The Blue Angel Story
PASSION AND PREJUDICE WITHIN DUE BOUNDS
‘The Blue Angel’ opened in 1961, and was
named after my father’s idol, Marlene Dietrich.
The restaurant was placed on two house plots,
which was a proud moment for my family, as it
was not a small achievement buying two plots in
Sydney. This bet paid off and we were already
enjoying a good stream of customers within 6
months. I still remember the very first menu we
served in our restaurant; it is still hanging on our
wall today. A blend of Italian and French dishes,
all priced in Pounds and Shillings. It still states the lobster at 2 pounds 5
shillings. How I miss those days.
As an enterprising young teenager, I was learning the ropes of the
restaurant business at the bottom of the staircase. ‘Checkers’ I remember it
well. As the youngest waiter I got to serve my share of dishes with
ballerinas moving all around me. I never dropped a plate. Don’t ask me
how I managed that! I got to serve the guests under the entertaining eyes
of Shirley Bassey and Sammy Davis Jr. What a life to have! One year later
I moved on to the Silver Spade. Here I met one of my life’s idols Nat King
Cole. It was hard to concentrate on work when he entertained. I still see
these moments passing before my eyes every day.
From there I moved on to the best place I could have ever gone to. It was
‘Prunies’ on 440 Old South Head Road, Double Bay. What a place that
turned out to be. The famous Tony Gemenis himself took me under his
wing, and there I truly picked up the passion for the restaurant business.
This was the one place where perfection was essential. The most colourful
people that Sydney has ever known would be found there. Tony taught me
so much that I owe him for. Even now I still think, ‘what would Tony do?’ It
is from there I still believe in the idea of preparing certain dishes like ‘steak
Diane’, ‘Lobster ala Muricane’ and ‘Crepes Suzette’ at the table of the
diners. I still honour Tony by making the crepes like his did 50 years ago.
This is when my father told me that enough was enough, and I moved into
the family restaurant. He was a visionary and we knew that we would have
to do something unique and special, even though we were already running
a good business. We renovated and we did what no other restaurant in
Sydney had done before. We had a lobster tank big enough for 100kg. We
thought it would be enough. Never were we so wrong! Within two years, we
needed a second aquarium holding at least twice as much. So we entered
1970 without knowing we would run short of supplies faster than we
thought we would. That year was important to us, because we weren’t
expecting one Japanese group of diners to ask for lobster sashimi, and
they wanted the biggest lobster we had. It didn’t take long for them to enjoy
the 5kg crustacean delight.
That was the one direction that took us by surprise, and the one that grew to
become over 50% of our frequent diners. The 1970s brought with it, a
sudden influx of Japanese diners, and with our success, we were able to
purchase the rest of the blocks of houses adjoining our restaurant. Further
additions included five more tanks, to accommodate 5000kg of live lobsters,
and four private dining rooms. We had grown from a mere 75 guests to a
whopping 175. Our guest book certainly got its share of celebrities and I was
filled with such pride that they had chosen our restaurant to dine (our
celebrity guests include: Kayama Yuza, Burt Lancaster, Mohammed Ali,
Hiroshi Itsuki, several Olympic teams, foreign dignitaries and a former Prime
Minister.
Constructive criticism is always embraced and is
a way forward for the wise restaurateurs,
however, in 1984, the Blue Angel had defended
its good name and its culinary methods and
shined a light on the truth of the issue. The Blue
Angel and Marcello suffered an attempted
humiliation from Mr. Schofield and “The Good
Living” section of the Sydney Morning Herald.
Having been justified by the supreme Court in
1989, before Justice Enderby and the jury of
four, in an unprecedented case, we were truly
vindicated. However, we are still awaiting a
public apology after 20 years. The diners at the Blue Angel are its true critics.
It speaks for itself, we are approaching our 50th anniversary in January 2011,
for which we have already planned a wonderful celebration by opening a 36L
bottle of French Champagne from the Drappier company. All are welcome to
this celebration, except the obvious. My esteemed congratulations to all the
other restaurateurs who have suffered and been vindicated in the same ....
Marcello Marcobello.
NEW LOOK LOGO ...truth over evil!
Our new logo (pictured left) was recently
adopted following the 50th anniversary ..
the image was taken from a beautiful
stained glass window at Blue Angel. It
depicts St George slaying the dragon and
parallels the Blue Angel’s fight for truth
and the slaying of the poison ink!