Skip to main content
Related institution (1931 - ca. 1981)

Ashtray

mid-twentieth century
Ceramic
Overall: 5/8 in. × 4 in. (1.6 × 10.2 cm)
Gift of Gloria Tomba Daini in honor of her father Amedeo Tomba
2017.14.30
The nightclub El Morocco first opened as a midtown New York speakeasy in 1931 during Prohibition. Following the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, the club became one of the city’s most popular and glamourous locales. It was frequented by international luminaries, New York City socialites, movie and stage stars (Rudy Vallee, Gary Cooper, Errol Flynn, Gloria Swanson, and Fred Astaire among them), directors, celebrated journalists, sports champions, and other dignitaries such Franklin D. Roosevelt, and, later, John F. Kennedy. The club was located at 154 East 54th Street until 1960, when its proprietor, John Perona, moved it to 307 East 54th Street. Its interior was nearly as famous as its clientele. The club’s ceiling was painted a deep, “glittering” blue, and its furnishings and tableware sported a bold blue and white zebra pattern. After Perona died in 1961, El Morocco closed and reopened several times under different owners into the 1990s.
Markings“EL MOROCCO” and signature “Jaro Fabry” printed on face of ashtray
El Morocco
mid-twentieth century
2017.48
Compact
El Morocco
mid-twentieth century
2017.14.28ab
Mirror
El Morocco
mid twentieth century
2017.14.29ab
"El Morocco"
El Morocco
2008.47.113
Ashtray (pink tree)
The Four Seasons
2016.44.2
Ashtray (green tree)
The Four Seasons
2016.44.1
Ashtray (brown tree)
The Four Seasons
2016.44.4
Ashtray
1910-1950
2002.1.356
Ashtray
1930-1960
2002.1.294
Ashtray
Hall China Company
1940-1960
2000.38
Ashtray (red tree)
The Four Seasons
2016.44.3
Ashtray
1960-1970
2000.60