Once upon a time, old friends John Hay (personal secretary to
Abraham Lincoln and later secretary of state for both Teddy
Roosevelt and William Howard Taft) and Henry Adams (scholarly
descendant of our second and sixth presidents and the author of the
classics Democracy and The Education of Henry
Adams) decided that it would be a nice idea to live on the
same block. And they didn’t choose just any block. Their adjoining
family mansions stood on H Street, directly overlooking Lafayette
Park to the south, just a stone’s throw from the White House. Given
his low opinion of Woodrow Wilson, Henry Adams was probably sorely
tempted to take advantage of that proximity in his later years.
Unfortunately, the man didn’t have much of a throwing arm.
By the
late 1920s, all the Adams and Hay inhabitants of the two mansions
had either passed away or moved on. Their properties were
purchased, their homes demolished, and Harry Wardman, the doyen of
Washington builders, erected a tastefully luxurious,
state-of-the-art hotel on the site. At 139 rooms, the inevitably
named Hay-Adams was just the right size to accommodate a select
clientele of the great and the famous, with room to spare for the
merely well-heeled.
An elegant, beautifully proportioned building in the best
Beaux-Arts style, it was the creation of Harry Wardman’s senior
architect, Mihran Mesrobian, who had served as palace architect to
the last sultan of Turkey—not that all that many new palaces were
going up in the twilight years of the Ottoman Empire—before
beginning a new career in the New World. I knew him as Uncle Mihran
because he was married to my grandmother’s sister. Uncle Mihran
died in 1975, but I suspect he was present in spirit at the
Hay-Adams in 2003 when I served as master of ceremonies for the
hotel’s 75th anniversary gala. One of the speakers—along with a
bevy of celebrated authors and public figures—was my cousin,
Caroline Mesrobian Hickman, granddaughter of the architect and a
scholarly expert on his work.
A COZY SPACE located at English basement level, the Off
the Record Bar has been designated one of the “World’s Best Hotel
Bars” by Forbes.com, and John Boswell, its senior dispenser for 15
years now, has been given Washingtonian
magazine’s “Best Bartender” award not once but four times.
While it charges top prices, the pours are generous, the liquor
selection and wine list are superb, and the menu draws from the
same kitchen that produces gourmet fare for the formal dining room
and frequent banquets hosted by the hotel. In this small space at
least, everything—at any rate, everything edible and potable—is for
the best in the best of all possible worlds. Under John’s skilled
if slightly Falstaffian stewardship, and ably assisted by
impeccable bartenders David Metzner and Michel Rivera and a
polished waiting staff, the Off the Record has become a
landmark-within-a-landmark, a Mecca for journalists, visiting
literary and entertainment types, political bigwigs, and younger,
aspiring wannabes from all of the above categories.
Just as Charles Lindbergh, Sinclair Lewis, senior members of the
Barrymore theatrical dynasty, and Amelia Earhart typified the
hotel’s A-list in its early days, more recent guests and bar
visitors I happen to have observed include Brad Pitt, Henry and
Nancy Kissinger, present and former national security advisors,
members of Congress, labor and industry bosses (the hotel is
flanked by the Chamber of Commerce and AFL-CIO national
headquarters, making its bar a demilitarized drinking zone of
sorts), and famous authors like David McCullough—appropriately
enough, the distinguished biographer of John, the Founding Adams. A
longtime fan of the hotel, McCullough first stayed in it with his
young bride many years ago, and he was one of the most amusing
speakers at the 75th anniversary gala, as entertaining and
insightful in person as he is on paper.
Indeed, you never know who will amble into the Off the Record on
any given evening. I remember a particular night about eight years
ago when I stopped by after dining elsewhere for a few postprandial
Dewars and sodas, and noticed a familiar but rather morose figure
sitting by himself at a table close to the bar. It was a famous
news broadcaster and, though I didn’t know it at the time, he had
just been diagnosed with terminal cancer.
Fortunately, most visitors to the Off the Record Bar don’t come
there to contemplate their looming mortality. A good time is
usually had by all, and on many nights group conversations tend to
spill over and intermingle in serendipitous ways. And then there
are the pleasant surprises that reconnect faded friendships and
revive old acquaintances. On one summer evening last year, as I
stood with my back to the entrance, focused on skewering a rather
promising Kalamata olive in the nibbles dish, I heard a booming
voice with a Southern accent call out my name.
It belonged to a former Hill staffer I hadn’t seen for years,
but who had just snagged the nomination for a safe House seat in
his native state—which, like him, will remain nameless. He has
since been elected, and I’m looking forward to many a future
conversation with him at the bar…although, like the name of the
bar itself, they will all be Off the Record.