jezebel 1983-2007

Few restaurants elicit such nostalgic sighs as Jezebel, a busy and ornate Southern restaurant in the theater district that Alberta Wright opened in 1983.

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