Because of you we hope we can stand by our motto - Everybody knows, Everybody goes. With that said, thank you Austin, for so many years of love and support. And now, looking towards the future, we’re focusing on the vibrancy of South Congress and slowly figuring out what it means to operate as safely as possible given our global circumstances, bringing back as much of our team as we’re able to with the classics you know and love. Christy Gray Office Administrator 313.237. The outpouring of love and tears we received (and experienced) from that loss was overwhelming - seeing and hearing the memories all of you created there for years building your families and friendships in deep ways for generations in our booths was such a powerful testament to what we had tried to do, and we are so grateful we got to do it with all y’all for so long. William Austin Executive Assistant to Wayne Brown 313.237.3421.
#OPERA CAFE IN AUSTIN PROFESSIONAL#
It was unique in that many of the waiters were professional opera singers who. So, to preserve the enterprise as a whole, we let go of our Lake Austin location. Adolphs Asti was an Italian restaurant in New York Citys Greenwich Village. Given a slow decline in sales for a few years consecutively at the Lake Austin location only, we realized our beloved original location would not be able to weather the massive uncertainty of the time to come. We quickly closed both restaurants temporarily before any mandate came through in order to protect our team and community from asymptomatic transmission, and we started taking a hard inventory of the business. When the threat of Covid-19 hit Austin, we had to make sudden re-calibrations. Since then, the restaurants were open 24 hours a day, 8 days a week, week after week after week. In February 1988, the Magnolia expanded to its location on South Congress. Story has it that the restaurant started staying open later and later each day until Kent or one of the managers or someone finally lost the keys, and that was that. He was committed to it being a place you could bring anyone, even your mom. Okay, so the diner he found out later was not a magnolia, it was the Camelia Grille, but that's okay. Finally, in 1987, Kent bought out the remainder of the shareholder stock from Ken Carpenter, and it was time to rename the enterprise. Kent really wanted to name the restaurant Eddy's Westside Cafe, given the proximity to Deep Eddy (and also, Eddy is just sort of a cool-sounding-name, right?), but instead he and his wife, Diana Prechter, decided to name it supposedly after a diner they really loved in Louisiana, which, vaguely remembered, was some sort of nice tree flower - a magnolia maybe? Magnolia.