Tamiment Resort, pictured in 1965 and 2023. Read more about Tamiments history here and here.

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Tamiment Resort, pictured in 1965 and 2023. Read more about Tamiments history here and here.
Kliph Nesteroff: 1947. Sid Caesar opened at the Copacabana. Max Liebman was fashioning a nightclub act for him. And then 1948-49 Sid Caesar is becoming hot on Broadway in a show called Make Mine Mannhattan. This was around the time that you first met Sid Caesar. There’s a shadow figure here, some Catskill comedian that you’re mentioned in the past, Don Appell, who introduces you to Sid Caesar. Who was Don Appell ?
Mel Brooks: None of your business! All right, I’ll tell you. Don Appell was, like, the only genuine celebrity we had in Williamsburg. And he was in a play. He was an actor in a play based on a book called Native Son. A great Black actor by the name of Canada Lee starred. Don Appell was in that.
My friend Joey and I used to meet Don at the grocery store - on the milk box outside the store. Joey and I would sit there waiting until about 11:30 when Don would show up and tell us what was happening at the Rialto, what was going on on Broadway, and stories of being an actor on Broadway. And we were thrilled… we were thrilled.
That was Don Appel. And then Joey did his stuff - juggling and running around to show Don impressions of Jimmy Cagney and Humphrey Bogart and stuff like that. And then I would do kind of bizarre things like impressions of a bald, Jewish man going on strike.
Don appreciated that. He thought, you know, there’s a brush stroke of avant-garde here. Don was a social director, in addition to being an actor on Broadway. He was a social director in the Mountains, the Borscht Belt. And in the band at The Avon Lodge, where he was social director, was Sid Caesar playing tenor sax.
He used Sid as a utility comic - and began to see he was a lot more than a utility comic… that he was really blessed with comic brilliance and madness.
Don became a fan of Sid and kept moving him along. I think he talked to Max Liebman at Tamiment about Sid because Tamiment was a big place and Avon Lodge was very little.
Max Liebman used Sid as comedy relief in Tars and Spars, which he directed, or produced - I’m not sure what he did. But he put together this little coast guard show with Alfred Drake and Janet Blair in the leads, and for comedy relief there was Sid Caesar doing shtick. Don Appell was there always helping and guiding like the eminence grise, guiding Sid Caesar’s career.
And then when there was an opening, in the Mountains, Don sent me to the Butler Lodge, which was a neighboring hotel, in Hurleyville. I had four or five jobs. I was an assistant busboy - I don’t know how low you can get. I was very young. I was fourteen. I was an assistant busboy. I was a rowboat wrangler - keeping the rowboats so they wouldn’t drift away. I was a utility actor. And one day - Don Appel got me this job.
There was a guy Joe Dolphin - D-O-L-F-A-N - it was really was “F” and he changed it to “P.H.” He wanted to be just a little more gentile because the “F” was kind of Russian-Jewish.
There was a play called Uncle Harry. The actor playing the district attorney fell in a hole or something, hurt his leg and couldn’t go on. One of the actors made me up. He was cruel - gave me a wig, glued it on my head, glued a beard. I knew the lines: “There there, Harry. Relax. Have a glass of water and tell me in your own words exactly what you recall of that night.”
All right, so comes time, I’m a little worried, a little nervous, I get onstage, and I’m sitting there. The star enters, and he says, “Oh, I don't know, I don’t know, I don’t know.” I say, “ There there, Harry. Relax. Take it easy, have a glass of water, and tell me in your own words…”
And on the word ‘words,’ the water - a full glass of water - falls out of my hand, smashes, and there’s glass and water all over the fucking place. There’s nothing but glass and water and there is a shocked silence from the audience. Oh my god. I get up, I walk down to the footlights, I rip off this crazy wig, I say, “I’m only fourteen! I’ve never done this before!” And the audience goes crazy, and I knew, well, I think it’s comedy for me.
Celebrating May Day -- Archival films from Tamiment Library Collections
Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives Moving Images Collection FILMS.001
https://vimeo.com/240850876
May Day 1950, NYC
Tamiment’s Constellation room (pictured in 1966 and 2023) was the resorts “late-late club” and featured music, two bars and snacks. It’s currently abandoned.
You now know how Tamiment started. But why did it close? After operating as a Socialist-run resort for decades, it was sold in 1963. At the time of the sale, it was described as "one of the largest resort hotels in the country." Over the next 20 years, it attracted stars like Danny Kaye, Joan Rivers, Frankie Valli, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Alan King, and Donny and Marie Osmond, who frequently visited and performed there. In 1982, it was purchased by Vegas legend Wayne Newton, who owned it for only 5 years.
Eventually, it landed in the hands of Suong Hong who sold the resort for $64 million to a development company called Greystone Capital Partners. At the time of its sale, Tamiment was considered "a pillar of the Poconos tourist industry." There were plans for 200 condominiums to replace the hotel buildings but as of 2023, the property sits empty. I’m not sure why Greystone demolished almost everything just to never build their condos.
The clubhouse lounge is one of the last buildings left behind. It overlooked the golf course and included a sitting area, terrace and the Constellation room “late-late” bar. The course remained open a few years after the resort closed and this building was used as the pro shop, which is why it was spared from demolition. Source
Tamiment Resort originally opened as Camp Tamiment in 1921 as a Socialist camp and summer school. It was owned and operated by the Rand School, a socialist institution based out of NYC. Upon opening, its goal was "to diffuse a general knowledge of literature, art and science through the medium of lectures, publications, and dramatic performances." At this time, all of the camp’s profits were reinvested in the camp or donated to charitable or educational institutions, which allowed Tamiment to have tax-exempt status.
It offered educational, cultural and recreational programs and activities, including swimming, tennis and golf. In the 1950s, Tamiment's golf course would be ranked among the top 200 U.S. courses by Golf Digest magainze.
Over time, it merged into a more mainstream, regular resort and eventually lost its tax exempt status. In the 1960s, the property included over 150 buildings, over 300 employees, a theater that could seat 1,000 people, and a dining room that could seat 1,200. So what happened?
Most of the resort was demolished in 2005. So much of this property looks like the last few photos: old foundations, piles of rubble and stairways to nowhere. Aside from the admin building (pictured) and lounge (which I’ll post about soon), there isn’t much left behind.
The Tamiment Resort operated from 1921 through 2005. It originally opened as a Socialist summer camp, but later developed into a regular resort until it fell under private ownership. It was often referred to as "a progressive version of the Catskills," and catered to young Jewish singles.
The resort was liquidated in 2005 and demolished. I was able to find the entrance to it on Google Street View (circa 2009). Located in the Poconos, Pennsylvania. Source
Dead Pocono Resorts: Matchbook edition
Pocmont was drastically renovated and reopened as the Bushkill Inn & Conference Center - A portion of Fernwood was sold, the rest of the property is abandoned or lost to fire - Tamiment was demolished - Penn Hills is partially burned down and abandoned - Mount Airy Lodge was demolished and the more modern Mount Airy Casino + Hotel was built on its spot - Pocono Manor Inn burned down