Tag Archives: Brooks Brothers

Roundup: Brooks Brothers, Soho Pizza, So Hot …

We’re just 2 days away from the 53rd annual Fine Arts Festival.

Across North America, over 150 artists will head to Westport. (Six already live here — they’re hometown favorites.)

Selected from more than 320 applications, and representing 12 categories, they come from 23 states and Canada.

All 2025 award winners return (click here for a full list). Meanwhile, a record 52 artists make their Fine Arts Festival debut.

New this year: Staples High School art students will paint a BMW in the family area (Sigrid Schultz parking lot). There are lots of other kids’ activities there too.

Plus, of course, music and food.

Two new judges join the panel: art enthusiasts Lonnie Quinn (CBS weatherman) and Louise Crowley.

The dates are Saturday and Sunday (May 23-24, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.). Click here for a full list of artists, and a map. The Fine Arts Festival is sponsored by the Westport Downtown Association.

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Also downtown, coming soon: an interesting reshuffling of space.

After more than 25 years in Westport, Brooks Brothers will vacate its space in what used to be called Brooks Corner, at the corner of Main and Elm Streets.

But they’re not closing. In fact, they’re moving a few yards away, to bigger digs.

Brooks Brothers’ new location is 44 Main Street. For decades, it was Klein’s department store. For a couple of decades after that, it was Banana Republic. For a few minutes most recently, it was Oka furniture.

(Before Klein’s expanded north from its smaller beginning, the space belonged to the Townly restaurant. During Banana Republic’s renovation, they discovered a long-lost painting, depicting life — in Westport? — during that era. They preserved it. Hopefully, Brooks Brothers will too.)

The move is planned for late October or early November — in time for the holidays.

The new space will be 1,000 square feet larger. It will include new women’s casual and everyday wear, in addition to the current inventory.

DOWNTOWN TRIVIA: Brooks Corner (now called much more generically “Main & Elm”) was not named for Brooks Brothers.

It’s a tribute to B.V. Brooks and his family. The real estate developer created the small shopping plaza in the 1960s — years before Brooks Brothers arrived in Westport.

Of course, the clothing company has a much longer history than that. They were founded in New York City in 1818 — 17 years before Westport was incorporated.

That makes them the oldest apparel brand in continuous operation in the United States.

Brooks Brothers’ new home. 

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Speaking of companies that have been around a long time: Texaco — originally the Texas Fuel Company — was founded in 1902.

We’re not sure when it came to Westport. But it was a loooong time ago.

We know, because a faded sign on Riverside Avenue has long marked the long-gone location of King’s Texaco.

(Photo/Mary Maynard)

Sure, it was old and faded. But it was a reminder of Westport’s heritage.

(It may even have been a remnant of when Riverside Avenue was named King Street. Yeah, that goes back a ways.)

No longer. Driving toward the Post Road yesterday, Jamie Walsh spotted this:

(Photo/Jamie Walsh)

“I almost crashed!” he reports.

“Just what Westport needs — another f—ing pizza place … touting New York City- style pizza in ‘the Pizza Capital of the World.’

“No SOHO Pizza for me … don’t NYC our Westport!”

At least there’s always Sunny Daes, next door.

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There will be no Democratic primary in the 26th State Senate district race.

Weston 1st selectwoman Sam Nestor is assured of a clear path to the November ballot. State Representative Lucy Dathan of New Canaan had explored a bid after Nestor outpolled her nearly 2 to 1 at the nominating convention, but decided against it.

Nestor’s Republican opponent for the seat being vacated by Ceci Mahar will be Westporter Alma Sarelli.

State Senate candidate Sam Nestor.

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Last month, Dr. Matthias Becker led a powerful Westport Library conversation about decoding bias and hate.

Next Thursday (May 28, 6 p.m.), the noted linguist returns for a follow-up discussion.

The evening includes screenings of video shorts about the subject, created by local teens — and an announcement of the winners of the “Decode Hate Video Challenge Awards.”

Parents, teens, and all community members are invited to learn — and to celebrate the next generation, using creativity to tackle an enormous social problem.

Dr. Matthias Becker

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My Toyota Camry is not an official weather station.

Still, it was quite something to see this reading yesterday, at 3 p.m.:

(Photo/Dan Woog)

But hey … this is New England. Conditions change rapidly.

Today is forecast to be about 40 degrees cooler — 60 degrees.

With rain showers.

It was nice while it lasted.

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The Brubecks are one of the jazz world’s leading family.

They’re also local. Their roots in Wilton date back decades.

So it was fitting on Tuesday night for for Dave Brubeck’s son Chris to bring his trio, Triple Play, to MoCA\CT, for an intimate, high-octane performance. A full house enjoyed the warm, playful and intimate show.

Arts supporters and blues lovers joined together in the gallery space where the  current exhibition, “Art, Jazz + the Blues,” has drawn raves.

It closes June 7. Click here for more information.

Chris Brubeck (left) and his trio, in the MoCA\CT gallery. Two of Westport artist Eric von Schmidt’s majestic paintings, telling the stories of America’s jazz, blues and folk music history, hang on the wall. All 7 of his works are part of the show. (Photo/Roger Young)

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Lila Doromal is going to the Venice Biennale.

The Pierrepont School junior will perform there in November, with Pierrepont dance faculty members Jamal Jackson and Emily Pacilio.

They’ll be in “Timaeus and The Teacher,” an opera written by former Pierrepont teacher Tammy Nguyen.

It will cost $100,000 to produce the piece. Tax-deductible donations can be made through the Center for the Arts at Wesleyan University. Designate a gift to the “Venice Biennale Project Fund,” or email Joshua Lubin-Levy, director and chief curator: jlubinlevy@wesleyan.edu.

Questions? Email Lisa Manimala: lisamanimala@gmail.com.

“Timaeus and the Teacher”

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We’re not sure where exactly this guy was headed to Tuesday, at Burying Hill Beach.

But it was sure easy for Gary Shure to snap him, for our “Westport … Naturally” series.

Let’s just say he was not racing to get there.

(Photo/Gary Shure)

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And finally … in honor of yesterday’s wonderful (if fleeting) weather:

(“06880” delivers hot fun — and news, features, photos, and much more — all summer long. Plus spring, fall and winter too. We rely on reader support to do it all. Please click here to help. Thank you!)

The Heart And Soul Of Main Street: 1998 Edition

Everyone’s Westport is different.

Our image of the town — what it is, and should be — is formed by our first experiences here.

Mine dates back to the 1960s, when I was in elementary and junior high school.

Those who arrived later — by birth, as kids or teenagers, or adults — have a different idea of “Westport.”

A woman recently lamented how much has changed. She misses the mom-and-pop shops on Main Street, and the small-town vibe.

She moved here in 2010.

That was a dozen years after the New York Times published a story headlined “Is Heart and Soul Gone From Main Street?”

In 1998, the New York Times had a stand-alone Connecticut section. This Page 1 photo shows Main Street, with Oscar’s Deli (center) and then-closed Remarkable Book Shop (right). The inset is Klein’s.

Nearly 3 decades ago — on December 27, 1998 — Leslie Chess Feller explored the changing nature of our town. She began:

Little shops, once the backbone of Main Street in Westport, have almost disappeared. One of the last is Klein’s, founded by a Hungarian-born entrepreneur named Henry Klein who took pride in greeting every customer by name, which has for 61 years sold books, stationery and office supplies. Mr. Klein worked until the day before his death in 1990, at the age of 90.

But in January the store will be subletting ground-floor retail space to the Banana Republic chain, one of many that have displaced family-owned Mom-and-Pop stores by being willing to pay higher rents.

Spoiler alert: Banana Republic is gone now too. So is Oka, the furniture store that took its place. The upper part of Klein’s — where you could buy office supplies and typewriters (kids: ask your parents what those were) — has been repurposed as Sushi Jin.

Banana Republic replaced Klein’s.

Robert Hertzel — vice president of Klein’s, and president of what was then called the Downtown Merchants Association — said, ‘We have turned into a regional shopping center. But that’s not a bad thing.”

Klein’s, in the 1962 Staples High School yearbook.

The piece continues:

Another holdover is Jack Swezey’s jewelry store, currently run by his son David. ”We opened here in 1956 when everybody knew everybody and each store was one of a kind,” said Mr. Swezey. ”Business is good, but sometimes I feel like a loner,” he added, looking out his shop’s window, now facing Williams-Sonoma, Brooks Brothers and Crabtree & Evelyn. ‘

‘Today’s Main Street has become an outdoor mall,” he said. ”I’m one of the few individual merchants left and that’s because we own the building.”

Swezey — where an enormous model train set entertained passersby every Christmas — is today the site of Brochu Walker.

Swezey Jewelers

Williams-Sonoma is still here, but in a location (Bedford Square) that did not exist in 1998. Brooks Brothers is still here — though next year, Sephora takes over. Crabtree & Evelyn sold its last loofah in 2009.

Plumed Serpent owner Fred Tow talked about his move to Playhouse Square, after 25 years on Main Street. (The bridal gown boutique has since moved again, across the Post Road.)

”When I opened in 1971, Ann Taylor was the only corporate store,” Mr. Tow said, ”and my monthly rent was $325.” By 1996, the chain stores had moved in and his rent jumped to $5,700 a month. Mr. Tow said that customers now have to go to Kent and New Preston for the look of old-fashioned Connecticut.

”In terms of both merchandise and decor,” he said, ”unless they see the sign, shoppers can’t tell whether they’re in J. Crew or the Gap. It all seems the same. There’s this corporate coldness, a lack of personal connection. People don’t realize what’s been lost.”

The 3-story Gap replaced a failed vertical mall — which was built on the site of a furniture store that burned down in the mid-1970s.

The piece continued with reminiscences from Howard Munce. The artist — then 83 years old, who first came to town in 1935 (and died 10 years ago, at 100), remembered Greenberg’s (“where you could buy anything from buttons and thread to underwear and Girl Scout uniforms,”) Charles Market, and the Ben Franklin 5-and-10 (kids: ask your grandparents).

In Howard Munce’s day, Welch’s was one of 3 hardware stores on Main Street. Traffic was 2-way all the way to the Post Road, too.

Feller continue:

In the last three decades, however, Main Street has morphed into a sort of Rodeo Drive East. Dubbed the ”Golden Half Mile” by the newspaper columnist John Capsis, who died in 1997, Main Street’s chain stores and boutiques are staffed by people who commute from other towns. As they talk on cell phones, the drivers of S.U.V.’s, BMW’s, Jeeps and Jaguars fight for parking spots. Tourists clutch shopping bags sporting logos while undercover police officers pursue what they say are organized gangs of shoplifters.

The story continues, bopping down Main Street’s favorite side road, Memory Lane.

Feller writes about the Remarkable Book Shop, which closed in 1994. Remarkably, after Talbots it was replaced by Westport Local Market, now Eleish Van Breems — both local, one of which even had the word in its name.

The Remarkable Book Shop. Too bad this does not show its vibrant pink color.

Leann Enos, an actress and theatrical director who moved to Main Street when she was a child, and whose father owned Walker’s Frame Shop, said, ”To me, it feels as if Main Street has lost its heart and soul. Now everything is about spending money.”

Anne Rowlands — a Westport native, and vice president of the Westport Chamber of Commerce — said she could no longer afford to shop on Main Street.

”It’s gotten so expensive and, to be honest, it feels kind of faceless to me,” she explained — not exactly a Chamber of Commerce-type comment. “It’s rare to find someone you know.”

Downtown shopper Linda Stern said, ”At first, I missed the mom-and-pop stores. But now it’s very exciting; there’s an energy to the street.”

Meanwhile, Predrag Vicvara, a Fairfield resident who had lived in Croatia, said, ”You find different nationalities here. It seems a little bit European to me. I like it. It’s nicer than the mall.”

Main Street: a bit of Europe?

Sharon Rosen — who moved to Westport 5 years earlier, and “considers Main Street an asset despite the chain stores” — had the last word.

”It’s convenient,” she said. ”I understand it was very quaint and lovely here once.”

That was the view 28 years ago — near the end of the 20th century.

Folks rued the demise of mom-and-pop stores then. They still do, 30 years later — even if they arrived after 1998, and believe there were plenty of quaint mom-and-pops when they came.

Downtown Westport was evolving 3 decades ago. It was when my parents moved here in 1956. It continues to evolve today.

What’s “your” Westport? When did you come to town? What’s changed? What hasn’t?

And how will your comment look when we look back on it 28 years from now, in 2054?

(“06880” often explores the changing face of Westport. If you enjoy stories like this — or anything else on our hyper-local blog — please click here to support our work. Thanks! PS: See you on Main Street!)

Roundup: Sephora & Brooks Brothers, Raechel & Studio 111, ALS & Cancer Walks …

Early voting starts today, at Town Hall. Click here for days and times.

NOTE: Registration for new voters is now only in person, at Town Hall.

Democracy in action. (Photo/Jo Shields)

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Although Sephora will replace Brooks Brothers at the “Elm & Main” shopping plaza downtown, the men’s clothiers is not leaving Westport.

The move will not come until late 2027 or early 2028, when Brooks Brothers’ lease expires. That gives them plenty of time to find a new location.

And, they assure customers, it will be somewhere in Westport.

FUN FACT: “Elm & Main” is the new (not very popular) name for what used to be called Brooks Corner, on Main Street at (duh) Elm.

But the name did not come from the store. It was developed — decades earlier — by the Brooks family. The commercial real estate company also owned the Westport News, whose offices took up much of the building.

(Photo/Sutton Bulkeley for Inklings)

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Over the last 2 weekends — one rainy, one gorgeous — Representative Town Meeting (RTM) members volunteered for annual tulip planting.

This year, member Andrew Colabella donated 1,500 bulbs, to jump start fundraising for the Sons of the American Legion.

The multi-colored tulips come directly from the Netherlands.

This year they were planted along the entrance to Compo Beach, and at Grace Salmon Park (suggested by RTMer Nancy Kail).

That makes over 5,000 total tulip bulbs, thanks to the RTM.

Colabella thanks Colorblends in Bridgeport for their amazing inventory, Westport’s Parks & Recreation Department maintanance division for grass seed, SCA-Crowley for topsoil, and Sons of the American Legion treasurer Mark Shornick for handling funds.

The SAL is still accepting donations. Cash or checks can be dropped off or mailed to: VFW Post 399, 465 Riverside Avenue, Westport, CT 06880.


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After graduating from Staples High School in 2010, Raechel Alaimo worked at the Black Duck for 10 years.

She worked at a boutique salon too in Stamford, to put herself through hairdressing school.

She worked at a variety of salons, received advanced training, an spent the past couple of years at Effi’s Salon in Saugatuck.

Now she’s opened her own salon, Studio 111, as part of the Sola Salons suite at 495 Post Road East (between Autostrada and the former Humane Society).

She offers hair coloring, cutting, styling and keratin treatments. She will soon add Bellami extensions

Raechel and her clients appreciate that Sola Salons includes more than just hairstyling. The building includes professionals specializing in Botox, waxing, skin care, makeup, barbering, event styling and more.

“It’s a one-stop shop for a slew of services in a private environment, eliminating the chaos that can come with the standard salon atmosphere,” Raechel says.

Click here for her website. Click here for her booking link. Her Instagram is @raechelynn.

Raechel Alaimo, at Studio 111.

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The weather was great for walking this weekend.

Hundreds of Westporters (and others) turned out Saturday for the Walk ALS event, at Sherwood Island.

Fifty teams, with over 800 walkers, took to the state park paths. The total raised was over $180,000.

ALS Walk at Sherwood Island.

Yesterday, it was the Making Strides against breast cancer walk.

It was another success — thanks to the passion of participants (and the weather!).

(Photo/Karen Como)

On hand: a large and enthusiastic Westport Woman’s Club contingent:

(Photo/Audrey Rabinowitz)

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The New York Giants season is in full swing. Cam Skattebo is having a great season — especially last week.

But on May 24, the running back will have time to head to Westport.

He headlines a special youth football camp, sponsored by the Staples High School football program.

Boys and girls ages 6 to 16 can register for the 4-hour event. Registration details will be available soon.

Cam Skattebo

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Former Staples High administrative assistant Lynette “Lyn” Birkmaier died Friday. She was 95, and lived in Trumbull.

The Illinois native spent 40 years in the school’s front office, including time as the principal’s assistant. She is survived by her son Gary (Lisa Laplante), grandson Karl Birkmaier, sister, Joyce and brother Paul.

Funeral services will be private. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in her name to Faith Food Pantry in Newtown. Click here to send online condolences.

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Let’s start the “Westport … Naturally” week with this fall classic, from Terra Nova Circle.

The way the weather changes this time of year, Westport may look much different by the weekend.

(Photo/John Maloney)

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And finally … on this date in 1977, a plane carrying Lynyrd Skynyrd crashed in Mississippi. Six people, including 3 band members, were killed.

(You don’t have to gimme 3 steps. But could you give “06880” a tax-deductible contribution, for what we give you: news, events, photos, history — and music — 24/7/365? Please click here. Thank you!)