Get Jeremy Allen White’s jacket from ‘The Bear’ and more NYC events

Each week, Alexa is rounding up the buzziest fashion drops, hotel openings, restaurant debuts and celeb-studded cultural happenings in NYC. It’s our curated guide to the very best things to see, shop, taste and experience around the city. 

What’s making our luxury list this week? That viral jacket from “The Bear” is back, Todd Snyder opens yet another store and Times Square just got a lot sweeter. 

Interested in the NN.07 jacket Jeremy Allen White wore in “The Bear”? Get in the 20,000-person line. Courtesy of NN.07

The seemingly innocuous wool plaid jacket sported by Jeremy Allen White’s character “Carmy” on “The Bear” currently has a 20,000 person waiting list. NN.07, the company that made said jacket (called The Gael), just opened in SoHo and will have a limited supply for sale in-store on September 7. The store is styled out with fall/winter merchandise, plus stylish accessories including jewelry and accessories by Brooklyn-based silversmith Heath Wagoner, Folie À Plusieurs fragrances, tote bags by Japanese brand Amiacalva, sunglasses by Garrett Leight, D’Orsay candles and ceramics by Leslie Scanlon. The Gael jacket will be available in limited quantities in-store only on September 7, with an online release on September 9.

212-994-7595 or [email protected] for more info. 

Earthenware vessels abound in South African artist Andile Dyalvane’s fourth show at Friedman Benda. Courtesy of Friedman Benda

This week marked the debut of Andile Dyalvane’s fourth show at Friedman Benda. Dyalvane, for the uninitiated, is considered one of South Africa’s foremost ceramic artists, whose pieces are in the permanent collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, among others. Through his work he has always sought to honor his Xhosa heritage, and his new show, “Oonomathotholo: Ancestral Whispers,” takes its title from the intergenerational whispers of the Xhosa people. It features over a dozen earthenware works, many of them vessels, that “carry notes of ancient experience passed down through time.”

Through November 2 at FriedmanBenda.com

We all scream for ice cream, and delicious food and crazy cocktails — all on the menu at Serendipity3. Courtesy of Serendipity

Serendipity3 has just opened on West 47 Street, 70 years after it first debuted as a restaurant and general store on the Upper East Side. It’s connected to the OYO Times Square Hotel, and is helmed by chef Joe Calderone, with a menu that mimics the UES version (Frrrozen Hot Chocolate for the win!) albeit with new additions including a Sunday Chicken Dinner Sundae, an ice cream bar with three new flavors, as well as proper bar offering “over-the-top cocktails.” The interior was designed by Wid Chapman Architects, who channeled Andy Warhol (a one-time regular) through reproductions of the artist’s signature pop art depicting Marilyn Monroe, the late Queen Elizabeth II and more.

Serendipity3.com

See artists’ interpretations of “Shades of Light” in Galerie56’s new show, on display through November 6. Courtesy of Galerie56

TriBeCa’s Galerie56, strategically located on the street level of the infamous 56 Leonard (aka “Jenga”) building, just debuted an exhibition in conjunction with London’s Sarah Myerscough Gallery. “Shades of Light” showcases works celebrating organic materials and some pretty incredible craftsmanship, including Full Grown’s willow chairs grown over many years from a single tree, cast in bronze for the first time, turned wood vessels by Ernst Gamperl, winner of the first Loewe prize in 2017, and Eleanor Lakelin’s horse-chestnut burr vessels (in the permanent collections of the Museum of Art and Design, New York and The V&A, London). There’s more, of course, with the bonus of an Anish Kapoor sculpture, just outside.

Through November 6, Galerie56.com

An expansive new location in Madison Avenue is Todd Snyder’s latest New York venture. Courtesy of Todd Snyder

Todd Snyder has opened his Fifth New York City store, a 2,700 square-foot aerie on Madison Avenue at 86th Street. “We are perfectly tailored for the uptown professional — mature men who appreciate sophistication, as well as high-end shoppers who prioritize quality and craftsmanship.” says Alejandro Rhett, Chief Product Officer. To that end, the shop is stocked with all the usual offerings, plus in-house Made-To-Measure services, footwear from Alden, Rubinacci, New Balance and Nike, vintage timepieces in collaboration with Foundwell and eyewear from Todd’s partnership with Moscot. Same-day courier service and in-house tailor are also available at this location.

ToddSnyder.com