Kitty Kelley and Big Boy Restaurants: Difference between pages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
 
→‎Regional franchises: remove circular redirect - Elias Brothers redirects to this article
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{expand|date=July 2008}}
{{for|the actress|Kitty Kelly}}
{{refimprove|date=July 2008}}
'''Kitty Kelley''' (born [[April 4]], [[1942]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[investigative journalist]] and author of several best-selling unauthorized biographies of celebrities and politicians. Described as a "poison pen" biographer,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article754857.ece|title=Oprah's life is next in celebrity 'poison pen' biography club|accessdate=2008-05-08|work=The Times of London|date=[[December 15]], [[2006]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/fact-or-fiction-the-incredible-world-of-kitty-kelley-428539.html|author=Usborne, David|title=Fact or fiction? The incredible world of Kitty Kelley|date=[[December 15]], [[2006]]|accessdate=2008-05-08}}</ref> her profiles frequently contain unflattering personal anecdotes and details, and their accuracy is often questioned.<ref name="jawa">{{cite web|url=http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/044660.php|title=Who is Kitty Kelley?|date=[[September 4]], [[2004]]|accessdate=2008-08-05|publisher=The Jawa Report}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,314100,00.html|title=Nancy:Go Figure|accessdate=2008-08-05|publisher=Entertainment Weekly|author=Meyers, Kate|date=[[April 26]], [[1991]]}}</ref> Though many of her books have topped the best sellers list, Kelley's credibility and sources have been called into question multiple times.<ref>{{cite news|publisher=MSNBC|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6000597/|title=Kitty Kelley defends sources and timing of new Bush book|accessdate=2008-08-05|date=[[September 14]], [[2004]]}}</ref>
{{Infobox_Company |
company_name = Big Boy|
company_logo = [[Image:BigBoyLogo.png|250px|Big Boy logo]] |
company_type = Restaurant |
foundation = 1936 |
location = [[Warren, Michigan]] |
key_people = [[Bob Wian]], Founder <br> Ron Johnston (former vice president)|
industry = [[casual dining]] [[restaurant]] |
slogan = "What's Your Favorite Thing?" |
homepage = [http://www.bigboy.com/ www.bigboy.com]
}}
'''Big Boy''' is a [[chain store|restaurant chain]] started in 1936 by [[Bob Wian]] in [[Glendale, California]], as '''Bob's Big Boy'''. [[Marriott Corporation]] bought the chain in 1967. One of the larger franchise operators, [[Elias Brothers]], purchased the chain from Marriott in 1987, moving the headquarters of the company to [[Warren, Michigan]], and operating it until declaring [[bankruptcy]], in 2000. The Vice president before Big Boy declared bankruptcy was Ron Johnston. Following the bankruptcy, the chain was sold to [[investor]] Robert Liggett, Jr., the current company CEO, who renamed the company [[Big Boy Restaurants International]], and kept the headquarters in Warren. The company is the franchiser for more than 455 Big Boy restaurants in the [[United States]] and [[Canada]]. Big Boy is currently owned by Labelle Management.
In September 2008, current CEO Tony Michaels was released from his position and a search for a replacement is under way.


==Origin==
''[[Time]]'' magazine reported that most journalists believe Kelley "too frequently fails to bring perspective or analysis to the fruits of her reporting and at times lards her work with dollops of questionable inferences and innuendos."<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,972790-2,00.html Books - Time<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In addition, Kelley has been described by [[Joe Klein]] as a "professional sensationalist"<ref>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,995182-1,00.html</ref> and her books have been decried as "Kitty litter."<ref>[http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article2076131.ece Fact or fiction? The incredible world of Kitty Kelley - Americas, World - Independent.co.uk<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
The chain is best-known for its trademark chubby boy in red-and white-checked pants with suspenders holding a double-decker [[cheeseburger]]. The inspiration for Big Boy's name, as well as the model for its mascot, was [[Richard Woodruff]] (1932-1986), of [[Glendale, California]]. When he was six years old, he walked into the diner Bob's Pantry as Bob Wian was attempting to name his new hamburger. Wian said, "Hello, Big Boy" to Woodruff, and the name stuck. [[Warner Bros. Cartoons|Warner Bros.]] animation artist [[Ben Washam]] sketched Richards' [[caricature]], which became the character seen on the company logo. This character would eventually also be featured in ''The Adventures of Big Boy'' comic book, produced as a promotional giveaway for children visiting the restaurant. Since 1997, the comic book has been produced by Craig Yoe's Yoe Studio.


The Big Boy sandwich is somewhat similar to the later [[Big Mac]]: two thin beef patties are placed on a three layer sesame seed bun, with lettuce, a single slice of cheese, and a red relish added (thousand island on the Big Boy). The Frisch's Big Boy franchise instead uses a tartar sauce on their Big Boy. The chain also offers other sandwich combinations, such as the Brawny Lad (a hamburger patty topped with butter and a slice of onion on a rye bun), along with salads, dinner combinations and various desserts.
Her past subjects have included [[Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis]], [[Elizabeth Taylor]], [[Frank Sinatra]], [[Nancy Reagan]], the [[British Royal Family]], and the [[Bush family]]. Although Kelley has been criticized and her books hotly debated, she has never been successfully sued for [[libel]] and has never been forced to retract a written statement.


==Personal life==
==Regional franchises==
[[Image:Big Boy Restaurant Chofu Tokyo M3343.jpg|thumb|right|This Big Boy Restaurant is in [[Chōfu, Tokyo]], [[Japan]].]]
Born in [[Spokane, Washington]], Kitty Kelley received a B.A. in English from the [[University of Washington]]. She worked at the New York World Fair and went on to become a receptionist/press secretary for Senator [[Eugene McCarthy]].<ref name="slate"/> Once in Washington D.C., Kelley became a freelance journalist writing for publications such as ''[[The Washington Star]]''.<ref name="slate"/> Her first book was ''The Glamour Spas'' (Pocket Books, 1975), based on an article she had written about the "fat farm" industry. The book included gossip about the celebrities who attended these spas.
[[Image:BobsBigBoy WilshireLA.jpg|thumb|right|Bob's Big Boy restaurant on [[Wilshire Boulevard]] in [[Los Angeles, California]]. This building was demolished in August 2008]]
In addition to the Bob's Big Boy name, the "Big Boy" concept, menu, and mascot were originally franchised to a wide number of regional franchise holders, listed below (with approximate original territory in parentheses). Of these, only Frisch's still maintains franchise rights to the "Big Boy" name, and many of the other former franchise owners (Shoney's, for example) have expanded into areas that were once the territory of another franchise holder, and the current Big Boy Restaurants International has been expanding its Bob's Big Boy name into territories formerly held by franchisees.


Unlike most modern franchises, the various restaurants differed somewhat from one another in terms of pricing and menu offerings.
==Books==
===Jacqueline Onassis, Elizabeth Taylor and Frank Sinatra biographies===
Kelley's first celebrity [[biography]] was ''Jackie Oh!'' (1978), a life of [[Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis]], which was written on the request of [[Lyle Stuart]], an independent publishing maverick who promoted Kelley's 'Washington insider' angle and launched the book into the [[New York Times Best Seller list|''New York Times'' Best Seller List]]. In the book, Kelley describes [[John F. Kennedy]]'s womanizing and includes personal revelations about Jackie Kennedy's psychological treatment.


*[[Abdow's]] (Massachusetts, Connecticut)
This book was followed by ''[[Elizabeth Taylor]]: The Last Star'' (1981), which was also a ''New York Times'' Best Seller in paperback and hardcover.
*[[Azar's]] (Northern Indiana, Colorado)
*[http://bigboyflorida.com/ Big Boy of Florida] (Exclusive rights to the Central Florida territory was acquired by Irv Lichtenwald from 2006 through 2011 with the right to extend this franchise for 6 additional years)
*Bob's (California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Northeastern Ohio, New York, New Jersey, as well as Indiana and Pennsylvania turnpike and airport locations operated in several states by the Marriott Corp.)
*[[Eat'n Park]] (metro Pittsburgh) dropped Big Boy in 1976.
*[[Elby's]] (West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Eastern Ohio) owned the Big Boy rights to northern West Virginia, originally through Shoney's and quickly expanded Big Boy into bordering Ohio counties, subfranchised through Frisch's, and later expanded through Pennsylvania. A trademark battle with Frisch's over Ohio operations caused Elby's to drop Big Boy affiliation, to be followed by [[Shoney's]] et al.
*Elias Brothers (Michigan, Northeastern Ohio, Ontario, Canada)
* [[Frisch's]] (Ohio, Kentucky, S. Indiana, Florida until the early 1990s) the [[Cincinnati]] restaurant chain and first franchisee, began serving Big Boy [[hamburger]]s in 1946; Frisch's now operates 88 Big Boys & franchises 32 Big Boys to others. They also franchise Golden Corrals in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky.
*JB's (Utah, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota, Wyoming, Washington, New Mexico, Kansas, Rhode Island)
*JB's (Canada) (Ontario and Alberta in the 1970s)
*[[Kebo's]] (Seattle & Tacoma, Washington area, no longer exists)
*Ken's (Maryland - suburban Washington DC, became Bob's late 1960s)
*Kip's (Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas)
*[[Lendy's]] (Western Virginia)
*[[Mady's]] (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)
*Manners (Northeastern Ohio)
*Marc's (Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois) were owned by the [[Marcus Corporation]]. Some were sold, others were converted to [[Marc's Café]] and later [[Annie's American Café]]. Most now operate as [[Perkins Restaurant and Bakery|Perkins]].
*McDowell's (North Dakota)
* [[Shoney's]] (Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, southwestern Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, West Virginia, Ohio, Missouri, Maryland), founded by and named after [[Alex Schoenbaum]], no longer displays the Big Boy Statue, because it dropped its relationship with Big Boy in order to expand to other states where others owned the trademark, in 1984. It was the second Big Boy franchisee and subfranchised to Elby's and [[Lendy's]].
*TJ's (New York)
*Tops (Illinois)
*Vip's (New Mexico)
*[[Yoda's]] (Western Virginia)


Also, '''Big Boy Japan''' owns and operates 216 locations (as of September 2007) throughout Japan under four restaurant names: Big Boy (199 stores), Milky Way (50), [[Victoria Station]] (43), and [[Grill Dan]] (4).
In Kelley's next book, ''His Way: The Unauthorized Biography of [[Frank Sinatra]]'' (1986) she discussed Sinatra's tumultuous marriages, alleged affairs and his links to the [[mafia|Mob]]. Sinatra initiated a $2 million lawsuit to prevent it from being published. He accused Kelley of character defamation and misrepresenting herself as his authorized biographer. He later withdrew his lawsuit. The book was number one on the ''New York Times'' Best Seller List, and hit best-seller lists in England, Canada, Australia and even France.


==Notable locations==
===''People'' magazine story===
[[Image:BobsBigBoy Burbank.jpg|thumb|right|Bob's Big Boy restaurant in [[Burbank, California]]]]
In 1990, Kelley wrote a piece for ''[[People]]'' magazine based on interviews she had conducted with Judith Campbell Exner, a former girlfriend of Frank Sinatra's who claimed to have had an affair with John F. Kennedy.<ref name="slate"/> Exner told Kelley that she had arranged ten meetings between Kennedy and a Mafia gangster [[Sam Giancana]], and they discussed having the mob kill [[Fidel Castro]].<ref name="slate"/> The story made national headlines, but it soon fell apart: it emerged that Exner had been paid $50,000 to talk with Kelley, was terminally ill, and did not mention these revelations in her own autobiography, which had been published years earlier.<ref name="slate"/> A former [[FBI]] agent also came forward and said that Giancana had been under a federal wiretap, so these multiple meetings with President Kennedy would have been impossible to cover up.<ref name="slate"/>
*[[Bob's Big Boy Restaurant of Burbank, California]] (est. 1949), oldest remaining Bob's Big Boy in America and a designated [[California Point of Historical Interest]].
*The first Phoenix, Arizona, Bob's Big Boy (est. 1954), was a notable exception to the traditional architecture in California. The restaurant was located at Central Avenue and Thomas Road. It quickly put two other nearby drive-in restaurants out of business. The building was very modern with horizontal overhanging roof lines and native stone at the entrance. Above was a large mural that resembled a Hopi sand painting of Kachinas, and a covered area to the east of the building for car hop service.


==References==
===Nancy Reagan biography===
{{reflist}}
In 1991 Kelley published ''[[Nancy Reagan]]: The Unauthorized Biography''. She was paid $3.5 million to write the book.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/16/garden/16KITT.html|title=For the Queen of Exposé, Four Walls That Won't Talk|accessdate=2008-08-05|work=The New York Times|date=[[September 16]], [[2004]]|author=Bruni, Frank}}</ref><ref name="ew"/> The book claimed that the [[First Lady of the United States|first lady]] had engaged in multiple affairs with [[Frank Sinatra]],<ref name="jawa"/> that she frequently relied on [[astrology]], that she had lied about her age, and that she had a very poor relationship with her children, even alleging that she hit her daughter, Patti.<ref name="slate">{{cite news|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2106746|title=Kitty Kelley: Colonoscopist to the Stars|author=Crowley, Michael|accessdate=2008-08-05|work=Slate|date=[[September 15]], [[2004]]}}</ref> The reliability and sources were questioned.<ref name="slate"/> As ''[[Slate]]'' magazine writer Michael Crowley said, "During the Reagan years Nancy cultivated an image as a doting wife and skillful hostess, a reputation Kelley mercilessly diced with the zest of a Benihana chef."<ref name="slate"/>
{{ref begin}}
* {{cite book | author=Hansen, Christian | title=The Big Boy Story: "King of Them All" | publisher=Haagen Printing | year=2002 | id=ISBN 0-9671943-6-9}}


* {{Citation
The book endured more far scrutiny than any of Kelley's others.<ref name="slate"/> The book's thin sourcing and heavy innuendo were picked up upon and heavily criticized.<ref name="slate"/> Media coverage included cover stories in ''Time'' magazine ("Is She Really That Bad?", referring to Nancy Reagan), ''Newsweek'', ''Entertainment Weekly'' ("The Kitty and Nancy Show") and ''People'' magazine ("Inside Kitty's Dish"). Kelley was also spoofed on ''[[Saturday Night Live]]''. Kelley appeared on many news shows and interviews promoting the book, some of which were very critical.
| last =Grandberry
| first =Nikki
| title =Altamont Springs Opens March 29
| year =2006
| url =http://www.bigboy.com/RestaurantImages/Altamonte%20Springs%20Opens%20March%2029.pdf
}}
{{ref end}}


==External links==
Former [[President of the United States|President]] [[Ronald Reagan]], aged 80 and who was to be diagnosed with [[Alzheimer's disease]] three years later, issued a brief statement, in which he said: "While I am accustomed to reports that stray from the truth, the flagrant and absurd falsehoods cited in a recently published book clearly exceed the bounds of decency. They are patently untrue&ndash;everything from the allegation of marijuana use [by Nancy and me] to marital infidelity to my failure to be present at the birth of my daughter Patti. Many of my friends have urged me to issue a point-by-point denial of the book's many outrages. To do so would, I feel, provide legitimacy to a book that has no basis in fact and serves no decent purpose."<ref>{{cite book |last= Goldberg|first= Bernard|authorlink= Bernard Goldberg|title= [[100 People Who Are Screwing up America]]|origyear= 2005|accessdate= 2007-05-17|edition= paperback|publisher= Harper Collins|location=New York |isbn= 0060761296|pages= 99}}</ref>
* [http://www.aiga.org/content.cfm/big-deal-on-big-boy-street Craig Yoe interviewed on history of ''The Adventures of Big Boy'' comic book]
* [http://www.bigboy.com Big Boy]
* [http://www.team188.com/features/brawny/ Tribute to Big Boy's popular "Brawny Lad" sandwich]
* [http://www.thinkworksus.com "The Big Boy Story"]


[[Category:History of Los Angeles, California]]
===''Poison Pen''===
[[Category:Hamburger restaurants]]
Partly as a result to Kelley's notoriety as a result of the Nancy Reagan book, she herself became the subject of a critical book, ''Poison Pen: The Unauthorized Biography of Kitty Kelley'' (1991), written by journalist [[George Carpozi, Jr]].<ref>{{cite web|publisher=Amazon.com|accessdate=2008-08-05|url=http://www.amazon.com/Poison-Pen-Unauthorized-Biography-Kelley/dp/1569801126|title=Poison Pen: The Unauthorized Biography of Kitty Kelley}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|work=Time|accessdate=2008-08-05|date=[[April 22]], [[1991]]|author=Birnbaum, Jesse|title=Books|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,972790-1,00.html}}</ref> Carpozi said that the book was "full of sex, sin, and scandal", reminiscent of Kelley's own work.<ref name="ew">{{cite news|work=Entertainment Weekly|url=http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,314098,00.html|date=[[April 26]], [[1991]]|accessdate=2008-08-05|title=Kitty Kelley First Lady Of Scandal}}</ref>
[[Category:Franchises]]

[[Category:Restaurant chains]]
===British Royal family and the Bush family===
[[Category:Buffet restaurants]]
In September 1997, Kelley turned her attention to the [[British Royal Family]] in ''The Royals'' (Warner Books, New York, ISBN 0-446-51712-7). In the book, Kelley stated that the Windsors obscured their German ancestry and described scandals surrounding the members of the Royal Family. The book was not published in Great Britain due to concerns about libel laws.
[[Category:Companies established in 1936]]

[[Category:Companies based in Metro Detroit]]
Kelley's most recent book, ''[[The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty]]'', was published on [[September 14]], [[2004]], less than two months before the [[2004 U.S. Presidential election]]. Kelley announced plans for the book shortly after [[George W. Bush]]'s election in 2001 and worked on it for four years. In "The Family", Kelley claimed that [[George W. Bush]] snorted [[cocaine]] with his brothers at [[Camp David]] during his father's presidency. Kelley cites [[Sharon Bush]], the divorced ex-wife of George W. Bush's brother Neil Bush, as her source for these statements, but Sharon Bush denied making the allegations.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/6179623.stm</ref>
[[Category:Restaurants in the United States]]

[[Category:Marriott International brands]]
===Planned biographies===
[[Category:Big Boy| ]]
On [[December 13]], [[2006]], Crown announced that it will publish a biography of [[Oprah Winfrey]], written by Kitty Kelley. The Oprah tell-all will follow the Kitty Kelley modus operandi and be unauthorized.

==Political views==

On [[March 19]], [[2007]] ''[[The Los Angeles Times]]'' ran an op-ed by Kelley. In it she wrote that President [[George H. W. Bush]] "enlisted at 18 to fly torpedo bombers. He flew 58 missions in two years and returned home a war hero. Since then, no one in his large family has seen fit to follow his sterling example of service and patriotism."<ref>http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-kelley19mar19,0,5964993.story?coll=la-opinion-rightrail%5D</ref> Two days later the elder President Bush's grandson [[George P. Bush]] announced he had joined the [[United States Navy Reserve]] primarily because, as he said, "My grandfather's my hero, and what really sold me on the ultimate decision was having the chance to see the CVN-77 be commissioned under his name."<ref>http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0307/3251.html</ref>

Kelley is listed on the Republic campaign of the UK's website as a supporter of a republic to replace the British monarchy.<ref>http://www.republic.org.uk/supporters/index.php</ref>

==Additional notoriety==

She is listed as #80 in [[Bernard Goldberg]]'s bestselling book ''[[100 People Who Are Screwing Up America]]''.{{cn}}

==References==
{{reflist|2}}

==External links==
*[http://www.slate.com/id/2106746/ "Kitty Kelley: Colonoscopist to the stars"], [[Slate.com]]
*[http://prorev.com/denton.htm "The Cat that Roared"] by Sally Denton
*[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CE3D71230F936A35756C0A967958260 "New York Times Book Review - No stone unthrown"]


[[ja:ビッグボーイ (レストラン)]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kelley, Kitty}}
[[Category:1942 births]]
[[sv:Big Boy]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American biographers]]
[[Category:American journalists]]
[[Category:Investigative journalists]]
[[Category:University of Washington alumni]]
[[Category:People from Spokane, Washington]]

Revision as of 03:36, 11 October 2008

Big Boy
Company typeRestaurant
Industrycasual dining restaurant
Founded1936
HeadquartersWarren, Michigan
Key people
Bob Wian, Founder
Ron Johnston (former vice president)
Websitewww.bigboy.com

Big Boy is a restaurant chain started in 1936 by Bob Wian in Glendale, California, as Bob's Big Boy. Marriott Corporation bought the chain in 1967. One of the larger franchise operators, Elias Brothers, purchased the chain from Marriott in 1987, moving the headquarters of the company to Warren, Michigan, and operating it until declaring bankruptcy, in 2000. The Vice president before Big Boy declared bankruptcy was Ron Johnston. Following the bankruptcy, the chain was sold to investor Robert Liggett, Jr., the current company CEO, who renamed the company Big Boy Restaurants International, and kept the headquarters in Warren. The company is the franchiser for more than 455 Big Boy restaurants in the United States and Canada. Big Boy is currently owned by Labelle Management. In September 2008, current CEO Tony Michaels was released from his position and a search for a replacement is under way.

Origin

The chain is best-known for its trademark chubby boy in red-and white-checked pants with suspenders holding a double-decker cheeseburger. The inspiration for Big Boy's name, as well as the model for its mascot, was Richard Woodruff (1932-1986), of Glendale, California. When he was six years old, he walked into the diner Bob's Pantry as Bob Wian was attempting to name his new hamburger. Wian said, "Hello, Big Boy" to Woodruff, and the name stuck. Warner Bros. animation artist Ben Washam sketched Richards' caricature, which became the character seen on the company logo. This character would eventually also be featured in The Adventures of Big Boy comic book, produced as a promotional giveaway for children visiting the restaurant. Since 1997, the comic book has been produced by Craig Yoe's Yoe Studio.

The Big Boy sandwich is somewhat similar to the later Big Mac: two thin beef patties are placed on a three layer sesame seed bun, with lettuce, a single slice of cheese, and a red relish added (thousand island on the Big Boy). The Frisch's Big Boy franchise instead uses a tartar sauce on their Big Boy. The chain also offers other sandwich combinations, such as the Brawny Lad (a hamburger patty topped with butter and a slice of onion on a rye bun), along with salads, dinner combinations and various desserts.

Regional franchises

This Big Boy Restaurant is in Chōfu, Tokyo, Japan.
Bob's Big Boy restaurant on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, California. This building was demolished in August 2008

In addition to the Bob's Big Boy name, the "Big Boy" concept, menu, and mascot were originally franchised to a wide number of regional franchise holders, listed below (with approximate original territory in parentheses). Of these, only Frisch's still maintains franchise rights to the "Big Boy" name, and many of the other former franchise owners (Shoney's, for example) have expanded into areas that were once the territory of another franchise holder, and the current Big Boy Restaurants International has been expanding its Bob's Big Boy name into territories formerly held by franchisees.

Unlike most modern franchises, the various restaurants differed somewhat from one another in terms of pricing and menu offerings.

  • Abdow's (Massachusetts, Connecticut)
  • Azar's (Northern Indiana, Colorado)
  • Big Boy of Florida (Exclusive rights to the Central Florida territory was acquired by Irv Lichtenwald from 2006 through 2011 with the right to extend this franchise for 6 additional years)
  • Bob's (California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Northeastern Ohio, New York, New Jersey, as well as Indiana and Pennsylvania turnpike and airport locations operated in several states by the Marriott Corp.)
  • Eat'n Park (metro Pittsburgh) dropped Big Boy in 1976.
  • Elby's (West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Eastern Ohio) owned the Big Boy rights to northern West Virginia, originally through Shoney's and quickly expanded Big Boy into bordering Ohio counties, subfranchised through Frisch's, and later expanded through Pennsylvania. A trademark battle with Frisch's over Ohio operations caused Elby's to drop Big Boy affiliation, to be followed by Shoney's et al.
  • Elias Brothers (Michigan, Northeastern Ohio, Ontario, Canada)
  • Frisch's (Ohio, Kentucky, S. Indiana, Florida until the early 1990s) the Cincinnati restaurant chain and first franchisee, began serving Big Boy hamburgers in 1946; Frisch's now operates 88 Big Boys & franchises 32 Big Boys to others. They also franchise Golden Corrals in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky.
  • JB's (Utah, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota, Wyoming, Washington, New Mexico, Kansas, Rhode Island)
  • JB's (Canada) (Ontario and Alberta in the 1970s)
  • Kebo's (Seattle & Tacoma, Washington area, no longer exists)
  • Ken's (Maryland - suburban Washington DC, became Bob's late 1960s)
  • Kip's (Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas)
  • Lendy's (Western Virginia)
  • Mady's (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)
  • Manners (Northeastern Ohio)
  • Marc's (Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois) were owned by the Marcus Corporation. Some were sold, others were converted to Marc's Café and later Annie's American Café. Most now operate as Perkins.
  • McDowell's (North Dakota)
  • Shoney's (Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, southwestern Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, West Virginia, Ohio, Missouri, Maryland), founded by and named after Alex Schoenbaum, no longer displays the Big Boy Statue, because it dropped its relationship with Big Boy in order to expand to other states where others owned the trademark, in 1984. It was the second Big Boy franchisee and subfranchised to Elby's and Lendy's.
  • TJ's (New York)
  • Tops (Illinois)
  • Vip's (New Mexico)
  • Yoda's (Western Virginia)

Also, Big Boy Japan owns and operates 216 locations (as of September 2007) throughout Japan under four restaurant names: Big Boy (199 stores), Milky Way (50), Victoria Station (43), and Grill Dan (4).

Notable locations

Bob's Big Boy restaurant in Burbank, California
  • Bob's Big Boy Restaurant of Burbank, California (est. 1949), oldest remaining Bob's Big Boy in America and a designated California Point of Historical Interest.
  • The first Phoenix, Arizona, Bob's Big Boy (est. 1954), was a notable exception to the traditional architecture in California. The restaurant was located at Central Avenue and Thomas Road. It quickly put two other nearby drive-in restaurants out of business. The building was very modern with horizontal overhanging roof lines and native stone at the entrance. Above was a large mural that resembled a Hopi sand painting of Kachinas, and a covered area to the east of the building for car hop service.

References

  • Hansen, Christian (2002). The Big Boy Story: "King of Them All". Haagen Printing. ISBN 0-9671943-6-9.

External links