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(L-R)
Gretchen Haase and Jaime Revis
at the downtown Hustler.
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Best Place for
a First Date Dinner
York Street International Café. Comfy cozy, great food and lots
of kitschy distractions if your date is conversationally impaired. There's
eclectic music and I-want-to-get-closer-to-you seating in the upstairs
bar if the date's going well. Finally, a Tarot Card reading is a plus
for those who need to know if they're going to score. York Street International
Café, 738 York St., Newport, 859-261-9675.
Best Place for
the Second Date Dinner
Thai takeout and cold beers on the Serpentine Wall at sunset. Hide the
beers.
Best Place to
Take a Blind Date
Iron Horse Inn. You don't have to decide until you get there if he/she
is worth "hoity-toity" (like the downstairs dining room offers)
or if someplace more casual (like the upstairs tavern) is appropriate.
Or, if you know it's going to be a long evening, the upstairs features
live Jazz several nights of the week, so you won't even have to attempt
small talk. Either way, you're guaranteed a great meal. Iron Horse Inn,
40 Village Square, Glendale, 513-771-4787.
Best Film Fest
to Take a First Date
The Israeli Jewish Film Festival, which recently closed with The Flying
Camel, a comedy set in Tel Aviv and screened in Hebrew with English subtitles.
The films range from the hilarious to the poignant and thoughtful. You'll
score points as an intellectual with a heart. Mariemont Theatre, 6906
Wooster Pike, Mariemont, 513-985-1504.
Best Film Fest
Not to Take a Date
The annual Cincinnati Women's Film Festival each winter. The most recent
incarnation featured a day of screenings of independent films, including
My Feminism, The Righteous Babes, Bedevil, Compensations, Golden Threads
and Tree Shade. Take your girlfriend here, and you might be walking home
alone. Raymond Walters College Theater, 9555 Plainfield Road, Blue Ash,
513-745-5645.
Best Place to
Take Your Homey for a Ride on a Surrey With the Fringe on Top
At Northern Kentucky's newest museum, The Carriage Museum, which boasts
the region's largest collection of buggies, surreys with a fringe on top,
sleighs, racers, runabouts, hickory wagons, vans and carts. Of special
note is a rare drop-front phaeton "that cost a fortune," according
to organizers. All two dozen carriages are housed in a brand-new museum
facility built expressly to house the collection. Afterwards, stroll the
romantic streets of Old Washington historic district. The Carriage Museum,
2213 Main St., Maysville, Ky., 859-759-7411.
Best Expensive
Romantic Dinner
The Celestial, with its stylish lounge, lilting live Jazz, incredible
skyline and river views and all-around atmosphere with a capital A. The
Celestial, 1071 Celestial St., Mount Adams, 513-241-4455.
Best Bargain Romantic
Dinner
Score points by suggesting an elegant, reserved moment at the Tearoom
at the Bonbonerie. Enjoy an afternoon of scones, finger sandwiches and
exotic tea. Tearoom at the Bonbonerie, 2030 Madison Road, O'Bryonville,
513-321-3399.
Best Romantic
Bench
There's nothing better than taking your beau/beaux for a romantic view
of the Ohio River and the vast Northern Kentucky landscape on a sunny
Sunday afternoon at the Eden Park overlook benches. When you get bored
with the view, check out the racy graffiti on the barrier wall and get
lovemaking tips from the inscriptions on the trees.
Best Kept Secret
Despite our civic reputation as a sour old spinster, Cincinnati actually
has a number of places that offer erotic toys, gifts, clothing, books,
magazines and videos. Shhhh, just don't tell anyone. Among our favorite
spots are Hustler (ladies, get 20 percent off on Tuesdays), Elyse's Passion,
Tip Top, Wetlands, Pyramid Leather, Pink Pyramid, The Cupboard and Kroger.
Have fun! Hustler Books Magazine & Gifts, 411 Elm St., Downtown, 513-421-7323;
1038 Lebanon St., Monroe, 513-539-6969. Elyse's Passion, 1210 Sycamore
St., Over-the-Rhine, 513-541-0800. Tip Top Magazines, 2611 Vine St., Corryville,
513-751-0900. Wetlands, 1289 W. Ohio Pike, Amelia, 513-943-ROXY. Pyramid
Leather Crypt and Gallery, 4040 Hamilton Ave., Northside, 513-591-1700.
Pink Pyramid, 907 Race St., Downtown,513-621-7465. The Cupboard, 2613
Vine St., Corryville, 513-281-8110. Kroger, multiple locations throughout
Greater Cincinnati.
Best Romantic
Hotel on a Budget
The Mariemont Inn, a quaint Tudor-style hotel built in 1926. The place,
even though it's now a Best Western, oozes Ye Olde England, with lots
of antique furniture and headboards in its 60 or so rooms. Plus terrific
meals at the hotel restaurant, National Exemplar, and intimate movies
at the movie theater in Mariemont Square right across the street. The
Mariemont Inn, 6880 Wooster Road, Mariemont, 513-271-2100.
Best Romantic
Hotel, No Expense Spared
A night at the Emery Presidential Suite at the Cincinnatian Hotel. Considered
Cincinnati's most expensive hotel room, the Emery Suite can easily set
you back $1,500 a night. Still, you do get two bedrooms, a living room,
dining room and two baths, not to mention two fireplaces, a wet bar, whirlpools
and piped-in stereo system. The hotel gladly supplies terry cloth robes
and lush bedding and turn-down service. This is the suite Billy Joel likes
to stay in, so it's probably already booked for May 13. Cincinnatian Hotel,
601 Vine St., Downtown, 513-381-3000.
Best Convenient
Place to Get Hitched
The interdenominational chapel inside the main terminal of the Greater
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. What a way to start
a marriage: among the hustle and bustle of jetliners and travelers. Hell,
your bridal guests can fly in, hop off the plane and get right back on
immediately after the ceremony. Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International
Airport, Hebron, 859-767-3144.
Best Oddball Place
to Get Married
How about doing the deed at the Ohio Renaissance Festival? This 30-acre
complex, open in the summer and early autumn only, is a medieval theme
park stocked with roaming kings, queens and knights
a virtual 16th-century town. Wedding packages include the "King &
Queen" (at the high end of the scale, a grand total of $3,000): The
happy couple gets a bagpipe procession, admission for 75 guests, carriage
ride to St. Peter's English Chapel, champagne and roses, and the park
even supplies the ordained minister. We're not jousting you. Other packages
start at a more modest $250. Ohio Renaissance Festival, Ohio Hwy. 73 at
I-71, Harveysburg, 513-897-7000.
Best Bridal Central
The 23 businesses along three blocks of Benson Street and Jefferson Avenue
in beautiful downtown Reading that cater specifically to brides and grooms.
From wedding dresses to bridal cakes, this is the ultimate nuptial planning
center. Shops include Bridal & Formal, winner of this year's Readers
Pick, plus Patricia's Weddings and Custom Cakes Unlimited, Paris Veils
and Bridal Accessories, Bridal Warehouse, Cincinnati Bride, Precious Moments
Photography, Carrousel Weddings, Oasis Florists and Under Wraps. Reading
Wedding Mall, Jefferson Avenue at Benson Street, Reading, 513-733-3100.
Best Bridal Alternative
If you're looking for bridal gear that's funky, used and relatively
inexpensive, try Casablanca Vintage. Not since Scentiment's went into
bondage has this city seen an outlet this comprehensive for authentic
vintage clothing and accessories. Throw in a visit to other nearby Northside
retailers, and you have a Wedding Mall for the alt crowd. They even offer
layaway and take credit cards. Casablanca Vintage, 3944 Spring Grove Ave.,
Northside, 513-541-6999.
Best Place to
Break up
At La Normandie, where it's quiet and dignified, with efficient waitstaff
that come and go regularly with condiments and plates, bread and entrées.
One wouldn't raise his or her voice in this comfortably classic setting.
And there's something upscale about sharing the kitchen with The Maisonette,
minus the price tag. La Normandie, 114 E. Sixth St., Downtown, 513-287-7782.
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