Leonard "Boogie" Weinglass

Leonard "Boogie" Weinglass

Leonard “Boogie” Weinglass (born 1941) is a charismatic American businessman who founded Merry-Go-Round (retailer), a chain of restaurants named Boogie’s Diner, and whose early life was portrayed by actor Mickey Rourke in the 1982 classic American film, Diner (film).

Personal history

In 1968 Weinglass opened the first Merry-Go-Round (retailer) on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, in the heart of that town's hippie district. The store was known for tie-dyed T-shirts, Sgt. Pepper jackets, bell-bottoms, and the occasional pot pipe. Together with business partner Harold Goldsmith, who died in a private airplane crash in Aspen, CO in 1991, Weinglass built Merry-Go-Round into an international publicly traded retailer with over $1 billion in annual sales, 1,500 stores and 15,000 employees. In 1987 Merry-Go-Round was ranked 34th on Forbes list of the 200 best companies in America, with a five-year average return on equity of 29.1 percent. In 1988 the Merry-Go-Round made its first foray into the Manhattan market, opening a 3,500-square-foot store in the East Village.

Weinglass attended Forest Park High School (Maryland) in mostly Jewish northwest Baltimore in the 1950s, where he was a frequent truant. He was a fixture in a teen scene that centered on hanging out in diners. His childhood friends included Ellen Cohen, who later achieved fame as Mama Cass Elliot of the rock band the Mamas and the Papas, and Barry Levinson, the Academy Award-winning movie director. Levinson chose to pay homage to the Baltimore of his youth and Weinglass in his first feature film, the American classic, Diner. In the movie "Boogie” , the womanizing prankster played by actor Mickey Rourke, was patterned directly after Weinglass.

After leaving Merry-Go-Round Weinglass opened a string of retail locations called Boogie’s Diner, the first clothing and food concept mix. This is a combination 1950s-style diner, clothing, and memorabilia boutique. The stores expanded to a total of six locations including Chicago, New York, Las Vegas, Washington, DC, and Los Angeles, with the anchor location in Aspen, CO. By 2000, all had closed with the exception of the Aspen location which remains today as one of the signature ‘go-to’ restaurants in town. The diner was the basis for a short lived Canadian sitcom called Boogies Diner.

Weinglass made several unsuccessful attempts to purchase professional sports teams for his native Baltimore. In 1992 Weinglass attempted to entice the National Football League to expand to Baltimore, nine years after the city’s beloved Colts moved to Indianapolis. The league bypassed Baltimore and expanded to Jacksonville and Charlotte, NC instead. In 1991 Weinglass pursued a stake in the Baltimore Orioles, but then owner Eli Jacobs decided to maintain control over the team.

In February 1993 Weinglass was brought back to Merry-Go-Round to resurrect the company. However the effort failed and the retailer filed for bankruptcy protection in 1994.

References

* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE6DA1231F932A15752C1A965958260] NY Times: November 21, 1993, "Hot (N.F.)L. Baltimore: N.F.L. Owners Have New Expansion Favorite"
* [http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1996/12/23/219820/index.htm] Fortune Magazine, December 23rd, 1996, "THE MAN WHO BOOGIED AWAY A BILLION BUILDING A RETAIL CLOTHING EMPIRE WAS EASY FOR LEONARD "BOOGIE" WEINGLASS. THEN CAME A SERIES OF CLASSIC MANAGEMENT BLUNDERS--AND IT ALL FELL APART"
* [http://www.macklewis.com/boogie.htm] Baltimore Sun, June 20, 1991, "Once upon a time, 'Boogie' boxed with Mack Lewis Together again, trainer and student are partners"
* [http://www.tv.com/show/3596/summary.html] TV.com, Boogies Diner, Premiered: January 1, 1994


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