Formerly Famous: Julius Keller

Julius Keller’s primary claim to fame was his role as the man behind Maxim’s, a popular New York eatery that shamelessly borrowed its name from the venerable Parisian nightspot. Though he would be responsible for a number of restaurant and nightclub firsts, in his early years, one would have been hard-pressed to predict such success for Keller.

One of seven siblings, the diminutive Keller—he stated in his engaging 1939 memoir, Inns and Outs, that he stood just 5’ 3”—was born in Basle, Switzerland. Unbeknownst to his family, he emigrated to the United States at 16, arriving in NYC with fifty cents in his pocket.

It wasn’t long before Keller found himself scrambling for food and shelter, occasionally having to settle for a berth on a park bench. Finally, he secured a job at a bakery, earning $16 a month plus room and board. After subsequently working as a short-order cook and an oyster shucker, Keller took a job as a waiter at the Tenderloin’s Paisley House. From there he moved to the tony Gilsey House, though he was let go after spilling Lobster Newberg in the lap of Ada Rehan, a prominent actress of the day.

In the 1890s, Keller was a server at the city’s most acclaimed restaurant, Delmonico’s, furthering his education in the ways and whims of the rich and famous.

Keller was later hired at Louis Sherry‘s Casino at New Hampshire’s Narragansett Pier. It was there that he made his first lasting mark in the restaurant world. When the wife of hotelier Paran Stevens requested soft clams be served with her luncheon but offered no specifics as to how they were to be prepared, Keller presented her with a dish of his invention: Large clam bellies were baked on the half shell with butter, paprika, shallots, and a strip of bacon.

Mrs. Stevens loved the dish, and when she asked Keller what he called it, he quickly coined the name “Clams Casino,” in honor of his place of employ. Keller went on feature the dish at every restaurant he owned or operated thereafter.

Keller later owned a series of eateries of varying stature and quality. During those years, he augmented his income by running a bookmaking operation. For a while, he even served as proprietor of the Old Heidelberg, a bar that doubled as a house of questionable (if not downright ill) repute.

Keller also dabbled in politics during those years, tying in with Tammany Hall boss Charles F. Murphy. Keller was the driving force behind the Tammany-backed Gastronomic Political Club, which boasted 20,000 members—most of whom were restaurant workers. Keller even ran for the State Assembly, losing by just 250 votes.

Keller got back on a more reputable track when he and two partners took over the lease of a restaurant on 38th Street in a location that had proven over time to be cursed. A burst of inspiration for Keller is what turned the tide.

The Merry Widow was all the theatrical rage at the time, and because Maxim’s of Paris was featured in that comic operetta, Keller adopted the name for his new restaurant. Keller even dressed his staff in faux Old World attire, as did the Paris Maxim’s.

Keller threw a free dinner for the press the night before Maxim’s opened, with free-flowing liquor and a floor show that featured scantily clad lovelies. His gambit paid off handsomely, as Maxim’s received glowing reviews and was very soon the place to see and be seen.

Keller claimed Maxim’s, which in its early days featured small-scale musical performances, was the first cabaret in NYC; he was also said to have mounted the first large floor show in a restaurant, making it Gotham’s first nightclub. A busy dance floor was also key to the establishment’s success, and Keller made it a point to employ handsome young men to dance with wives whose husbands weren’t keen on cutting a rug. One of those young men, discovered washing cars in a nearby garage, later made it big in Hollywood. His name? Rudolph Valentino.

It wasn’t all smooth sailing for Keller and Maxim’s. In 1920, he was found guilty of violating Prohibition laws; though he was sentenced to jail, he never served a day. Perhaps his old political connections came in handy in getting the sentence overturned.

Eventually, Keller felt the call of a quieter life than was to be found along the Great White Way, and he took over operation of the Canoe Place Inn in Hampton Bays, said to be Long Island’s oldest hostelry. There, Keller continued to cater to the movers and shakers in the worlds of finance, politics, society, and show business until his death at the age of 81 on February 26, 1945.

This story originally appeared in the Fall/Winter 2012 issue of Zelda, the Magazine of the Vintage Nouveau.

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