Georgina Nieves ‘17 had the opportunity speak with Drew Nieporent ‘77, the acclaimed restauranteur behind Myriad Restaurant Group. The interview covers Drew’s experience within the Hotel School and his present career.

Drew Nieporent ‘77
How do you think your time in the hotel school influenced your path, and is there any class that you believe shaped your experiences?
I think the most formative for me was the diversity of the student body. On the very first day, there was a reception for us. I met my fellow classmates. It was amazing for me that there were people from Bahamas, or Ghana, or France, or Atlanta for that matter. That tremendous diversity amount the student body served me tremendously through the four years, it was so interesting to meet different people from different places.
And then in terms of a class. In freshman year there was a class called introduction to hospitality, but really it was an introduction to Vance Christian. Vance Christian was a larger than life professor to us. He always had these amazing philosophical ideas that he threw out to us, and it was very impressive. I think that left an impression not only on me, but on most of us.
If there is one piece of advice you could give to graduating students, what would that be?
It just doesn’t happen right away in terms of your career. You graduate and now have to enter into job experiences that will lead up into whatever your chosen goal is. It is very rare that someone leaves school and gets a position they will stick with their entire career. I don’t know too many people who have done that. So I would just say take your time, and don’t look to far ahead. It will take a couple of years before you reach the point where you are professionally most satisfied.
So obviously you have been extremely successful in the restaurant industry, I think that is an understatement, but I think there are two sides to opening restaurants there is that business side where you see the market and you see an opportunity and you decide to take it. And there is also that entrepreneurial spirit where you have an idea about it and you are extremely passionate about it. What do you think opening your first restaurant was like? What is more of that seeing the market and seeing the opportunity, or was it you that was more inspired by your entrepreneurial spirit and decided to go with an opportunity.
I was always very clear as far as what I wanted to do. I wanted to open several restaurants when I was younger. And going to Cornell started me on the path of the school and the educational side of the business. And you can’t just can’t will the thing to happen, you have to have the finances to make it work. So even with all good intentions, if you don’t have the money to start the business, you are not going to be able to start the business. It really has to do with the economic climate and where you happen to be. I was fortunate I was in New York and my roots were in New York so I knew the marketplace quite well. And I knew I could be successful here. I was always directed to wanting to do my own thing.
Did you have someone that inspired you? Did you have a role model?
Joe Baum who was a Cornell graduate. Joe Baum opened the Windows on The World in New York, and the Rainbow Room.
How did you make the connection to open a restaurant with Robert DeNiro?
I had opened my first restaurant in 1985 in the neighborhood known as Tribeca. And he lived down in Tribeca, so he came into the restaurant, it was an evening where his girlfriend and he was having dinner asked me the question about whether I was interested in doing another restaurant. So that was over 33 years ago.
So I see that your restaurants have won a lot of awards from Wine Spectator, so obviously I imagine that you are really into wine. I always like to personally ask this question because it can say a lot about someone, but bear with me it can be a little weird. If you were a wine, what would you be and why?
If I were a wine I think I would be a Beaune because I like the shape of the bottle and the voluptuous consistency of the wine.
I don’t think I have heard of that?
Beaune is a village in Burgundy. In Burgandy all the wines are named after the villages.
Nice, and is there anything you would like to convey to students before we finish this interview?
The only thing I would convey is to not think too far ahead. It is important to enjoy your time in college. It obviously goes by with a wink of an eye. Enjoy your time there and don’t start worrying about your professional career until you need to.
* * *
The Cornell Hotel Society Executive Board thanks the Cornell Hotel Society – Collegiate Chapter for initiating and conducting the “Conversations with Alumni” project.
SHA Hosts Reception at ALIS
/in Uncategorized/by Robert MandelbaumThe annual Cornell Reception at the Americas Lodging Investment Summit (ALIS) is one of the Hotel School’s principal networking events, attracting over 500 alumni and industry leaders each year. We had an amazing time at this year’s event! Check out all the photos and tag your friends. Thanks for the CHS Los Angeles Chapter for their assistance.
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
SHA Reception at ALIS 2018
CHS New England Hits the Lanes!
/in Chapter Event/by Robert MandelbaumThe New England Chapter gathered for some after-work bowling on February 15. With 15 alumni and guests in attendance, the Chapter bowled the night away in Somerville’s Davis Square! The event was right up everyone’s alley as many alums reminisced of bowling at Helen Newman Bowling Center!
CHS New England goes bowling.
Rocco M. Angelo ’58
/in Hotelie for Life/by Robert MandelbaumRocco M. Angelo ’58, Associate Dean, School of Hospitality & Tourism Management at Florida International University, shares what it means to him to be a #Hotelie for Life®.
“It was love at first sight when I stepped into Statler Hall for the first time on a Fall day in 1955. I flew from NYC to Ithaca at the invitation of Dean Meek, the founding dean of the Cornell Hotel School, who after a brief interview urged me to apply. Once I was enrolled and attending classes I bonded with a number of classmates who like myself had attended other universities and were veterans of the Korean Conflict (it was not labeled a war.) We became a family; working multiple jobs at the Statler Inn (now Hotel), studying together and yes, partying together. My Cornell friends became my friends for life. Up until 2015 and for the thirty years before we reunited for a fun weekend, reminiscing about our days on the hill, talking about our families and our careers. I had hotel and restaurant experience before matriculating at Cornell but I consider my career as having started seriously after Cornell and due to Cornell and the contacts I made throughout my career. While I was a student I was active in HEC and most School clubs. My affection for the Cornell Hotel School continued after graduation. I was the CHS chapter president twice in New York, once in the the Caribbean and once in South Florida, and in 2001 the CHS international president. It was an honor to emcee the School’s 75th anniversary celebration at Windows on the World, the Hotelie of the Year celebrations for Dean Robert Beck at the Waldorf Astoria, Denis Sweeney at Windows on the World and the Mariani Family, co-emceed with Simon Turner at The Plaza Hotel and the dinner honoring David Dittman’s decade as Dean, also at Windows on the World. Am I a Hotelie for Life? Stand back as I shout, YES!”
Rocco M. Angelo ’58
Julie Surago Pierce, MMH ’14
/in Hotelie for Life/by Robert MandelbaumJulie Surago Pierce, MMH ’14, Senior Financial Analyst for CBRE Hotels Capital Markets, shared with us what it means to her to be a#hotelieforlife:
“Conversations with Alumni” – Drew Nieporent ‘77
/in Conversations/by Robert MandelbaumGeorgina Nieves ‘17 had the opportunity speak with Drew Nieporent ‘77, the acclaimed restauranteur behind Myriad Restaurant Group. The interview covers Drew’s experience within the Hotel School and his present career.
Drew Nieporent ‘77
How do you think your time in the hotel school influenced your path, and is there any class that you believe shaped your experiences?
I think the most formative for me was the diversity of the student body. On the very first day, there was a reception for us. I met my fellow classmates. It was amazing for me that there were people from Bahamas, or Ghana, or France, or Atlanta for that matter. That tremendous diversity amount the student body served me tremendously through the four years, it was so interesting to meet different people from different places.
And then in terms of a class. In freshman year there was a class called introduction to hospitality, but really it was an introduction to Vance Christian. Vance Christian was a larger than life professor to us. He always had these amazing philosophical ideas that he threw out to us, and it was very impressive. I think that left an impression not only on me, but on most of us.
If there is one piece of advice you could give to graduating students, what would that be?
It just doesn’t happen right away in terms of your career. You graduate and now have to enter into job experiences that will lead up into whatever your chosen goal is. It is very rare that someone leaves school and gets a position they will stick with their entire career. I don’t know too many people who have done that. So I would just say take your time, and don’t look to far ahead. It will take a couple of years before you reach the point where you are professionally most satisfied.
So obviously you have been extremely successful in the restaurant industry, I think that is an understatement, but I think there are two sides to opening restaurants there is that business side where you see the market and you see an opportunity and you decide to take it. And there is also that entrepreneurial spirit where you have an idea about it and you are extremely passionate about it. What do you think opening your first restaurant was like? What is more of that seeing the market and seeing the opportunity, or was it you that was more inspired by your entrepreneurial spirit and decided to go with an opportunity.
I was always very clear as far as what I wanted to do. I wanted to open several restaurants when I was younger. And going to Cornell started me on the path of the school and the educational side of the business. And you can’t just can’t will the thing to happen, you have to have the finances to make it work. So even with all good intentions, if you don’t have the money to start the business, you are not going to be able to start the business. It really has to do with the economic climate and where you happen to be. I was fortunate I was in New York and my roots were in New York so I knew the marketplace quite well. And I knew I could be successful here. I was always directed to wanting to do my own thing.
Did you have someone that inspired you? Did you have a role model?
Joe Baum who was a Cornell graduate. Joe Baum opened the Windows on The World in New York, and the Rainbow Room.
How did you make the connection to open a restaurant with Robert DeNiro?
I had opened my first restaurant in 1985 in the neighborhood known as Tribeca. And he lived down in Tribeca, so he came into the restaurant, it was an evening where his girlfriend and he was having dinner asked me the question about whether I was interested in doing another restaurant. So that was over 33 years ago.
So I see that your restaurants have won a lot of awards from Wine Spectator, so obviously I imagine that you are really into wine. I always like to personally ask this question because it can say a lot about someone, but bear with me it can be a little weird. If you were a wine, what would you be and why?
If I were a wine I think I would be a Beaune because I like the shape of the bottle and the voluptuous consistency of the wine.
I don’t think I have heard of that?
Beaune is a village in Burgundy. In Burgandy all the wines are named after the villages.
Nice, and is there anything you would like to convey to students before we finish this interview?
The only thing I would convey is to not think too far ahead. It is important to enjoy your time in college. It obviously goes by with a wink of an eye. Enjoy your time there and don’t start worrying about your professional career until you need to.
* * *
The Cornell Hotel Society Executive Board thanks the Cornell Hotel Society – Collegiate Chapter for initiating and conducting the “Conversations with Alumni” project.
CHS At 90
/in Uncategorized/by Robert MandelbaumOn May 12, 1928, alumni from the recently formed Cornell University School of Hotel Administration formed the school’s official alumni association: The Cornell Society of Hotelmen. Throughout 2018, the Cornell Hotel Society will celebrate our 90th anniversary by featuring documents found in the university archives. Thanks to Rick Aide ’75, Nickie Fredenburg, and Togo Tamura’19 for visiting the archives and retrieving the documents.
Rick Aide ’75, Nickie Fredenburg, Togo Tamura’19
Early Banquets
Since the beginning of time, Hotelies have enjoyed their food and wine. What better way for a bunch of Hotelies to get together and bond both professionally, and socially. Below are the menus from some of the first banquets held by the Cornell Society of Hotelmen.
Cover – Second Annual CSH Banquet
Menu – Second Annual CSH Banquet
Cover – Third Annual CSH Banquet
Menu – Third Annual CSH Banquet
CHS Leaders and Students Gather at CALC
/in Uncategorized/by Robert MandelbaumOn February 2, 2018, the CHS executive board invited CHS leaders and Hotel School students to a three-course meal at Alma de Cuba, and an evening of good conversation, food, and networking. The dinner was held during the 2018 Cornell Alumni Leadership Conference in Philadelphia. Thanks to David McCabe MMH ’06 and STARR restaurants for the generous hospitality.
Attendees Included:
Alma de Cuba Philadelphia – CALC 2018
Alma de Cuba Philadelphia – CALC 2018
Alma de Cuba Philadelphia – CALC 2018
CHS France Enjoys Gastronomic Drinks at Hotel Shangri-La
/in Chapter Event/by Robert MandelbaumOn January 29, 2018, the CHS France chapter held a small Get Together at the Bar “Le Botaniste” of the Hotel Shangri-la Paris. The Hotelies in attendance tasted a selection of great cocktails from Chef Barman Clément Emery and discovered the new identity of the bar, the former home of scientist Prince Roland Bonaparte.
Thanks to its Founder Erwan Castain (Cornell), the group enjoyed Pernod Ricard’s new internal start-up and concept “L’Orbe”, a range of gastronomic drinks between fine cuisine and mixology. Each recipe of L’Orbe is a marriage between a culinary ingredient and a fine spirit, and is based on a scientific technique called “micro-encapsulation” used to protect fragile products over time.
Participants (left to right):
Not in the picture:
CHS France – Get Together at Hotel Shangri-La Paris
Hotelies Gather at FITUR 2018
/in Chapter Event/by Robert MandelbaumTwelve Hotelies and their guests gathered for a rececption at the Posada del Dragon in the Madrid during the FITUR International Tourism Trade Fair January 17 to 21, 2018. As in the past, the event was organised by Eduardo Irigoras of Continuum Hotelservice and his great network.
CHS thanks event host Lars von der Wettern, co-owner of the Posada del Dragon, who provided superb finger food, and selected wines, prepared by his excellent team. Proceeds from the event went towards scholarship.
Hotelie reception in Madrid during FITUR 2018
Hotelie reception in Madrid during FITUR 2018
Hotelie reception in Madrid during FITUR 2018
Hotelie reception in Madrid during FITUR 2018
CHS Chicago Dines with HLDP Students
/in Chapter Event/by Robert MandelbaumThe Cornell Hotel Society Chicago Chapter joined SHA students, Richard Adie ‘75, and Ravinder Kingra MMH’12 for dinner on January 18, 2018. Local alums Jennifer Perna ‘92, Steven Stern ‘07, Sophia Lin Kanno ‘05, and Stacey Nadolny ‘05 enjoyed a lively dinner with the group at Chicago’s iconic Greek Islands. The eight students spent the week touring Chicago as part of the Hotel Leadership Development Program. Thank you to all of the local alums that provided their time and resources this week for the HLDP students!!
CHS Chicago Dines with HLDP Students