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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

This Week At The Cinema: Barack Obama and Live From Memphis

It’s a busy week in Memphis film land.

The Final Year

Everybody’s turning out for Avengers: Infinity War, but if you’re in the mood for something more serious, check out The Final Year at Studio on the Square. In 2016, director Greg Barker got unprecedented access to Barack Obama and his foreign policy team. Maybe they calculated that it would be an uneventful time, so a camera wouldn’t capture much, but they calculated wrong. Check out the trailer for this unique political documentary.

This Week At The Cinema: Barack Obama and Live From Memphis

Across Midtown, the Indie Memphis Shoot & Splice series moves to a new space: the Crosstown Arts atrium. There, Memphis’s own LensRentals.com will give a demonstration of some of their newest gear. The demo begins at 7 PM, and there’s free beverages!

Wednesday at Crosstown Arts, Indie Memphis’ Microcinema series presents a retrospective of the pioneering web video work by Live From Memphis. For eleven years, LFM, based at 1 S. Main in Downtown Memphis, was devoted to the arts, music, film, and culture of the Bluff City. During that time, Christopher Reyes, Sarah Fleming and many other Memphis artistic types produced hundreds of hours of video of all kinds. This retrospective program, which will see LFM’s principle creators giving behind the scenes stories of a decade of Memphis creative life, will be a pay what you can affair with all proceeds going to the legal defense fund to help Reyes and Fleming fight eviction from 1 S. Main by the Aparium Hotel Group, owners of the Madison Hotel. For more details on that ongoing fight, see the Memphis Flyer’s coverage here (part 1) and here (part 2).

Here’s just one Live From Memphis video: New Orleans musical wizards Quintron and Miss Pussycat tear the roof off GonerFest 5.

This Week At The Cinema: Barack Obama and Live From Memphis (2)

See you at the movies!

Categories
News News Blog

1 S. Main Eviction Case Evokes Protest, New Legal Controversy

Laura Jean Hocking

About 100 people rallied outside City Hall on Monday, April 9th, to protest the pending eviction of artists and filmmakers Christopher Reyes and Sarah Fleming from their home at 1 S. Main.

“This rally was organized because we could not stand by silently as our friends and fellow artists were so ruthlessly mistreated by the new owners of the Madison, Aparium Hotel Group,” said Joann Self Selvidge of Memphis Women in Film, who organized the rally.

Self Selvidge said Fleming was a founding member of Memphis Women in Film and “vital to the Memphis film community. … Her list of awards and accolades is too long to cover here. But unless you know her personally, you might not realize the full extent of who she is outside of her career.

“So, I want you all to stop and think for just a moment what they are going through right now, as a family. As a mom, Sarah is struggling to explain to her 3-year-old daughter why mommy and daddy are packing up all of their belongings into big boxes in the middle of their living room floor.

In this past week since the court decision was made, her 9-month-old daughter, whom she’s still nursing, got baby measles, a virus that gave her a bumpy red rash all over her body. The entire family is suffering from the stress of an eminent forcible eviction from their home, their home that they have owned for 25 years.”

Chris McCoy

Musicians Will Sexton and Amy LaVere

Citing the examples of Austin and Nashville, musician John Paul Keith said “More and more, you’re going to see groups like Aparium coming into Memphis to try to make money off of the culture we create every day.

“If you look at Aparium’s website, it’s got a bunch of stuff about how they like to partner with local creatives. Well, we see what they really do to local creatives, and their actions speak louder than words.

“We need to speak with our actions as artists and be unified. We need to make sure we don’t give them the benefit of our labor. We need to make sure they realize what they have done, and how seriously we take it.

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“And I’ll tell you who else needs to understand that — City Hall and the county commission, the mayor’s office, and the Downtown Memphis Commission (DMC), who gave these people a $100,000 grant.

“Not only did Aparium get a $100,000 grant to do what they did to Christopher and Sarah, a Shelby County judge awarded them $102,000 in damages, adding incredible insult to injury.

“As far as I’m concerned, this is an absolute outrage and a crime. Like Woody Guthrie says, some people rob you with a fountain pen. That’s what happened to those guys — they were robbed.”

Reyes and his mother, Vernice Kuglin, who bought the property from Henry Turley in 1993, have filed an appeal of the March 27th to vacate their home and pay Aparium Hotel Group $102,000 in damages. Kuglin, Reyes, and Fleming declined to be interviewed for this article, citing the appeal and ongoing negotiations.

The ruling hinged on the interpretation of documents related to the Payment In Lieu Of Taxes (PILOT) program, which is administered by the DMC.

Article II, Section 28 of the Tennessee Constitution states that “all property, real, personal, or mixed, shall be subject to taxation,” except in the cases of property “held by the state, by counties, cities, or towns and used exclusively for public or corporation purposes.”

So, in order for governments to give tax breaks to developers looking to rebuild their city centers, the owners of the properties must surrender their titles to the DMC’s finance arm, which then leases it back to them.

Instead of paying taxes, the property owners technically pay rent to the Center City Finance Corporation (CCFC), a tax exempt entity. These PILOT leases contain a clause that gives the owners of the properties, who are technically called beneficial owners, an option to repurchase the properties from the DMC for a nominal amount. Then, the property is re-assessed and taxed at the normal rate.

“During the PILOT term, our CCRFC board is the technical owner of the property,” said Jennifer Oswalt, DMC president. “There is a $1,000 termination fee at the end of the PILOT period. This fee covers costs associated with the legal transfer of the property title. Our attorneys and the PILOT holder, or his/her attorney, monitor and execute this transaction.”

Paul Morris served on the board of directors of the DMC from 2003-2010, and then as president of the organization from 2010-2015.

“Chris Reyes and Sarah Fleming were very helpful to the Downtown Memphis Commission during my tenure there,” Morris said. “They were consultants to us as well as producers of many of the communication and marketing tools that we used to attract Downtown businesses. I got to know them as Downtown neighbors and folks that make the neighborhood better.”

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Morris is a lawyer who has reviewed all of the documents in 1 S. Main case, but he emphasizes that he does not speak on behalf of the DMC.

The PILOT program’s purpose, he says, “is to incentivize development of property and make it more valuable. The idea is, in certain cases, a property owner doing that would drive up their taxes so much that they would lose money on the deal.

“So, they wouldn’t do it in the first place. To incentivize them to improve their property, we don’t let them pay less in taxes, but we freeze their tax assessment at the pre-development level for a number of years.”

Current DMC head Oswalt says, “We have 107 active PILOTs, with an average remaining term of seven years. We cannot know the full value of the properties until they return to the tax rolls but these projects garnered over $1.3 billion in investment so far.”

Developer Henry Turley said the PILOT program has been vital to the redevelopment of downtown Memphis.

“We couldn’t have done virtually any of our products, save for the opportunities to do them with PILOTs,” Turley said. “When I added up 31 PILOT projects that I had done, including Mud Island, South Bluffs, the Cotton Exchange, Shrine Building, Paperworks … the total city and county taxes that were being paid pre-redevelopment was $190,000. The year I measured it, the taxes were over $7 million. It’s the best tool the city and county have to cause the redevelopment of the city.”

Turley first acquired the 1 S. Main property in 1986. In 1993, Reyes, then a freshly minted Memphis College of Art (MCA) graduate, and Kuglin, a pilot for FedEx, approached Turley about buying the building. But they could not secure enough financing, so Turley offered to sell them the second floor for $55,000.

“We created a condominium in the building for the purpose of selling — of conveying is maybe a more proper word,” said Turley. “I remember the lawyer [S. Joshua Kahane] shouted me down for using the term ‘sell’ — for conveying our beneficial interest in unit two of the condominium to Vernice and Chris, because we wanted to see it used as an art space and as a living space.

“When we conveyed it to them, it was totally unfinished, just exterior walls, floor, roof, and windows. We wanted to see it animated and used for the purpose it is being used for. We created a condominium for that purpose and sold our interest to them for their use and benefit.”

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After 30 years of redevelopment, such arrangements are now common Downtown.

“The Cotton Exchange Building, where I’m sitting right now, is a two-unit condominium, exactly like 1. S. Main,” said Turley. “They’re all like that.”

Under the terms of the PILOT lease, the sale — or, conveyance of the beneficial interest — was handled with a sub-lease which gave Reyes and Kuglin the option to buy the property for $1 when the PILOT lease expired, just like any PILOT beneficial owner.

At the time of the 1993 sale (or conveyance), the PILOT lease was set to expire in December 2001.

But in the late 1990s, then-DMC president Ed Armentrout spearheaded a 15-year extension of PILOT leases, with the funds earmarked for the construction of Downtown public amenities.

In 2001, when 1 S. Main’s PILOT lease was set to expire, it was instead extended. Critically, the original sublease with Kuglin and Reyes was not changed.

In 2007, Turley sold — or, conveyed his remaining beneficial interest in — the first floor of the building to the owners of the Madison Hotel, which is next door to 1 S. Main.

“We made it utterly clear to Muhommoud [Hakimian, Madison Hotel owner] that we were conveying to him our interest in the property, less that which we had conveyed to Vernie [Kuglin],” Turley said. “And we made it utterly clear to him in the public recording and discussions that Vernie had a right to buy her part of the condominium for $1 at the end of the PILOT lease.”

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Morris says that, before the current lawsuit, the question of ownership of the 1 S. Main condo was clear.

“There was no doubt in the minds of Chris or his mom [Kuglin] or Sarah or the person who sold it to them, who was Henry Turley,” Morris said. “And there was no doubt in the minds of the current owners of the Madison Hotel who, on May 3, 2016 wrote a letter to the Center City Finance Corporation in which they acknowledged that the property they were acquiring did not include the condo that Chris and Sarah occupy.”

The Aparium Hotel Group purchased — or, were conveyed beneficial interest in — the Madison Hotel and the 1 S. Main building in June 2016. In December, 2016, the PILOT extension expired, triggering the new owner’s option to get the title from the Center City Finance Corporation.1 S. Main LLC, the company Aparium Hotel Group created to administer the building, exercised its option on June 14, 2017.

Morris says that in his experience, “It’s very typical in these PILOT leases for the beneficial owner — who is technically the lessee under the PILOT lease — once the PILOT term has expired, to take many months, if not over a year to exercise their option to gain title.

“It was routine for the title holder — in those cases being the Center City Finance Corporation — to execute quit-claim deeds in favor of the beneficial owner long after the PILOT term ended.”

Oswalt said, “In this specific case, there was a sublease which included a purchase option at the end of the PILOT. It is common for PILOT holders to enter into subleases during the PILOT term.

“Such subleases are legally ‘attached’ to the PILOT lease; however the, Center City Finance Corporation/DMC are not involved in such subleases in any way. Practically and legally, these agreements are between the PILOT holder and the sublease tenants.”

On July 25, 2017, Aparium Group filed a lawsuit in General Sessions court claiming that Kuglin and Reyes were in violation of their sublease agreement and seeking to evict them.

“It struck me as unfortunately being in the wrong court,” says Turley. “It seems to be a question of title. It’s an extraordinary case to be in General Sessions court, which is typically a landlord-tenant court.”

Morris says, “What’s interesting to me about that is, this major corporation with accountants and lawyers, took six months after their lease ended to exercise their option to acquire title.

“After filing for the forcible eviction, without giving Chris any notice on July 25, 2017, on Dec. 19, 2017, they filed an application for an incentive [grant] with the Center City Development Corporation in which they represented that there were no civil proceedings pending by them. That is false. They submitted an application that contained a false statement.”

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The 1 S. Main LLC was awarded a $100,000 grant to improve the facade of the building.

“We understand the legal action was taken after the application was received by the DMC,” says Oswalt. “The grant was approved but has not been paid, as it is a reimbursable grant paid upon proof of completion in accordance with all requirements.

“The DMC’ s exterior improvement grant program is designed to incentivize property owners to improve their building facades. The Madison Hotel owners applied for and met all of the eligibility requirements for this program, which must be administered fairly and without bias by the DMC. The DMC supports positive facade improvements and we welcome investment into Downtown Memphis.”

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In court on March 27, 2018, Aparium Hotel Group’s lawyers argued that the facade improvements covered by the grant applied only to the downstairs of the property, and not to Reyes’ condo.

When the eviction ruling was handed down on March 27th, the news sent shock waves through not only the film and arts community, but also the legal community and Downtown property holders.

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“What a dreadful miscarriage of equitable justice,” says Turley.

“This is the first time I’ve seen a beneficial owner under a lease like this be divested of their title,” says Morris. “I have never seen a situation where someone who held the beneficial ownership of a property Downtown, via PILOT lease or PILOT sublease, which this is, where it is questioned whether they are ultimately the ones to regain title.

“As far as I know, no one has ever questioned that — and I don’t want to name names of other major property owners downtown who don’t own title to their properties, but everyone assumes … not just assumes, knows that they’re the beneficial owners.”

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Part of Aparium Group’s winning argument was that the sublease Kuglin and Reyes had under the PILOT lease expired in 2001, when the PILOT was renewed, and that they failed at that time to exercise their option to purchase, and thus their option had expired.

But Morris says there is no time limit to exercise the option specified in the sublease or in any other agreements.

“Looking just at the terms of the sublease in isolation, one could conclude that Kuglin had an option to gain title for a dollar as of Dec. 30, 2001,” Morris said. “But as a matter of fact, it would have been impossible for her to exercise her option at that time, because the party with whom she had executed the sublease didn’t have title.

“Title was still with the Center City Revenue Finance Corp., and pursuant to the PILOT lease extension, would remain with the Center City Finance Corp. until Dec. 15, 2016 at least.

“As we saw in this case, it stayed with the Center City Finance Corp. until June 14, 2017. What that means is, the first moment that Kuglin or Chris Reyes could have possibly gained title under the sublease, pursuant to their $1 option, was June 14, 2017.

“That was a publicly filed document, but no one gave them notice that 1 S. Main LLC had acquired the title on June 14, 2017. About a month later, they got sued. They never got a real chance to exercise their option.”

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Could this ruling set a precedent with ominous implications for other downtown property owners?

“I don’t know,” Morris said. “I think given the opportunity to present all of the facts in evidence, a judge on appeal will likely find the other way. … The implications beyond private agreements are limited.

“It’s important to note, because some people think that this was a PILOT lease, or that the DMC could have stepped in legally and done something, and that’s just not the case.

I think this is a purely private legal dispute, but it does have public implications because of the fact that the nature of the PILOT program, which is what’s involved with this as a master lease, does make the situation more complicated, and led to the confusion here.”

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Speaking at the protest in front of Memphis City Hall on April 9, Pat Mitchell of the Beale Street Caravan radio show said, “This is a watershed moment. We have a crucial choice in front of us: Do we stand by the side of artists and creatives, or do we stand with those who want to harm artists and creatives?

“This is a simple choice. If creatives are a key part of our strategy to attract businesses and investment to Memphis, we need to value creatives and who they are first. We need to keep them in their homes, keep them contributing to their city.”

Categories
News News Blog

DMC President Hopes for ‘Solution’ on Artist Eviction

Google Maps

Downtown Memphis Commission (DMC) president Jennifer Oswalt said in a Tuesday statement that she hopes to “find a solution that works for all” on the recent eviction of Downtown artists from their home of 25 years.

While Chris Reyes and Sarah Fleming have begun packing up their belongings from their longtime home at 1 S. Main, Tuesday’s statement from Oswalt shows further relief on the situation could be ahead.

Here’s Oswalt’s full statement posted to the DMC Facebook page on Tuesday: DMC

Oswalt

“Some of our online community may be aware of the conflict regarding Downtown residents Chris Reyes and Sarah Fleming.

Christopher Reyes and Sarah Fleming are an integral part of what makes Downtown Memphis what it is: interesting, colorful, engaging. Their creativity and dedication to this city and Downtown Memphis deserve to be heralded.

The Downtown Memphis Commission has a long history of collaborating with Chris and Sarah on multiple projects and supporting their work in Downtown. We believe their contributions have made Downtown better.

The investors who purchased the Madison Hotel were no doubt attracted to the neighborhood in part because of its authentic Memphis vibe, a vibe that Chris and Sarah helped create.

We believe in a Downtown Memphis that includes Chris and Sarah. And we have never stopped looking for ways to help make that happen. We are a community of creatives, artists, musicians, and makers. This creative heritage is what gives Memphis its very soul and authenticity. And we work every day to preserve it.
[pullquote-1] We have expressed our concerns to the stakeholders of 1 S. Main LLC and hope that our appeal and those from other community leaders will help them to want to find a solution that works for all.

The Downtown Memphis Commission was created to develop Downtown for the betterment of the entire region and is tasked with increasing population and property values in our core city.

It isn’t always an easy or straight-forward job, but we work every day to preserve what is good and great in our city and to nurture what can be even better.

—Jennifer Oswalt, Downtown Memphis Commission”

Categories
News News Blog

Court Orders Eviction of Memphis Family

Google Maps

On Tuesday, General Session Court ordered Christopher Reyes, Sarah Fleming, and their two children to vacate the property at 1 S. Main that the family has has occupied for more than 25 years.

In addition, the judge ordered Vernice Kuglin, Reyes’ mother, to pay $102,397 to 1 S. Main LLC, a company created by Aparium Hotel Group, the owners of the Madison Hotel, to administer the property.

The case stems from a 1992 agreement between Memphis real estate developer Henry Turley and Kuglin, then a pilot for FedEx. Turley had owned the property, which, like much of Downtown during that time period, was vacant and in disrepair.

Long before the contemporary downtown renaissance, Kuglin and her son, Reyes, expressed interest in buying the entire building on the corner of Main and Madison and renovating it.

But financing for the full amount was not available, so Turley and Kuglin struck a deal that would create a condominium arrangement for the then-vacant second floor.

“We liked the idea of artist loft living”, Turley said on the witness stand as the trial commenced last Wednesday.

Kuglin and Reyes took out a $55,000 mortgage against the property and paid Turley. That mortgage has since been paid off.

But at the time, the property was under the auspices of a Payment In Lieu Of Taxes (PILOT) program, so the deed to the property was ultimately held by the Center City Finance Corporation, a board affiliate of the Center City Commission, (now called the Downtown Memphis Commission) with Turley listed as lessee and Kuglin’s interests covered under a sub-lease.

Under the agreement struck at that time, Kuglin and Reyes would have the option to buy the property outright for $1 once the PILOT program expired in December 2001.

“We went through all sorts of machinations to inform the city of our intentions,” Turley testified.

Reyes moved in and performed extensive renovations to the property, building an entire second floor and expanding the available square footage from 4,000 to more than 6,400 square feet.

He both lived and ran his businesses out of the condominium, which included computer consulting, filmmaking, digital art and sculpture, karate lessons, and, for eleven years, Live From Memphis, an arts organization that ran a website devoted to city’s “music, art, film, and culture”.

Before the PILOT expired in 2001, the term was extended for 15 years. In 2006, Turley sold the building to 79 Madison LLC, owners of the then-new Madison Hotel.

Reyes and Kuglin claimed that, in their initial meeting with Madison hotel owner Mohammad Hakim, he expressed interest in buying their share in the building. In the meantime, Hakim stopped billing them for the annual property tax assessment and handed maintenance of the 1 S. Main condo over to Reyes.

Meanwhile, Reyes and his long term partner Sarah Fleming had two children and continued to live and operate their businesses out of 1 S. Main. The property is currently assessed at $250,000, but based on the going rates of improved Downtown properties it could be worth upwards of $800,000.

In June 2016, the Madison Hotel was sold to new owners, a Chicago conglomerate called Aparium Hotel Group and G4, a New York equity firm. Kuglin was informed that the 1 S. Main property, along with the Madison Hotel, had been sold to while still under the PILOT agreement.

When the PILOT expired on December 15, the property was transferred from the Memphis Center City Finance Corp. to 1 S. Main LLC., which the new owners had formed to administer the building.

“We thought the PILOT expired at the end of the month, but actually it expired on the 15th,” Fleming said. “No one informed us when the PILOT expired. We got served a (Forcible Entry and Detainer) eviction notice on December 29.”

The company claimed that Kuglin and Reyes were in breach of their lease and sued to evict the family in General Sessions Court Tuesday.

The company also demanded operating costs, monetary defaults, building improvements, and lawyer fees totalling $102,397. Kuglin and Reyes countersued for breach of contract and emotional distress.

Kuglin and Reyes were represented by Newton Anderson, while 1 S. Main LLC was represented by S. Joshua Kahane, of Memphis law firm Glankler Brown. As the trial began on Wednesday, Judge Lonnie Thompson commented on the complexity of the case, saying “We could be litigating this until I’m off the bench.”

But Kahane seemed determined to simplify the proceedings by objecting to virtually every bit of evidence entered by Anderson, as well as every question asked by Anderson of any witness.

Kahane’s behavior drew occasional gasps and giggles from the observers in the courtroom. Kahane was successful at convincing the judge to rule inadmissable many pieces of evidence introduced by the defense and many statements by their witnesses.

Company attorney Michael Kitchen testified that, since 1 S. Main LLC had bought the building, and the only right Kuglin and Reyes had to occupy the building was a sub-lease with the previous owner, they were within their rights to evict Reyes and his family and take full possession of the entire building.

Tensions between the attorneys rose as the trial entered its second day on Tuesday.

When Anderson attempted to call Kitchen back to the stand as a hostile witness, it prompted a lengthy and contentious exchange between the attorneys.

“They are trying to steal this property, your honor,” Anderson said, “The actions of this Chicago company are outrageous.”

Eventually, Judge Thompson allowed Anderson to call Kitchen back to the stand as a hostile witness.

“I want everyone to feel like they’ve gotten a fair shake,” Thompson said.

Anderson used the opportunity to introduce an application for a $100,000 Exterior Improvement Grant 1 S. Main LLC had submitted to the Center City Commission, in which they had claimed that there was no pending litigation that would affect the property, despite the fact that 1 S. Main LLC had already sued Kuglin and Reyes at the time.

Kahane continued to object repeatedly to defense stataments, until Anderson reached a breaking point, citing what he called Kahane’s “harassment objections.” He snapped at Kahane during the cross examination of Christopher Reyes.

The judge called both attorneys into his chamber. When the trial resumed, Kahane was marginally more respectful.

Kahane eventually said that Kuglin had the right to buy the property for $1, but that since she had not exercised that option when the PILOT expired, they were now under the jurisdiction of laws governing the landlord-tenant relationship.

Anderson countered that the documents conferring the option did not specify an expiration date, and thus Kuglin and Reyes could exercise their purchase option at any time after the expiration of the PILOT.

The final witness was Kuglin, who testified over Kahane’s objections that she and Reyes had “made a commitment to Mr. Turley to create something that the city could be proud of.”

When asked how she felt when she was sued, she said “I felt betrayed.”

After both sides questioned Kuglin, the judge directly asked her questions about the events of the last 25 years.

During his closing arguments, Kahane said “I wish to apologize publicly and on the record to Mr. Anderson,” for his behavior in court.

With his ruling, Judge Thompson first dismissed the countersuit and then found for 1 S. Main LLC on every claim, including the $102,397 in damages they sought. Included in those damages are more than $50,000 in funds marked for future improvements to the building.

Fleming said after the trial, “I want to make it clear that not only have they stolen our home, but they have included in the damages money to make it better in the future.”

Kitchen and his legal team left the courtroom pursued by reporters, but declined to answer questions. “We appreciate your interest in this case,” Kahane said.

Reyes left the courtroom in tears, and was advised by his counsel to not answer questions.

“We’re obviously very disappointed in the outcome, and are assessing our options at this point,” said Anderson.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Twilight Sky Terrace’s Dazzling Cocktails

If you’ve never been to Twilight Sky Terrace seventeen stories atop the Madison Hotel in downtown Memphis, the view alone is enough of a reason to go… but their provocative cocktails make the experience even better. The 2015 season theme is the celebration of being “StarStruck.” With that comes a list of new, constellation-themed handcrafted cocktails.

I tried three of the cocktails, starting with the Space Kitty ($11) because I’m a sucker for Prosecco. The drink has Cathead Honeysuckle Vodka, rosemary-grapefruit syrup, fresh lemon juice and Proescco. The syrup is homemade, and I can tell on the first sip. I haven’t tasted anything quite like this before. You immediately get a hint of grapefruit and the drink packs a punch. The cocktail starts off tart. Then you get layers of sweetness, followed by layers of citrus. The supervisor for Twilight Sky Terrace, James McDermott, let me know that most of the juices in their drinks are freshly squeezed after I pointed out that you could see the remnants of the lemon juice in the glass. It’s a nice touch. You don’t even taste the vodka, but I love that because it’s well-masked for your enjoyment. This drink will sneak up on you!

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Up next was the Binary Sunset ($11), Mr. McDermott’s favorite. It consists of Avion tequila, lime juice, pineapple juice, and bitters. The bitters are laid on top of the drink for presentation, but the best part is that you can experience a flavor change. If you mix the bitters into the drink, the taste and color is completely different. Before mixing, you mainly taste the bitters. The drink doesn’t go heavy on the pineapple, which I enjoyed. I liked the cocktail better when it was mixed. Overall, it seemed lighter and was refreshing. The lime and pineapple juice makes the drink airy. These cocktails are very well mixed and I can tell a lot of time and effort went into creating them.

Lastly, I tried Orion’s Belt ($13), which has Hendrick’s Gin, St. Germain, lime juice, Prosecco, and is shaken with cucumber. I feel instantly refreshed, especially in the Memphis summer heat. I love that I can taste a little bit of everything, from the St. Germain down to the Prosecco. It all goes so well together. The cucumber highlights the effervescence of the drink. The best word I can use to describe this cocktail is crisp. Orion’s Belt was by far my favorite of the three. I even ate the cucumber! 

Twilight Sky Terrace also serves food, and executive chef Max Hussey was kind enough to bring out his charcuterie and cheese plate ($13) to accompany the cocktails. There was so much on the plate I didn’t know where to begin and asked the chef where to start. “You don’t have to color inside the lines,” Chef Hussey said, “but my favorite way to tackle it is by putting prosciutto on the ciabatta bread with a bit of the pickled veggies.” What comes with this appetizer is up to the chef. I got ciabatta bread, a mix of vegetables, pickles, olives, Tasso ham, prosciutto, a local cheese called Dancing Fern, and creole mustard.

The bread is crunchy but soft… so good! The pickled vegetables are spicy and the Tasso ham is tender and hot, but not heavy. Don’t get me started on the cheese. It was soft, creamy and had a hint of spiciness to it. The prosciutto was sweet and a bit fatty. If you like spicy, you’ll love this appetizer. Thankfully Twilight Sky Terrace gives you plenty of bottled water to stay hydrated. My favorite combination was putting the cheese and prosciutto together on the ciabatta bread.

Overall, you’ll get an amazing experience at Twilight Sky Terrace. All of the cocktails are going to be available year-long as long as it stays nice out. 

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Harbor Town Dog Show Eats, and more

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Sunday’s Harbor Town Dog Show is open to all dogs. Any pooch, no matter how questionable his pedigree, can compete for the top prize in such categories as “Least Obedient” and “Best Tail Wagging.”

What does this have to do with food? The event is a fund-raiser for the Humane Society of Memphis and Shelby Country, and $20 gets you and your dog entry into its VIP area, where there will be a spread with food from Miss Cordelia’s, Paulette’s, Tug’s, and the Terrace. One Smart Pet Food will be donating treats for the dogs.

The event is from noon to 4 p.m.

Tickets for the VIP room can be purchased here.

The Memphis Farmers Market annual Barnyard Ball at the Central Station Pavilion is Saturday, from 4 to 7 p.m. There will be plenty of food from area restaurants plus beer and wine, but I’ve got my eye on that cake walk.

Get your tickets here.

But wait, there’s more …

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The Spellbound Halloween party, Halloween night, at the Madison Hotel will feature a Candy Corn Cocktail. It’s Kahlua, Licor 43, butterscotch schnapps, half & half, and OJ.

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Nuff said.

Nearby at Felicia Suzanne’s, also on Halloween, is the Zombies, Tacos, & Tunes. There will be $2 tacos, spooky cocktails, plus a costume contest, which is open to dogs.

On Saturday, starting at 1 p.m., Slider Inn will host Paws for a Cause, another event benefiting the Humane Society.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Twilight Sky Terrace

Downtown has a new rooftop hot spot, complete with a fire pit, a full bar, mood lighting, a big-screen TV, and did we mention a fire pit?

Swanky amenities aside, the Twilight Sky Terrace‘s biggest asset is its view of the Mighty Mississippi, which stretches out below the rooftop of downtown’s Madison Hotel. The rooftop lounge faces due west, directly into the setting sun, and this picturesque vista — the Mississippi River at twilight — is the source of the lounge’s name. It is also the primary reason the Madison Hotel decided to make over its rooftop space, which had been used primarily for Thursday-night parties.

“The sunsets are absolutely spectacular,” says Chey Fulgham, director of food and beverages for the hotel. “There’s not a better view of the river in the city that’s publicly accessible.”

Fulgham says the success of the hotel’s Thursday-night “Sunset Atop the Madison” events encouraged management to develop the space into a regular downtown destination.

“It was such a spectacular space but with such a basic setup,” Fulgham says. “The owners wanted to make it more special. Now, it’s a chic, edgy, sexy but casual destination spot.”

The lounge fits about 120 people standing or around 60 people seated at the communal table, nestled in upholstered chairs around the fire pit, or in any of the other seating areas positioned around the terrace. Large, white sails overhead offer a little protection from the elements but are primarily a decorative backdrop when the sun goes down and the lounge’s colorful lights come up. Fulgham says they won’t have live music as before, opting instead for a local DJ with a relaxed vibe. And as it’s an open-air venue, smoking will be allowed.

Twilight Sky Terrace’s primary focus is cocktails and, in particular, a selection of six specialty concoctions with an emphasis on artisan and small-batch spirits, freshly squeezed juices, and house-made bitters, tinctures, and syrups. Fulgham has been growing a small herb garden especially for use at the bar on a section of rooftop above the Twilight Sky Terrace.

Whereas the rooftop bar formerly had only a house wine, limited beer selection, and well liquor, Fulgham has upped the ante with higher-quality spirits, an expanded beer selection on tap (including Ghost River and Yazoo brews), and a larger wine and champagne list.

A small menu of about 12 shareable dishes, what Fulgham calls “delectable bites,” will be available from the lounge’s small kitchen space. (Hungrier patrons can always order larger items from the hotel’s kitchen downstairs.) The 12 items range from charcuterie plates to paninis to house-made chocolates.

“The quality of the ingredients used in our food far exceeds what you would expect at a pre- or post-dinner lounge,” Fulgham says. “They’re very well thought out, very well put together, and perfect for sharing.”

Much of the menu is borrowed from the restaurant in the hotel, eighty3, where the time-tested grilled cheese with Gruyère, leeks, and a Parmesan crust is split into smaller bites for sharing, as is the “Italian Stallion,” a panini made with homemade tomato chutney, provolone, capicola, salami, and prosciutto and grilled with that same Parmesan crust. Chef Adrianna Shea brings her Sicilian background to the table with items like the charcuterie plate’s imported Italian meats, and she will also be serving up her signature trios of handmade Godiva bites, made from Godiva liqueur-infused custard covered in dark chocolate.

On Saturday and Sunday mornings from 6 to 10 a.m., the Twilight Sky Terrace will offer a small breakfast and brunch of scones, muffins, and quiche as well as Bloody Marys, mimosas, and coffee drinks.

Twilight Sky Terrace is set to open on April 26th. For more information, follow @TwilightMemphis on Twitter, visit twilightskyterrace.com, or call 333-1200.

Twilight Sky Terrace, The Madison Hotel, 79 Madison (333-1200)

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Hot & Cold

The Madison Hotel is offering an afternoon tea, from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday during the holiday season. The teas are being held in conjunction with a fund-raiser for Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. Hand-painted ornaments from the hospital’s patients and families are on sale at the Madison with all proceeds benefiting Le Bonheur.

The tea service includes a selection of seven teas: house spiced chai; a mellow Dragon Well green; Egyptian mint; citrus chamomile; a caffeine-free Wild Encounter fruit tea; sapphire Earl Grey; and Kenilworth Ceylon English breakfast. Any of these teas can be paired with scones or petits fours for $10, finger sandwiches (salmon, cucumber, chicken salad, and egg salad) for $12, both sweets and sandwiches for $16, sweets, sandwiches, and Lustau Solera Fino sherry for $20, or Rotari Brut champagne for $26.

Complimentary hot chocolate also is available through Christmas. Performances by high school jazz bands, school choral groups, and other student groups will accompany the tea service. Reservations must be made 24 hours in advance.

For more information or to make your reservation, call 333-1200.

The Madison Hotel, 79 Madison (333-1200)

madisonhotelmemphis.com

Maggie Moo’s, the ice cream shop previously located in Peabody Place Mall, is now open at 125 South Main, next to the Center for Southern Folklore.

“There was no traffic in the mall,” says Thelma Bobo, owner of the store for almost seven years. “Main Street — that’s the place to be now.”

Located near Bluefin and the Majestic Grille, Maggie Moo’s is yet another eatery to join downtown’s restaurant row. The new shop is only 860 square feet, but the lobby inside the 125 South Main building leaves space for seating, and the pedestrian-friendly Main Street mall is perfect for a cone to go. Stop in and check out the shop’s newest offering: an ice cream “pizza” with cake crust, ice cream, icing, chocolate shavings, and candy toppings.

Maggie Moo’s is open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and noon to 10 p.m. Sunday.

Maggie Moo’s, 125 S. Main, Suite 101 (522-1912)

YoLo Frozen Yogurt has signed the lease on its new Midtown location. Starting next March, yogurt fans can flock to the corner of Cooper and Madison.

“We’ve always had our sights set on Midtown,” says part-owner Taylor Berger, a Midtown native and graduate of Rhodes College. “We love the area and all the other food there.”

Berger chose the intersection of Madison and Cooper for the parking availability, the proximity to other restaurants, and the future redevelopment of Overton Square. “This was the best place to be accessible to Cooper-Young and Vollintine-Evergreen,” he says. “And we hope to see Overton Square get redeveloped. I hope our being there will be part of the momentum to get that done.”

Seating will be available on a covered patio with the same wrought-iron motif that circles Overton Square to create continuity. Even more exciting is the business collaboration between YoLo and the local Ladybugg Bakery. Heather Bugg and her sister and mother will run a front-of-house retail bakery out of the Midtown YoLo. Ovens and prep areas will be visible to customers. “It will add a lot of energy,” Berger says, “and make it a fun place, not to mention a place where you can get any sugary creation you can imagine.”

The store will serve baked goods and coffee in the morning and will stay open until 10 p.m. on weekdays and 11 p.m. on the weekends. Expect the same great flavors and local toppings served at YoLo’s other two locations.

YoLo Frozen Yogurt, 559 Erin Drive (683-0190)

102 E. Mulberry (861-0037)

yolofroyo.com

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The Vault Club

The Vault Club in 1960

  • The Vault Club in 1960

Memphians with a tendency towards claustrophobia — in other words, Memphians like me — were probably reluctant to join a private club that opened downtown in April 1960. The Vault Club was a members-only dining club inside a massive bank vault tucked away in the basement of the 81 Madison Building.

“A door estimated to cost $75,000 — probably one of the most expensive doors in the world — opens onto a room in one of the most unusual clubs ever formed in Memphis,” said the Memphis Press-Scimitar, without bothering to mention that a similar door guarded the main vaults at the Lauderdale Mansion. “Nobody seems to know quite how long the vault has been there. It’s been in the building for decades. Its brass still shines, but it looks venerable and expensive.”

Oh, please. There was really no mystery to it. The vault was presumably installed when the building was constructed in 1907, since 81 Madison was originally home to the Tennessee Trust Company and later Union Planters Bank. Developer Philip Belz bought the 15-story property in 1958, one of the first steel-frame skyscrapers in the city, and converted it into offices.

The Vault Club, he told reporters, “would offer Memphis businessmen the same sort of fine surroundings in which to dine, relax, and talk business which they might find in New York.” Assuming they liked to dine, relax, and talk business while locked away in a big bank vault, that is. Luncheon would be offered during the week, and there would be piano music on weekends, “but it is not envisioned as a place where there will be dancing and partying.”

No, obviously not. Mainly because staying more than 10 minutes inside this thing gave people the heebie-jeebies. Or maybe that was just me?