Date: Fri 15-May-1998
Date: Fri 15-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LIZAM
Quick Words:
Redoshop
Full Text:
The Not So Little Shop
(W/4 cuts)
BY LIZA MONTGOMERY
NEW YORK CITY -- Maya Schaper's antiques shop on Columbus Avenue has long been
a familiar site for many New Yorkers. As a primary setting for Warner
Brothers' new movie You've Got Mail, to be released in December, it will
become familiar on a scale even Schaper never dreamed of.
"It was a little bit like winning the lottery," she admits hesitantly. An
understatement, perhaps; the romantic comedy -- starring Tom Hanks and Meg
Ryan as competing and combating bookstore owners who unknowingly fall in love
on the Internet -- looks like a sure bet for ticket sales if there ever was
one.
A location scout approached Schaper informally this January, after looking
over several other spots in the city, but went away disappointed. "I wasn't
terribly interested," Schaper recalls. "But they came again and again and
again. Then they brought the whole crew over, and I couldn't say `no' when
they told me how much they would pay."
In addition to her prime location on 72nd and Columbus, her lovely arched
window, and the shop's roomy and malleable layout, a special customer helped
cinch the decision to film there: Nora Ephron, the movie's
producer-director-writer and a former neighbor, had dropped in on many
occasions.
For a period of two weeks this spring, Schaper's store became a children's
bookshop (owned by Meg Ryan's character in the movie), and her merchandise
carefully inventoried and packed away in the basement. The windows, the first
quarter of the store, and the exterior were all transformed for the occasion,
and even the leafless trees on the sidewalks had a role to play.
"They pinned fall leaves on the branches," said Schaper, "but the next day
they had a problem because the trees' green leaves began to sprout." Christmas
also plays a part in the movie, which is based on the 1940s film The Shop
Around the Corner, so the store was decorated in all the trimmings, complete
with snow outside.
In the meantime, Schaper flew to Europe for a much-deserved vacation and
buying trip. "It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," she says, "but I
couldn't do it to my customers again."
Although her newfound stardom has created a great deal of excitement on the
street (One customer is also a tour guide who now points the shop out on her
route), Schaper's offerings have always been considered hard to forget. For
among her selection of casual, painted country furniture, upscale antiques and
gift items, one can find a delicious selection of cheeses.
Antiques and cheese?
A strangely logical combination, certainly, as both improve with age. It is
also a winning partnership in a city packed with hundreds of run-of-the-mill
stores. Nora Ephron agrees. "I can't imagine there are many more of them," she
says.