You can now really have breakfast at Tiffany

Rob Bates

Four years ago, while mystery-shopping Tiffany, I asked the sales clerk if you can have breakfast at Tiffany. He said no, but that’s the question he’s asked most often.

That made me wonder: Why doesn’t Tiffany serve breakfast? Shouldn’t it give the people what they want?

And now—some 59 years after Truman Capote’s book, 56 years after the Audrey Hepburn romantic comedy, and 24 years after the Deep Blue Something song—you can actually have breakfast at Tiffany. Well, at one of them.

On Friday the third of November, the famed retailer opened the Blue Box Café on the revamped fourth floor of its New York City flagship. Its seats are coated in its signature robin’s egg blue and though it serves lunch, coffee, and alcohol, most of the attention has focused—of course—on breakfast.

While the items on the menu will rotate, for now the Café is offering standard New York City brunch fare, like seasonal fruits and berries, smoked salmon, and avocado toast. That, along with coffee, will set you back $29; even with food, the standard Tiffany markup comes into play. (The full menu can be seen here.)

new-blue-box-cafe-at-tiffany-and-co-fifth-avenue-flagship-storeWill the morning meal at Tiffany prove as spiritually nourishing for visitors as it was for movie heroine Holly Golightly? Even though she was reduced to chomping on a croissant while gazing up at the store windows, she always made the pilgrimage to Tiffany because “nothing bad [can] happen to you there…It calms me down right away.”

While she may be a unique case, opening this café seems like a smart business move for Tiffany and a sign that is embracing the sometimes-racy film that many now associate with it. (In September, it paid $840,000 for the original script, making it the most expensive movie script every sold at auction.) It’s also a sign that, after years of uneven sales, Tiffany is diversifying its business.

Right next to the café on the revamped fourth floor is Tiffany’s new home and accessories section. That department has gotten much derision (and attention!) by offering “everyday objects” like a $9,000 ball of yarn and a $95 paper clip. One assumes it will also feature everyday objects that everyday people might want to buy.

Read full article

Source JCK Online