Photograph Portrait ‘Miss Veneer’ @ Lucky Cheng’s New York
Anonymous Photograph Portrait of infamous drag performer Miss Veneer, taken at the also infamous Lucky Cheng’s, in the Lower East Side, soon after it opened in the early nineties. This was a very underground bar lounge who’s entire staff was drag queens/performers. Eventually, and especially after being featured in ‘Sex in the City’, the bar was overrun by ‘Bridge & Tunnel’ crowd, which killed it’s uniqueness.
Photograph available standard sizes. Price accordingly.
Example from my private collection of an 11×14 inch color digital print, featured in a silver frame and matted. Frame measures 20×24 inches.
Print only $350.
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Lucky Cheng’s Chinese Restaurant and Bar at 24 First Avenue, Between East 1st. Street and East 2nd Street, East Village, New York City.
Photo by James and Karla Murray.
In 1993, Lucky Cheng’s opened its doors in New York City’s East Village, quickly becoming a cultural sensation and an iconic symbol of the city’s LGBTQ+ nightlife. Located at 24 First Avenue between East 1st and East 2nd Streets, the restaurant stood out not only for its playful, kitschy decor but also for its groundbreaking concept: an upscale Chinese restaurant and bar where the waitstaff and performers were predominantly Asian drag queens and transgender women.
The establishment was the brainchild of Gilbert Wong, a queer restaurateur who saw the potential to create a space that combined fine dining with the campy, glamorous spectacle of drag performance. Lucky Cheng’s was ahead of its time, blending food, fashion, and live entertainment in an immersive experience that celebrated diversity and self-expression. Patrons were treated to a unique fusion of Chinese-American cuisine and dazzling cabaret-style performances featuring song, dance, comedy, and playful interaction with diners. Drag queens sashayed through the tables, serving food while delivering biting humor and unforgettable performances.
The performers at Lucky Cheng’s became a core part of its appeal, drawing crowds of celebrities, tourists, and locals alike. The venue’s cast, often dressed in elaborate gowns and stylized wigs, embodied both traditional drag aesthetics and unique cultural influences, helping to redefine mainstream perceptions of drag artistry. Many of the performers were also transgender women, making Lucky Cheng’s a trailblazer in providing employment and visibility to trans performers at a time when they faced significant marginalization in both the LGBTQ+ community and society at large.
The location in the East Village was significant—this neighborhood was long known for its countercultural edge and history as a hub for artists, musicians, and activists. Lucky Cheng’s fit perfectly into this landscape of experimentation and rebellion against societal norms, serving as a beacon of joy and empowerment during the turbulent early 1990s, a period marked by the ongoing AIDS crisis and growing political activism for LGBTQ+ rights.
The venue became a hotspot for celebrations such as birthdays, bachelorette parties, and even corporate events, with guests eager to experience its blend of bold entertainment and culinary flair. The staff’s charisma and audacity were the heart of Lucky Cheng’s success, as they balanced humor, raunch, and glamour in a way that felt both intimate and larger-than-life.
The legacy of Lucky Cheng’s extends beyond its initial location. It set the standard for interactive dining and helped pave the way for the growing acceptance of drag culture in mainstream entertainment. Drag brunches and themed restaurants that followed owe a debt to Lucky Cheng’s groundbreaking model, which transformed a dining experience into an unforgettable spectacle that celebrated queer identity and Asian-American representation. It was more than a restaurant—it was a cultural phenomenon that embodied the resilience, creativity, and pride of the LGBTQ+ community in New York City during the 1990s.