West Side Spirit - October 12, 2017

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The Spirit|Westsider westsidespirit.com

OCTOBER 12-18,2017

Business

HOOKING UP, FOR NEARLY 75 YEARS Viola Goodman has been selling bras at her Upper East Side lingerie boutique since 1943 BY CARSON KESSLER

Viola Goodman can guess a woman’s bra size with a quick glance. Goodman’s cultivated her expertise over time, nearly 75 years’ worth, which is how long she’s been in the lingerie business, all of it on the Upper East Side. A life in lingerie was not what Goodman had imagined for herself after she earned a master’s degree in history from Columbia University. But soon after graduating, Goodman’s husband, Max, a mechanic, was stricken with an infection in his knees and could no longer ply his trade. “Somehow this store was empty,” Goodman recounted last week. “It was dry and clean, and my husband needed work.” Viola and Max opened Viola’s Smart Shop in 1943. “Every woman needs a brassiere, so I decided it was a good product to sell,” she said. The lingerie boutique, on First Avenue just north of 77th Street, is sandwiched between a children’s clothes shop and a vacant storefront. Racks of nightgowns and robes dressed in plastic covers border the right side of the store, while sets of packaged underwear decorate the left.

Viola Goodman has owned and run her First Avenue lingerie boutique since 1943. Photo: Carson Kessler Behind the counter, an assortment of bras are tucked in individual boxes, each with a hand-written label noting its size and style. Goodman knows exactly where each item resides and who it will best fit. “When I first came in here, I was asking for the wrong size. I’d been wearing this size for 20 years,” said Rochelle Pillar, an Upper East Side resident and Smart Shop regular. “Viola hooked me up with the correct size and it fit me so much better!” For 74 years, Goodman, who preferred to let people guess her age, has

personally serviced women such as Pillar, ensuring each leaves her shop with the best fit. She prides herself on style and quality. It’s a selling point for many of her longtime and newer customers that Viola’s Smart Shop is no Victoria’s Secret. Experience and quality is what Goodman believes sets her boutique apart. “Many women come in here, and the garment is so tight, they can’t breathe!” Goodman said, suggesting that big-name stores in her industry train young women to sell bras for commission. “I know they’re going to come to me because I give them what’s right.” Goodman’s co-worker, Connie Norkin, shopped at Viola’s for many years before she started working there this spring. After noticing a sign in the window on the way to her gym, Norkin, a graphic designer, stopped to talk to Viola about possibly helping her spruce up the displays in the windows. Goodman had little interest in modernizing. Instead, she asked Norkin to help inside the shop as a salesperson. “I’m Viola’s ladder,” Norkin said with a smile. “That was one of my selling points.” Grateful for the part-time job, Norkin helps Goodman with just about anything from inventory to working on the windows to showing and fitting customers with a variety of nightgowns.

Viola’s Smart Shop occupies the first floor of a First Avenue building constructed in 1910. Photo: Carson Kessler “I had always loved the fact that Viola had this store for a very long time and kept it going,” Norkin said. “That’s really a testament to Viola and her passion, commitment and energy to keep this store going in a neighborhood that is changing.” And it has changed. Goodman recalls a time when all of her customers were Eastern European. Rudy Giuliani is perhaps her most memorable client. Goodman recounts how Guliani, during his mayoral tenure, and an army of security personnel paraded into her narrow shop, in search of a few nightgowns for his

elderly mother. Goodman, of course, knew the perfect style and fit, and insisted Giuliani buy three or four. Max passed away about 10 years ago. But many customers continue to ask for him. “The old timers,” Goodman laughs. With her children and grandchildren in all different states, Goodman works six days a week, reserving Sundays for cooking her favorite pot roast with fresh vegetables (“and no salt!”). “I’m busy, and I’m happy,” Goodman said of her 48-hour workweek. “My work keeps me going.”

NEIGHBORHOOD SIDE STREETS MEET 72ND STREET

sideways.nyc

FRAMES FOR YOU 136 WEST 72ND STREET Alexander, the current owner of Frames For You, came to the United States from the former Yugoslavia, where he was a film director. He could not be a film director in the United States “for many reasons,” he explained, but he wanted to find a job related to art in some way. While showing some of his favorite framed pieces, Alexander said that he works with everything from small family photographs to big projects for the Metropolitan Opera. Surprisingly, many of the picture frames at Lincoln Center have come from this little workshop. Alexander also shared that he does smaller projects for the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Natural History Museum, such as gifts for donors. For more photos and side streets, go to sideways.nyc.


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