Amos Wengler: The Songwriter of Coney Island 10/01/2009
Amos Wengler has lived in Coney Island or nearby for most of the last four and a half decades. His family emigrated from Israel in 1962, when he was 17, and moved into one of the towers built by Fred Trump. For years, Wengler has been composing and singing songs about Coney Island, from songs about the hot dog eating contest to the “polar bears” (a local club of people who swim in the ocean during the winter). During community meetings discussing redevelopment of the neighborhood, Wengler has been known to sing, instead of speak, in an effort to persuade politicians to stop their development plans. On a recent Saturday afternoon, I sat down with Wengler in the Coney Island Museum for a chat about the neighborhood, its atmosphere and his music. I also recorded him singing in the Coney Island subway station, where he has a permit to sing. Amos Wengler's "Hot Dog Song", "Polar Bear Song", and "In the City" More of Wengler’s singing, such as his Mermaid Parade song and his Save Coney Island song can be seen on YouTube or MySpace. Tucked into the parking lot of the New Fulton Fish Market in Hunts Point is the city’s only wholesale farmers market—and now it’s getting a boost from a $296,000 grant to the Council on the Environment of New York City, which runs farmers markets in all five boroughs. Continue reading here. ![]() Charles Denson reads from his book in front of a jellyfish tank at the New York Aquarium. Denson was one of half a dozen poets and other writers who appeared at the first annual PARACHUTE: The Coney Island Performance Festival. ![]() Suzie the elephant is given a hose bath by local firefighters and police officers in Coney Island, Brooklyn. |


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