After my 
post on Little Rickie and its devolution into a Starbucks, I talked via Facebook with the shop's founder, Phillip Retzky. He gives us the whole story of the shop, the time, the place, and everything...
 Phillip & Fanny at the first shop
How did Little Rickie get started?
Phillip & Fanny at the first shop
How did Little Rickie get started?
I got a call from my then boyfriend, Steven Rubin, who owned  the  eponymous Paper White flower shop on 2nd Ave between 4th and 5th, next  door to Bink and Bink, the great food store,  that a store on 1st and  1st was available, and was I interested? I said yes to the vacant store  front (72 e. 1st Street), spent  some months making drawings of what  Little Rickie would  look like, inside and out, and began  conceptualizing the whole thing,  like an art project, installation, Joseph Cornell box. When I  opened the store, it was totally about what I liked and had  been buying all my life. I've collected flotsam  and jetsam since the 4th  grade.
I moved the shop to 1st and 3rd in 1987, with my  then life partner and soul mate, Mitchell Cantor.  We started dating when I  was renovating the 1st Avenue space that had been Tensor's Army  Navy for 50 years prior. I  used to buy my jeans there when I lived on  1st Avenue, way before  Little Rickie.
 Mitchell & Phillip at the first shop
Did you always have an artistic sensibility?
Mitchell & Phillip at the first shop
Did you always have an artistic sensibility?
I had  been to art school (San Francisco Art Institute, in photography,  hence  the B/W photobooth), and grew up hanging around the May Company   department store  (on Fairfax and Wilshire) in Los Angeles as a child   and early teen in the 1960s. My mom worked there as a salesgirl, making   50 bucks a week. We were poor, but boy did I get a great early retail   experience.
When other kids were doing sports, I was window shopping and making my   rounds at all the cool shops. I studied art on the streets and in   museums, galleries and stores. Aside from   studying photography at SFAI, I studied performance art with people like   Chris Burden, and had classes and was friends with people like Karen   Finley. I studied drawing with David Hockney who became a dear friend.
At Little Rickie, I hired the  genius local artist, Ilona Granet to paint the store sign in the window on 1st Street, later hiring the 
genius  Julie  Wilson to paint the reverse window paintings in all the windows  on 1st  and 3rd.
 photo: Julie Wilson
What was it like to run the shop in the 1980s and 90s?
photo: Julie Wilson
What was it like to run the shop in the 1980s and 90s?
The neighborhood was  full of characters. For example, it was  not that I chose not to capitalize on Paul Reubens' tragedy in  Florida by not raising prices on the items from his show.  It was that Paul shopped at Little Rickie  when 
Pee Wee's Playhouse was being shot in New York. Paul bought  some of the best  vintage items I had for sale, like a pair of 1950s  shoes with springs  attached to the soles, so one could walk like a pogo  stick. I probably  priced them at 25 bucks, which was the underlying  philosophy of the  store, make it accessible, nothing elitist. 10 cents  bought you a cool novelty. 25 bucks, a museum quality collectible toy.
People like Taylor Mead became a  good friend, and  always stopped by the store to hang in the photobooth  for the  afternoon. At night we were all at The Palladium, Area, and  local bars,  like The Bar. There was a complete sense of local. We lived  in,  worked in, hung out in the neighborhood.
People on 1st street left  their kids in the store with me for a few  hours, while they ran errands.  I loaned money to everyone (Nan Goldin  still owes me 50 bucks!). I  hired the local kids as soon as they were  old enough as staff members.  Sometimes their parents worked in the  store along with them. People spent locally, and the  money went right  back into the community. This is the whole concept of  buying local.  Starbucks is not local. The majority of the money goes back to  Seattle, or  wherever the fuck they are headquartered, and into the  pockets of  shareholders. A mom and pop store (in this case sans Mom), as I  see it,  weaves a thick carpet in a community.
 Taylor Mead & Phillip
Tell us about that wonderful photobooth.
Taylor Mead & Phillip
Tell us about that wonderful photobooth.
The photobooth was an integral part of the  store from day one. No other business had a B/W booth in New York at the time,  save for a few Woolworth's, PlayLand in Times Square, and the arcade in Chinatown. I had been using photobooths since 1959, at the Thrifty Drug  store across from the aforementioned  May Company in LA.
When people were not in the booth, my dog Fanny slept on the  floor in her bed. Fanny became a Little Rickie fixture of sorts.
I immediately put customer photobooth strips in the  window on 1st street, in a grid, in homage to Walker Evans, the great  photographer. The  pictures in the window said: Everyone has a place here, no  one is excluded. The images of gay and multiracial couples dancing,  painted on our front windows, said we permanently support inclusiveness.  We sold the Hells Angels calendar every year, and so the 3rd Street  chapter were "our buds." We celebrated the births of so many neighbors,  and the deaths from AIDS of what seemed like almost everyone, including  Mitchell, my dearest of partners.
Mitchell was beloved during his 5  years at Little Rickie. From the moment we became a couple, he was an  integral part of everything Phillip, and everything Little Rickie. Even when he was down to 80 pounds and  had to take naps often behind the photobooth, people remember Mitchell  as the shining light that he was.
AIDS had a big impact on Little  Rickie, and of course on me. Many of the photobooth strips in the window were of people we lost. So it held great importance to me, all of it,  and when I decided I'd had enough and needed to move on to the next  phase of my life, in 1999, it was not without tremendous deliberation  (it took years to make that decision). My heart was broken,  shattered, by losing Mitch in 1991, and I never quite healed afterwards.
 Mitchell & with Phillip
How did the Starbucks lawsuit over those "Fuck Off" stickers contribute to the store's closing?
Mitchell & with Phillip
How did the Starbucks lawsuit over those "Fuck Off" stickers contribute to the store's closing?
It had nothing to do with why I closed the store, just odd timing. I did not make the stickers, I was selling them for a local guy  who did make them, and I thought they perfectly stated what I thought of  the fast moving corporatocracy of our country.
I used to buy flip  flops at a Vietnamese store on the corner of W.Broadway and Chambers  street for years, for $1.19 a pair. Then one day they were gone, maybe  1995, and a Starbucks moved in. No more flip flops--shitty coffee and  the rents of Tribeca went through the roof. No more cool little shops.  End of story. I was saying Fuck You to what Starbucks symbolized, and  the satire of it is protected in the 1st amendment.
That did not stop  Starbucks from paying their lawyers over $500,000 to sue me. First they sent a SWAT team of 6 suited, earphoned FBI-looking guys to confiscate the  merchandise and attempt to scare the jeans off me.
What did you do after the store closed?
Finally, at age 47, I knew it was the store or me, and I chose myself in   the end. I bought an old farmhouse in Provincetown, and moved there   full time to write, sit, and ride a bike. I went back and got my masters and am now in private practice as a  psychotherapist in New Mexico.
My house is for sale  in Santa Fe, and when it sells, I might come back to New York and open  another  store. However, with rents as high as they are now, even in  Brooklyn, that dream might be prohibitive. Commercial rents are killing  creativity and opportunities, not only for  old guys like me, who may want a second act, but for the new  generations to follow. People may  think, oh good, Starbucks, easy, good enough, or even like the crap, and  then support them. That support will only create more of the same  elsewhere, ad nauseum.  It's like the 99% supporting the Republicans.  Know where you put your money, and what that means, not only for  yourself, but for your community.
 Fred Schneider & Joey Arias at the shop
The East Village, like much of the city, is turning into Anywhere, USA.
Fred Schneider & Joey Arias at the shop
The East Village, like much of the city, is turning into Anywhere, USA.
The encroachment  of NYU on the EV, the story of RENT, the Kate Spadification of downtown  (my word), and yes, cellphones and a new crop of people, were all  writing on the wall for me. I closed the store in great part for my own  personal needs and growth, but I also mourned the changes in the  neighborhood, in a serious way.
I liked that Little Rickie at any given  moment could be filled with drag queens, Hells Angels members, Susan  Sarandon, Happi Phace, every cool art person in the city, grandmas who  lived in the projects across the street, anyone local, every age, color,  race and predilection. It was a true neighborhood-city-cacophony, and I  liked it that way.
I still have the  thousand or so photo strips from the windows--one day to be a book for all of  us to sit, laugh, and cry by.
 Phillip today
Phillip today