Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Chinatown Fair

Recently, rumors have come out about the closure of the Chinatown Fair Arcade on Mott Street. Bowery Boogie shares a video of the manager who says he can't make money here and "runs the arcade for the community." Boogie reports: "store manager Henry Cen lost his lease on the Mott Street space, and will be moving out March 23."


New York Daily Photo

It's not the first time closure has been threatened here. In 2007, a For Rent sign showed up on the arcade, but the Fair survived. In 2008, a reader named Ben told us the For Rent sign was back: "Now you can't even see the old ghost lettering for the Tic-Tac-Toe chicken. Worst of all, it might close!" But it didn't.

This past weekend, an employee of the arcade responded to the current rumors, saying, "the truth is, that cf maybe relocating to williamsburg, brooklyn if disputes with the landlord r not settled. CF IS NOT CLOSING."


photo: Ben

The Chinatown Fair has been around since at least the 1950s, and possibly as early as 1944, when it was run by Frank Gee, who helped establish the Chinese American Legion post, holding tea parties for the organization in his arcade after World War II.

Author Bruce Hall recalls in his Chinatown memoir Tea That Burns when the arcade was owned by Frank Gee and was "noted for its pinball machines, shooting gallery with real bullets, and funny little 'museum' with its golden globe encircled with snarling dragons."


1958

But the Chinatown Fair's greatest claim to fame was its Tic-Tac-Toe Chickens. They were written about, more than once, by Calvin Trillin. In a 1999 New Yorker piece, he dug deep into the story of the birthplace of the tic-tac-toe chickens: They were trained in Hot Springs, Arkansas, by former students of famed behaviorist B.F. Skinner.

The same people, Trillin informs us, had created "such acts as a Vietnamese pig that drives a Cadillac and a parrot that rollerskates, a chicken that dances while a rabbit plays the piano and a duck plays guitar." Similar chickens trained here have also "told fortunes and sold postcards and played baseball."

According to the Arkansas folks, the first tic-tac-toe chicken was installed on Mott Street around 1974. Their chickens were unbeatable. They even beat B.F. Skinner.


from the New Yorker

One long-time Chinatown Fair chicken, named Willy, died in 1993 and received a moving obituary in the New York Times, which stated: "The bird was still smart enough to take our 50 cents. It was not like meat from Frank Perdue. It was our playmate, and since we have always been a particularly self-centered species, that elevated it."


1994, Michael Yamashita/Corbis

One of Willy's successors, called Lily, was rescued in 1998 by a concerned chicken lover and set free in Massachusetts to frolic with other farm animals. She may well have been the last tic-tac-toe chicken at the arcade.

(If you run a casino and would like to sponsor your own Tic-Tac-Toe Chicken Challenge, write to a guy named Bunky in Arkansas. He still trains his chickens using the Skinner method. If you just want to play a chicken, head to Foxwoods, where if you beat the chicken you win $10,000--check out the movie.)


photo: Elaine Norman

Sometime in the 2000s, the word CHICKENS disappeared from the arcade's sign. Chickens was plural because, in addition to the tic-tac-toe chicken, there was also a dancing chicken, whose life was maybe not as intellectually stimulating as the tic-tac-toe chicken's.


Adam Woolfitt/Corbis

What has remained at the Chinatown Fair, without the chickens, are lots of arcade games and lots of dedicated gamers. Scouting NY recently went inside to take pictures, and last year The Times did a profile on the place.

They wrote: "Chinatown Fair has become a center for all the outcasts in the city to bond over their shared love for a good 20-punch combo and 'old school' games that more popular arcades don’t stock anymore." But its glory has been fading for awhile. Said one gamer to the Times, the arcade is the "Last of a dying breed."

Its move to Brooklyn will be another blow for any such outcasts left in Manhattan.

11 comments:

  1. Damn. What a shame. I just posted a little tour through Chinatown on my blog, complete with Chinatown Fair footage: http://clapforbacon.blogspot.com/

    If the Fair closes in March, this might unfortunately be a final look at the place.

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  2. your video capture the cacophony of the place. thanks for posting.

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  3. it's too bad pinball isn't a priority at the Fair. but Ms. Pac Man and Marvel v. Capcom always please.

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  4. Wow, this seems like a cool place that young kids today might enjoy... but they've never heard of it. Had this place kept up with the times, it probably wouldn't be on the edge of oblivion. Would it look great with a retro' redo that dusted off the old stuff and fixed up the furniture... how about some new paint? It wouldn't take much. Can we honestly let things go to shit and then complain that no one wants to save them? Reuse, repurpose, relive.

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  5. I'm sorry to say I've never been to the arcade and now must go before it closes. I really wish I'd seen these amazing chickens. To get an obit in the Times...wow!

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  6. I just heard about this from a friend of mine. Very sad times we are living in.

    If they move away from their current location it might as well stay closed in my opinion.

    In other news I also recently just heard about the closing of the NBA store due to rent increases.

    Mr Jeremiah. Will you be heading over 5th Avenue soon to take a few pictures?

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  7. So glad I got in there to photograph before it heads off to Brooklyn!
    #1: http://www.flickr.com/photos/therealfauxtographer/5469465387/lightbox/

    #2: http://www.flickr.com/photos/therealfauxtographer/5469959842/lightbox/

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  8. Ah, the NBA store holds a special place in my heart....as the place where I ran into Bill Clinton! :)

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  9. the NBA store? am i missing something?

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  10. I beat the chicken once, but it gave up playing when it was cornered and time ran out. They trained those chickens to be cheaters.

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  11. when I walked by some guy inside walked up to the door and taped a sign to the door "we're closed pending new location to be announced"
    http://www.nychinatown.org/storefronts/mott/8mott.html

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