Showing posts with label Forrest Park Carousel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forrest Park Carousel. Show all posts

Friday, November 19, 2010

Parks Department Refuses To Reveal Amount Of Carousel Donation

William Adee of Local 52 cleans a Forest Park Carousel horse as film crews get set to shoot 'The Sitter' at shuttered treasure.
The City's Parks Department has refused to reveal the amount of the donation made in connection with filming last week by 20th Century-Fox in Forest Park. The "significant donation," - said to be $ 5,000 - was made for allowing filming including inside the Park's shuttered historic carousel. Advocates fighting to get the carousel reopened want the funds to be used towards that purpose but parks officials have other plans for it.

Queens

LOCAL residents are calling on city parks officials to earmark donated cash from a Forest Park film shoot for the shuttered, historic carousel, according to the New York Daily News.

Crews filming the "The Sitter" took over the park and the carousel in recent weeks to shoot scenes for the comedy.

A spokesman for 20th Century Fox, the film's production company, said it made a "substantial" donation to Forest Park.

Both the film company and the Parks Department have refused to disclose the amount.

The carousel, called priceless by experts, has been closed for two years while the Parks Department searches for someone interested in operating it as a concession. It was crafted more than 100 years ago by Daniel Carl Muller, considered a master woodcarver of the genre.

"Our kids deserve the chance to enjoy our carousel, not just some Hollywood celebrities," said Ed Wendell of the Woodhaven Residents Block Association. "That's why we're calling for every penny of that generous donation to be allocated to the restoration and reopening of the carousel."

Queens Parks Commissioner Dorothy Lewandowski pointed out that the crews also filmed at other locations in the park.

"I understand people's concerns for the carousel, but that donation is for use of the park," she said. "The movie crews did some cleaning and repair work to the carousel and the concession stand. You have to consider that an in-kind donation.

"There must be transparency and accountability with these donations," said Geoffrey Croft of NYC Park Advocates, a watchdog group. "Unfortunately, that is not happening."

Read More:

New York Daily News - November 16, 2010 - By Lisa L. Colangelo

A Walk In The Park - November 3, 2010


Saturday, July 24, 2010

Community Fights to Reopen Forest Park Carousel

A beloved century-old carousel in Woodhaven's Forest Park is shuttered and the community is working hard to open its gates before summer's end.(Image: NY1 VIDEO)

Queens

The historic Forest Park Carousel, shuttered for over a year, may spin again this summer, according to the New York Daily News.

The city Parks Department said it is in negotiations with a new concessionaire to operate the carousel, a hand-carved treasure that dates back to the early 1900s.

City Councilwoman Elizabeth Crowley (D-Middle Village), who has been pushing Parks officials to find a new vendor, said it is slated to reopen by mid-July.

The carousel fell silent after the previous vendor, New York One LLC, let its contract expire last year. Civic leaders complained that the company allowed the carousel and the surrounding grounds to deteriorate.

Earlier this year, the Parks Department dismissed New York One as the vendor of the Central Park Carousel for failing to maintain and clean that famous attraction.

Local residents are hoping a new vendor will return the Forest Park Carousel to its former glory.

"I hope they are really vetting them well because we don't want another vendor coming in and abusing the area," said Maria Thomson of the Greater Woodhaven Development Corp. "It should be a destination and a place where people can go and enjoy the park."

The carousel was crafted by Daniel Carl Muller, considered by experts to be a master woodcarver of the genre. It's one of two Muller carousels still in operation. The other is in Ohio.

"It's priceless," said Patrick Wentzel, who keeps a census of carousels for the National Carousel Association. "The carvings are exquisite. They are so lifelike."

The carousel was brought to Forest Park from Massachusetts in the early 1970s to replace one that burned down nearly 10 years earlier.


The beloved carousel in forrest Park Queens has been closed for three years. The metal security gate is closed in the background. (Photo By Manny)

A Facebook page has been created to help save the carousel.

Read/View More:

Devotees Seek To Reopen Queens Carousel
NY1 - July 17, 2010 - By Shushannah Walshe
New York Daily News - June 7, 2010 - By Lisa L. Colangelo