HISTORY COMPANY
Rare “Russian Tea Room” 1960s-Era Ashtray
Rare “Russian Tea Room” 1960s-Era Ashtray
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- Vintage ashtray from New York's legendary restaurant
- Endangered object from the golden age of the cigarette
- Crafted in clear glass; branded with RTR logo
- Measures 3 3/4-inches in diameter
Own this souvenir of New York’s legendary Russian Tea Room, a bit of imperial nostalgia.
Originally a gathering place for Russian artists, dancers, and intellectuals, by the 1960s, The Russian Tea Room had shed its modest émigré origins and stepped fully into the spotlight, becoming one of New York’s most glittering stages. Under the watchful eye of Faith Stewart-Gordon, the dining room transformed into a kind of theatrical salon, where the city’s cultural elite gathered beneath gilded ceilings and among glowing samovars. Just steps from Carnegie Hall, it became the unofficial green room for musicians, dancers, and conductors, who drifted in after performances to hold court over caviar and cocktails. The room pulsed with conversation, ambition, and the quiet electricity of reputation in motion.
By the 1970s and 1980s, it was less a restaurant than a ritual. Deals were struck in its red leather banquettes, rivalries softened over vodka, and legends materialized at neighboring tables – Rudolf Nureyev, Salvador Dalí, Leonard Bernstein – each adding to the mythology. Lunch could stretch into late afternoon; dinner into something approaching theater. The Tea Room offered not merely a meal but a performance of New York itself: extravagant, knowing, slightly decadent. To be seen there was to belong, if only for an evening, to a world where art, society, and spectacle met under one shimmering roof.
