‘A Star is Born’ writer Dorothy Parker’s ghost no longer haunts landmark NYC hotel — here’s why: historians



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Dorothy Parker’s ghost spooked guests at New York City’s landmark Algonquin Hotel for more than 50 years — then suddenly went silent in 2020. 

Local historians suggest the literary icon’s restless spirit desperately called in agony from the beyond, until her dishonored earthly remains were buried with respect beside her family in the Bronx.  

Among other indignities, Parker’s ashes reportedly spent 17 years stuffed in the filing cabinet of a law office in downtown Manhattan.

“You can certainly make the clam that, since Parker’s ashes have returned to New York City, she doesn’t haunt the Algonquin anymore,” Greg Young, host and producer of the “Bowery Boys” podcast, a popular chronicle of Gotham history, told Fox News Digital. 

News of her spirit’s sudden silence came as a shock to Kevin Fitzpatrick, founder of the Dorothy Parker Society. 

“Oh wow. That’s incredible,” Fitzpatrick said Saturday, after being informed by Fox News Digital that Parker’s ghost appears to have left the Algonquin after more than half a century of alleged hauntings. 

Fitzpatrick personally delivered the author’s ashes to Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx for a long overdue proper burial beside her parents and grandparents in August 2020. 

The “Algonquin” Hotel at 59 W. 44th Street in Manhattan is reportedly haunted.
Brigitte Stelzer

Parker was a member of the Algonquin Round Table, a collection of early 20th-century literary luminaries who gathered at the historic Midtown Manhattan hotel, which opened in 1902. 

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Harpo Marx, along with Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning playwright George S. Kaufman and essayist and Oscar-winning screenwriter Robert Benchley — perhaps best known today as the grandfather of “Jaws” author Peter Benchley — were all members of the what they dubbed “the Vicious Circle.”  

Parker carved out a place in literature with withering wit.

Local historians suggest the Dorothy Parker’s restless spirit desperately called in agony from the beyond, until her dishonored earthly remains were buried with respect beside her family in the Bronx.
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“The first thing I do in the morning is brush my teeth and sharpen my tongue,” she said in one of her many oft-repeated quotes.

Parker died of a heart attack in 1967. Reports that her ghost was haunting guests followed soon after her death and continued for decades. 

Many other spirits reportedly still haunt the hotel, too. 

The hotel is said to be haunted by several ghosts.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fitzpatrick spent several hours in the hotel’s sub-sub-basement with paranormal investigator Doug McMillan in 2016, in response to decades of ghostly reports.

“Investigators found all kinds of paranormal activity at the Algonquin,” Fitzpatrick said. “It was spook central.”

Added ghost hunter McMillian, “There were definitely some unresolved issues manifesting themselves down there.” 

American journalist, writer and wit Dorothy Parker (1893 – 1967), at a restaurant. with her husband, Alan Campbell.
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A portrait of Algonquin Round Table members hangs over the hotel’s lobby restaurant. Children reported that the “mean woman” in the painting — Parker — told them to hush if they were being loud or unruly. 

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Reporter Kelly Conaboy of Gawker spent a night at the hotel in 2015 armed with an electromagnetic field reader, Ouija board and crystal pendulum to communicate with the dead.

She asked the 30 late members of the Algonquin Round Table if they were present. 

Eight of them, Conaboy reported, said yes. The reporter determined only that Parker “may be” present.

“These ghost stories become real because people retell them and believe them,” said Young of the “Bowery Boys” podcast.
Zandy Mangold

Elle Decor named the Algonquin one of 30 “most haunted hotels in the world” in 2018, singling out Parker’s spirit. 

“When renovations were made to the hotel’s attic, unexplained noises were reported coming from the empty space,” the outlet reported, “and a photograph of Parker even flew off the wall, shattering.”

Parker’s outcries, observers now believe, were a call by the author’s restless spirit to be reunited with her family.

Parker was a celebrity of American letters. She was among the first contributors to The New Yorker, helping to turn it into one of the nation’s leading periodicals of literature; she wrote the lyrics to Bing Crosby’s hit “I Wished on the Moon”; and she left an imprint on Hollywood, too.

Parker was one of the screenwriters behind “A Star is Born.” Her version appeared on the silver screen in 1937 and has been remade several times. 

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She was also famous for her appetite for alcohol and for her lascivious lifestyle. 

“I like to have a martini. Two at the very most,” she wrote in one famous ode. “After three I’m under the table, after four I’m under my host.”

Her clever quotes are often cited in toasts today. And she’s the namesake of Dorothy Parker Gin from New York Distilling Co., a popular spirit in the Big Apple. 

“Regularly seated at the famed Algonquin Round Table, she occupied the city’s cultural and intellectual center stage,” the distiller proudly points out on its website.



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