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Remembering Editta Sherman, Duchess of Carnegie Hall

Editta Sherman inside her Carnegie Hall Towers studio in 2010.Jennifer S. Altman for The New York Times Editta Sherman inside her Carnegie Hall Towers studio in 2010.

Someone had gotten a large black hat made of flowers and displayed it with a jaunty tilt - just the way Editta Sherman wore hers â€" next to the coffin, as if to set a “Let’s Party!” tone for the wake and funeral of Ms. Sherman, the 101-year-old portrait photographer who was known as the Duchess of Carnegie Hall.

Ms. Sherman became a grande dame of the Carnegie Hall Towers, a unique set of studio living spaces above the concert hall, and of the extended family of quirky, talented artists living and working there.

The crowd of friends and relatives at the service, at St. Malachy’s Church, known as the Actors’ Chapel, on West 49th Street on Tuesday, was as an artsy group. One man was dressed as a gentleman cowboy; another had angel wings strapped to his dark business suit. Everyone was laughing and hugging and backslapping.

Ms. Sherman’s closed coffin was flanked with photographs of her doing her two favorite things: taking pictures and posing for photos.

This duchess was hardly demure. She was a flamboyant dresser who left strict instructions that she look good, even in death, which meant being dressed in the vintage white wedding dress she had bought recently, just for kicks.

Ms. Sherman moved into her rent-regulated, 12th-floor studio in 1949 and raised five children there and also photographed some of the most famous people in the world, including Salvador Dali, Andy Warhol, Henry Fonda, Paul Newman and Marlene Dietrich.

“In that studio, she was right in the middle of a beehive of activity on top of Carnegie Hall,” said Josef Astor, 52, a photographer and fellow tenant in the building who made the documentary “Lost Bohemia” about the tenants of the studios.

“Yes, she was the duchess of Carnegie Hall, but she also made a great lentil soup,” he said, adding that she cooked her famous soups on a stove in her photography darkroom.

After 61 years in Suite 1208, Ms. Sherman moved in 2010 into an apartment on West 59th Street, displaced, along with the other tenants, by a renovation plan to build new studios and offices at the location.

Next to her coffin was a prototype for a large book of her portraits, which her friends and family plan on publishing in coming months. The images varied from Carl Sandburg to a local homeless man.

In a eulogy, Ms. Sherman’s son, Kenneth Sherman, 77, a Lutheran pastor, said his mother loved “life in all its forms.” Afterward, he told of how he took her to a Christmas party last year at the White House, hoping to introduce her to the president, but she wound up introducing him.

“She got in the room, and immediately said, ‘I’m going to meet him,’ and at 100 years old, she made a beeline straight through the crowd toward the president,” Mr. Sherman recalled. “No one was going to stop her.”

When the coffin was finally placed into a waiting hearse, someone set the large flower-woven hat temporarily on a street trash can nearby. Some passers-by began taking snapshots of this stylishly topped trash can. Everyone agreed: the duchess would have found it hilarious.



An Unofficial Barista at Starbucks

Dear Diary:

A few months ago I was waiting in a long, slow-moving line at a Starbucks on the Upper East Side. While the bustling baristas quickly took orders, accurately exchanged payment and efficiently wrote customers’ names on cups, the line was still as sluggish as the slothful patrons before their morning caffeine.

One elderly lady, wearing bold red lipstick and mammoth sunglasses, was on the other side of the store awaiting her name to be called out. A barista placed a drink on the counter and shouted “Ben!” As instantaneous as an echo in a cave, the elderly lady screamed 100 decibels louder, “BEN! COME PICK UP YOUR DRINK!”

Moments later another barista placed a drink at the pickup counter, “Mike, your order’s ready!” Without delay, the elderly lady clamored, “MIKE! COME ON UP, YOUR DRINK’S HERE!”

For a couple more orders the elderly lady followed suit, making the already scrambling Starbucks baristas a little more frantic. At last, a barista announced “Ruth!” The elderly lady picked up her coffee and scurried out onto the street.

Alas, I was still waiting to place my order, but there’s not a single doubt in my mind that without “barista” Ruth helping out, the line was once again moving slower than ever.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: Meet Your Mayor

Bill de Blasio on Election Night with his family.Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Bill de Blasio on Election Night with his family.

The city woke today to a new mayor, Bill de Blasio, who won in a landslide.

To mark this occasion, we have gathered some facts about Mr. de Blasio that you might not know.

- At 6 feet 5 inches, he is the tallest mayor since John Lindsay, who was 6 feet 3 inches and was elected in 1965.

- In his 20s, colleagues referred to him as “Big Bird with a beard.”

- He speaks Italian (well) and Spanish (decently).

- In the early ’90s, he lived in a basement bachelor pad in Astoria, Queens. His answering machine greeting often quoted lyrics or poetry.

- He then courted a lesbian writer, now his wife, Chirlane McCray, and moved to Park Slope.

- He is 52; she, 58. They are the first interracial mayor and first lady.

- He is the first mayor to live in Brooklyn since Abraham D. Beame, who was elected in 1973.

- He does impersonations, including Charles Rangel, Bill Clinton and a goose.

- He is a Red Sox fan.

- Traveling in Spain, he and a fellow N.Y.U. undergrad, Barry Yeoman, wrote these words to the tune of “I Wanna Be Sedated,” by the Ramones:

Put me on a postage stamp,
Take me to a show,
Put me on some currency so everyone will know
Never once confuse me with Francisco Franco
I know, I know, I know!
I-wan-wan-wan-wan-wan-wan-wan-wan-
I wanna be Juan Carlos!

Here’s what else you need to know for Wednesday.

WEATHER

A swirl of sun and clouds, but slightly warmer and more humid than Tuesday, with a high of 62. This may mean rain on Thursday.

COMMUTE

Subways: Click for latest status.

Rails: Click for L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect the rest of the week.

COMING UP TODAY

- Officials celebrate a new line of holiday stamps by unveiling a giant gingerbread house at the main post office on Eighth Avenue at 10 a.m. [Here’s a sneak peek of the stamps.]

- Actors read from a play about an unlikely friendship that emerges from the demolition of the old Penn Station. Center for Architecture in the West Village. 7 p.m. [Free]

- Try to break a world record today - say, for completing the fastest 20-meter “butt scoot” â€" in Times Square. From 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. [Free]

- Off they go: Watch as three astronauts in Kazakhstan take off for the International Space Station, on a giant screen, also in Times Square. 11:14 p.m. [Free]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

Javier C. Hernandez, Sam Roberts and Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

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