guigno / June 2024
IN THIS ISSUE

  • Joe Benny's reopens in former Germano's
  • Little Italy's new barbershop
  • Memories of neighborhood barbers
  • Blast from the past
  • Slideshow of June's Italian Festival
  • Delegate Mangione featured speaker at Lodge
  • Thoughts from our readers
  • Italian cultural events
Around the neighborhood
Joe Benny’s chef and owner Joseph Gardella
(photo Jamyla Krempel, The Baltimore Banner)

Joe Benny’s owner plans
second act in Little Italy

(Food Reporter for The Baltimore Banner)

Joseph Gardella couldn’t stay out of the game. In the weeks and months after shutting down his Little Italy restaurant Joe Benny’s, he began doing catering events and pop-ups, selling meatballs at The Dive in Canton.

“I was always itching to get back in” to the restaurant industry, he said. “The past year has been the most difficult of my life,” he added, as he took a step back from the kitchen in an effort to heal his ongoing back issues. “I love doing this ... I have to do it or I’m not happy.”

But following a recent surgery, he said Little Italy resident Ben Sudano reached out to him about opening a new restaurant in the space formerly occupied by Germano’s Piattini and Cabaret at 300 S. High St. The restaurant will be called “Benny’s,” a reference both to Sudano, whose nickname is Benny, and to Gardella’s former eatery.

When it opens sometime in June, customers can look forward to a combination of Joe Benny’s signature classics, like focaccia pizza, as well as other Southern Italian and particularly Sicilian dishes. “It’s like Joe Benny’s, but all grown up,” Gardella said. Both he and Sudano are Sicilian by ancestry, and Gardella recently returned from a trip to the island. “We’ve got some stuff up our sleeves,” he said.

Gardella said he’s begun reaching out to former staffers at Joe Benny’s to offer them jobs, but says “unfortunately some of those folks have moved on.” The restaurant’s chef will be Vern Smith, who has Southern Italian roots. That means Gardella will spend less time in the kitchen and more time dealing with customers. “My true thing is the front of the house,” he said. “I’ll be able to not stress myself out.” His goal is to “try to heal and do it a little differently this time.”

The new restaurant should be a shot in the arm for the neighborhood, which has seen a decline in the number of eateries. Sudano, the CEO of Sudano’s Produce, also purchased Aldo’s Ristorante Italiano, which closed during the pandemic.

“I can’t sit back and be part of the decline,” Gardella said. “The neighborhood is part of me.”
Little Italy welcomes Frank's Barber
Studio to the neighborhood
What says "neighborhood" more than a red/white/blue striped pole in front of a barber shop? Barbershops have been around for centuries and have served as an important social venue in towns and neighborhoods. Besides providing haircuts and shaves, the role of the barbershop served as a place for men to socialize, gather, talk, laugh, and enjoy each other’s company - it created a sense of community.

Little Italy has a new barbershop - Frank's Barber Studio - which opened in March at the corner of Albemarle and Stiles Street. That building once housed the original Vaccaro's (and other businesses since) before the pastry shop moved across the street. "Frank" is Francisco Grullon (left photo) from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. This editor stopped in one day to see the newly renovated space. Although she didn't need a shave or a haircut, she found the atmosphere to be very friendly as she talked and laughed with the guys!

Daily hours 9 am to 8 pm
Adults & Kids shape & haircuts
Walk-ins welcome

217 Albemarle Street
646.806.8508

~~~~~~~~
Barbershop
Memories


"Got my first haircut and many more at Bruno & Sergio's."
~ Steve Loudermilk
"Bruno & Sergio
were the best!"
~ Bob Burch
"The Ole' Clip Joint ... the nickname for Brotto Brothers."
~ Olindo Monaldi
"There were many places to get a haircut in Little Italy over the decades, but the consensus of what would be the iconic location has to be Bruno & Sergi."
~ Steven Blattermann
"Sergio on Eastern Avenue ... when I moved to Pennsylvania, I still had to take my son there - he wouldn't let anyone else cut his hair!" ~ Jerry Joseph Della Noce
"Bruno & Sergio for sure. Little Italy at one time was a self contained entity: groceries, shoes, clothing, food … all of the basics."
~ Carmen Strollo
"Barbershops in Little Italy never skipped a beat. Sergio & Bruno sold their barbershop to Geppi Barber Salon, who in turn sold it to Dawn, aka Shears of Little Italy [also a full service barber salon]. It has operated for the past 20 years ... proud of the girls." ~ Giovanna Acquia
"Bruno & Sergio on the corner of High and Eastern Ave. At one time there was Baptist Barber Shop on Bank Street above Eden Street; Jimmy's on the corner of Eden & Gough; and Paul's Barber Shop at Pratt & Exeter." 
~ Bill Bertazon
"I got my first haircut at Mr. Paul's on Exeter and Pratt. My father then bought a hair clipper and from that point on, I looked like a refugee. No long hair for me and my brother until 8th grade."
~ Will Matricciani

Blast from the past
Photo and caption as published in the 2020 book,

Mario Scilipoti (pictured in 1950) was an immigrant from Bafia, Sicily, Italy, and owned Mario’s Barber Shop at Pratt and High Streets. His son, Tom “Mazzie” Scilipoti, followed in his father’s footsteps, with a barbershop in his Bank Street home boasting the classic spinning barber pole in front. (photo by Thomas C. Scilipoti)
 Include caption, people ID, location, approximate year, and your name.
Photos must be Little Italy or Italian immigrant-related.
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Little Italy in the news
The Italian Game
Little Italy's courts host popular evening leagues

By Rafael Alvarez
Photography by Jake Saltzberg

In late summer 1936, amid the depths of the Great Depression, the charms of bocce were heralded in The Evening Sun. The writer used the same line that accompanies just about every story on the ancient game of lawn bowling. “Ever hear of bocce?” In fact, bocce is a descendent of the oldest game devised by man: throwing balls toward a target.

Some 5,000 years before Christ, the Egyptians played a version with smooth stones. In Baltimore, folks from Harford County to Hamilton surely know it, particularly in Little Italy, where courts next to the old St. Leo’s parish school will host the 2024 season beginning this month.

“We’re upgrading the surface of the courts now,” says Francis Blatterman, a veteran competitor.

Feast of St. Anthony Festival slideshow
May 31 - June 2, 2024
(click image to view)
Little Italy events
Little Italy Lodge General Meeting
Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Featured Speaker
Nino Mangione,
Maryland Delegate

6 pm social / 7 pm meeting
905 E. Pratt Street, Little Italy
Delegate Mangione (R-District 42A, Baltimore County) will present a synopsis to Lodge members and guests of the major accomplishments of the recently completed 2024 Maryland General Assembly session, with a special focus on events of greater interest to our Little Italy community. All are welcome.

  • Social hour 6-7 PM
  • Italian cold-cut sandwiches available for $5-$10 donation
  • Cash bar
  • Free parking in Lodge lot and along streets
from our e-mailbox
"Excellent edition! Many thanks for your dedication!"
~ Rosalie Ranieri

"I enjoy this newsletter every month. It's a great way to find out about events in the area."
~ Johannah Espey

"... your latest newsletter - all good. Very well done, very broad coverage."
~ Albert Marra
Italian-related events elsewhere
Click cartoon below to watch a FUN 2-minute video
about Promotion Center for Little Italy
a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization established 2010
EDITOR
Director & Co-founder
EDITORIAL ADVISOR
Co-founder
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