{{Short description|New York performing space, bar and club}}

{{Infobox venue | name = Pete's Candy Store | image = Petes Candy Store.JPG | image_alt = Pete's Candy Store in Williamsburg, NYC | address = 709 Lorimer Street | location = Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City | type = Music venue, bar | opened = {{Start date|1999|12|1}} | owner = Andy McDowell | capacity = 125 | website = {{URL|petescandystore.com}} }}

'''Pete's Candy Store''' is a music venue and bar located at 709 Lorimer Street in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City. Opened on December 1, 1999, it is considered Williamsburg's original nightly live music venue and has hosted early performances by artists who later achieved mainstream success, including Norah Jones, Vampire Weekend, Sharon Van Etten, Sufjan Stevens, and Devendra Banhart.<ref name="greenpointers">{{cite web |last=Conlon |first=Erin |title=Pete's Candy Store Celebrates 25 Years in Williamsburg |url=https://greenpointers.com/2024/12/18/petes-candy-store-celebrates-25-years-in-williamsburg/ |website=Greenpointers |date=December 18, 2024 |access-date=}}</ref><ref name="bedbow">{{cite web |last=Spinelli |first=Bradley |title='It Was the Place to Be': 20 Years of Pete's Candy Store |url=https://bedfordandbowery.com/2019/11/it-was-the-place-to-be-20-years-of-petes-candy-store/ |website=Bedford + Bowery |date=November 27, 2019 |access-date=}}</ref>

== History == === Early history of the building === The storefront at 709 Lorimer Street has been in continuous operation since the 1920s. It was originally a general store run by a family known locally as "Funzi's." By the 1970s, ownership passed to Pete Caruso, who gave the establishment its current name. Under Caruso, the space functioned as a diner and neighborhood gathering spot, with poker tables in the back room that would later become the performance space.<ref name="bedbow"/> === Opening as a music venue === In 1999, Andy McDowell, a former film and television set designer, leased the storefront from building owner Jerry Trotta. McDowell, who had moved to Williamsburg in 1990, was drawn to the location's relative isolation at the time, describing the area between Frost and Richardson Streets as "like the Bermuda Triangle" where few people walked.<ref name="greenpointers"/> McDowell opened Pete's Candy Store on December 1, 1999, with co-founder Juliana Nash serving as general manager and music booker. British singer Beth Orton performed the venue's first show before the back room was even fully completed. Nash established many of the venue's early residencies, booking acts including the Howard Fishman Quartet, Reverend Vince Anderson and his Love Choir, and Greg Garing.<ref name="bedbow"/>

The venue quickly became a center of the emerging Williamsburg music scene. The intimate back room, which reviewers have compared to a train car, became known for hosting artists before they achieved wider recognition. Norah Jones performed there in the early 2000s, and bands including Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Dirty Projectors, The Walkmen, and Joanna Newsom played the venue in their early years.<ref name="bedbow"/><ref name="greenpointers"/> In 2019, British pop singer Dua Lipa filmed portions of her music video for "Don't Start Now" at the venue.<ref name="greenpointers"/> The venue celebrated its 20th anniversary in December 2019 with a week-long festival featuring returning artists and former staff members.<ref name="bedbow"/> In December 2024, Pete's celebrated its 25th anniversary. McDowell, who now owns the building after purchasing it from Trotta, has stated his intention to keep the venue unchanged.<ref name="greenpointers"/> == Programming == Pete's Candy Store hosts live music nightly, with all performances free of charge. The venue maintains a policy of primarily booking unknown and unsigned artists, many of whom have subsequently achieved greater recognition.<ref name="bedbow"/> In addition to music, the venue hosts weekly trivia nights, open mic nights, and a variety of recurring events including poetry readings, comedy shows, and an LGBTQ+ comedy showcase called Kweendom.<ref name="bedbow"/> The venue has also hosted the reading series Pete's Reading Series, Astronomy on Tap meetings, and various community events.

=== Revolution Church === From 2006 to 2013, Pete's Candy Store served as the New York City home of Revolution Church, a nondenominational congregation led by pastor Jay Bakker, the son of televangelists Jim Bakker and Tammy Faye Messner.<ref name="abcnews">{{cite web |title=Punk Pastor Preaches Tolerance, Compassion |url=https://abcnews.go.com/WNT/story?id=2711472 |website=ABC News |date=December 8, 2006 |access-date=}}</ref><ref name="startribune">{{cite web |title=Jay Bakker, son of televangelists Jim and Tammy Faye, to start church in Minneapolis |url=https://www.startribune.com/jay-bakker-son-of-televangelists-jim-and-tammy-faye-to-start-church-in-minneapolis/201789551 |website=Star Tribune |date=April 8, 2013 |access-date=}}</ref> Services were held on Sunday afternoons in the venue's back room, with up to 75 attendees.<ref name="startribune"/> Bakker, who described Revolution as "a church about God's grace and love" that welcomed "all people with no expectations of change," relocated to Minneapolis in 2013.<ref name="abcnews"/> == References == {{Reflist}}

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Category:Music venues in Brooklyn Category:Williamsburg, Brooklyn Category:1999 establishments in New York City