A Newport Landmark, Brick Alley Pub has been voted both "Best Restaurant" and "Best Bar" in Rhode Island.
With over 25 beers on tap, a Bon Appetit-voted best lobster roll in America and burgers, Brick Alley is the perfect spot for a family dinner, a date or a night out with your friends.
The interior in the SNL skit, however, was most definitely not the Brick Alley Pub.
Related Slideshow: 10 Great Things to do in Newport This Weekend - April 20, 2018
Arboretum Week First Light Night Celebration & Illuminated Trolley Tours
Celebrate the beginning of Arboretum Week and the first night of the Lighting of the Trees! Enjoy good company, light refreshments, cash bar, and a display of local wood art.
Special trolley tours will highlight some of Newport's finest trees, illuminated in honor of Arboretum Week.
Join prominent local artist David Barnes by the fire in Mabel’s Studio as he recounts the extraordinary artistic heritage of the area surrounding Norman Bird Sanctuary known as Paradise Valley. You will learn all the techniques and materials an artist like John La Farge would have used while David recreates a landscape painting on separate panels at various stages.
Middletown Aquidneck Growers Market at Aquidneck Grower's Farmers Market
Now in its 22nd season, the market has 20 regular vendors, guest artisans and live music every week. Pick up your groceries and head inside for wine tasting.
Fingerprint Charms With Sue Gray at Museum of Newport History
The Newport Historical Society hosts local artist, Sue Gray, at the Newport History Museum & Shop as she takes personal fingerprint pressings to create one of a kind keepsake charms.
Gray will take the fingerprint pressings to her home studio where she will use the pressings to create unique molds to make one of a kind silver charms.
Join us for an afternoon of champagne tasting with expert brunch pairings from our chef. Tasting will be led by John Callaghan of Laurent-Perrier, and owner of Bellevue Wine & Spirits.
Whitehorne House Lecture Series: Local Manufacture, Global Fusion: Surveying Early American Furniture at Newport Art Museum
Mahogany from Honduras, brass from Britain, stylistic details from China, and wealth borne of slavery at home and abroad. This lecture connects the global dots and illuminates how interconnected forces yielded a wide range of new furniture forms in the 17th and 18th centuries. As European furniture designs were adapted to American tastes, a wholly new and specialized branch of the craft emerged and along with it new methods of work.