With construction of an extended subway line imminent, the club will close its doors Saturday night as its owner hunts for a new home.
"What are you going to do?" said John Juliano, taking a break from setting up shop on the club's penultimate evening. "Like anything else in life, you're born and you die. We'll try to find another spot by the fall."
The three-floor space on Manhattan's West Side, a replica of the original club where Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr. and Dean Martin once ruled, is locking up shop after Latin superstars El Gran Combo play Saturday night. Owner Juliano, who bought the Copa with two partners in 1976, said he hoped to open a new club under the old name by October.
This is the nightspot's third incarnation. The original was the scene of a memorable 1957 brawl involving New York Yankees stars Mickey Mantle and Billy Martin, and eventually became a disco in the mid-1970s.
"In the '40s and '50s, every star possible appeared at the Copa," Juliano said. "You had to play the Copa if you wanted to get anywhere."
Copa II was opened in 1992. The current Copacabana, which caters to the hip-hop and salsa crowds, opened on West 34th Street in 2001.
The latest Copa was condemned when the city decided to extend the No. 7 subway line west, providing a link with the remote Javits Convention Center.
In addition to all the real-life drama in the club, the first Copa on East 60th Street was prominently featured in the Martin Scorsese mob classic "Goodfellas," his earlier film "Raging Bull" and in the Dustin Hoffman film "Tootsie."
And the club provided the impetus for the hit song "Copacabana," co-written and performed by Manilow, the musical story of a showgirl working "the hottest spot north of Havana."
There are a number of possibilities for a new location, including a possible move to the Bronx.
"It would kill me," Juliano confessed, "but what are you going to do?"
The club's name and its palm tree theme will accompany Juliano wherever he ends up.
"Without a doubt," he said. "You have to keep it tropical."
Lady Gaga finds a new fan in Barry Manilow
Dec 1, 2009 3:00 pm PST
Veteran showman Barry Manilow, who unveiled a new Las Vegas act on Tuesday, said that when it comes to today's hit singers, he most admires original acts such as controversial dance queen Lady Gaga. Manilow has sold more than 80 milli...
Manilow keeping things romantic at new Vegas gig
Dec 1, 2009 9:00 am PST
Barry Manilow says plenty of people still like to hear great love songs, so he's keeping things romantic as he moves to the Las Vegas Strip for a new show opening March 5. "I've always believed that a good love song will never go out of s...
U.S. judge sentences noisy offenders to Barry Manilow
Nov 25, 2008 9:00 pm PST
A U.S. judge has hailed as a success a new form of punishment for people who go to court for being too noisy -- an hour of listening to Barry Manilow or the theme tune from the children's TV show "Barney and Friends." Judge Paul Sacco...
Nov 13, 2008 9:00 pm PST
Get this: LeBron listens to Barry Manilow. Or Brian Manilow. A big fan of all styles of music, Cleveland's superstar always gets ready for games by listening to hip hop. On Thursday before facing the Denver Nuggets, James walked into the ...
Manilow sparks political feud with TV show
Sep 17, 2007 3:10 pm PDT
Pop singer Barry Manilow, a major Democratic fundraiser, said on Monday he has scrapped plans to appear on the television talk show "The View," because he did not want to be interviewed by its conservative co-host. Manilow was scheduled ...