Jimmy Morton: Grand Avenue and Dean Street; the building is still there, but it’s nothing [presently]. But it was a local bar. In Robin [Kelley]’s book he refers to it as a small, black-owned café. We’ve got a friend named Vincent Jones, we used to call him Zandu [ Vincent Jones], if he saw this article he would go crazy, because first of all it was owned by Italians named Bordello; in fact Roger Bordello had a liquor store on Bergen Street between Grand and the next street over. Vincent Jones knew this family, and he was the one who talked them into letting Tony’s [Grand Dean] be a jazz spot, and Vincent [Jones] was the one who brought all the acts in. He was a dancer, and they used to bring him out onstage in a coffin, and he had a partner that would be dancing and she would dance and he would come out of the coffin. He used to get mad at me because I was taking all those pictures of young musicians, “and you never took any pictures of my act.” I loved the act, but I never took any pictures of it. When you talk about jazz, most people start talking about Harlem. There was a time when I believe there were more jazz clubs in Brooklyn than there were in Manhattan. Bilal [Abdurahman]’s book lists 24 Brooklyn jazz clubs, and I think Tony’s [Grand Dean] is included.