's
Puerto Rican Wedding (1969). Brown said the café in the lower left corner of this painting "isn't set up like an imitation of
Nighthawks, but still refers to it very much." Because it is so widely recognized, the diner scene in
Nighthawks has served as the model for many homages and parodies.
Painting and sculpture Many artists have produced works that allude to or respond to
Nighthawks. Hopper influenced the
Photorealists of the late 1960s and early 70s, including
Ralph Goings, who evoked
Nighthawks in several paintings of diners.
Richard Estes painted a corner store in ''People's Flowers'' (1971), but in daylight, with the shop's large window reflecting the street and sky. More direct visual quotations began to appear in the 1970s.
Gottfried Helnwein's painting
Boulevard of Broken Dreams (1984) replaces the three patrons with American pop culture icons
Humphrey Bogart,
Marilyn Monroe, and
James Dean, and the attendant with
Elvis Presley. According to Hopper scholar Gail Levin, Helnwein connected the bleak mood of
Nighthawks with 1950s American cinema and with "the tragic fate of the decade's best-loved celebrities."
Nighthawks Revisited, a 1980 parody by
Red Grooms, clutters the street scene with pedestrians, cats, and trash. A 2005
Banksy parody shows a fat, shirtless
soccer hooligan in
Union Flag boxers standing inebriated outside the diner, apparently having just smashed the diner window with a nearby chair. A large mural recreation of
Nighthawks was painted on a defunct Chinese restaurant in
Santa Rosa, California until the building was demolished in 2019.
Literature Several writers have explored how the customers in
Nighthawks came to be in a diner at night, or what will happen next.
Wolf Wondratschek's poem "Nighthawks: After Edward Hopper's Painting" imagines the man and woman sitting together in the diner as an estranged couple: "I bet she wrote him a letter/ Whatever it said, he's no longer the man / Who'd read her letters twice."
Joyce Carol Oates wrote interior monologues for the figures in the painting in her poem "Edward Hopper's Nighthawks, 1942". A special issue of
Der Spiegel included five brief dramatizations that built five different plots around the painting; one, by screenwriter
Christoph Schlingensief, turned the scene into a chainsaw massacre.
Michael Connelly,
Erik Jendresen and
Stuart Dybek wrote short stories inspired by this painting. John Koenig's
The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows references Hopper's painting under the entry for "nighthawk".
Film Hopper was an avid moviegoer and critics have noted the resemblance of his paintings to
film stills.
Nighthawks and works such as
Night Shadows (1921) anticipate the look of
film noir, whose development Hopper may have influenced. Hopper was an acknowledged influence on the film musical
Pennies from Heaven (1981), for which production designer Ken Adam recreated
Nighthawks as a set. Director
Wim Wenders recreated
Nighthawks as the set for a film-within-a-film in
The End of Violence (1997). In
Glengarry Glen Ross (1992), two characters visit a café resembling the diner in a scene that illustrates their solitude and despair. The painting was briefly used as a background for a scene in the animated film
Heavy Traffic (1973) by director
Ralph Bakshi.
Nighthawks influenced the "future noir" look of
Blade Runner; director
Ridley Scott said "I was constantly waving a reproduction of this painting under the noses of the production team to illustrate the look and mood I was after". In his review of the 1998 film
Dark City,
Roger Ebert noted the film had "store windows that owe something to Edward Hopper's
Nighthawks."
Hard Candy (2005) acknowledged a similar debt by setting one scene at a "Nighthawks Diner" where a character purchases a T-shirt with
Nighthawks printed on it. The painting features in the 2009 movie
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, it comes to life through CGI animation with the characters reacting to events in the outside world.
Music •
Tom Waits's album
Nighthawks at the Diner (1975) features a title, a cover, and lyrics inspired by
Nighthawks. • The video for
Voice of the Beehive's song "Monsters and Angels", from
Honey Lingers, is set in a diner reminiscent of that in
Nighthawks, with the band-members portraying waitstaff and patrons. The band's site said they "went with Edward Hopper's classic painting,
Nighthawks, as a visual guide." •
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark's 2013 single "
Night Café" was influenced by
Nighthawks and mentions Hopper by name. Seven of his paintings are referenced in the lyrics. • The first movement of American Composer
David Maslanka's multi-movement quartet for two pianos and two percussionists,
This is the World, is entitled "Nighthawks" and takes its inspiration from Hopper's painting.
Theatre and opera •
Jonathan Miller's 1982 production of
Verdi's opera
Rigoletto for
English National Opera, set in 1950s New York, features one street setting with a bar inspired by the
Nighthawks diner.
Television from "
Homer vs. the Eighteenth Amendment" (1997), one of several references to
Nighthawks in the animated TV series
The Simpsons • The show
Fresh Off the Boat Season 2 poster features the title family in
Nighthawks with actress
Constance Wu using chopsticks. • The closing scene of
Turner Classic Movies (TCM)'s “Open All Night” intro sequence, which was used to open overnight movie presentations from 1994 to 2021, is based on
Nighthawks. • The American series
Shameless features the
Nighthawks painting in a late season 11 arc where
Frank Gallagher, a petty criminal and conman, pulls off his final heist, stealing the painting and hiding it in his basement, with a visiting repairman later thinking it was a high quality replica. • In a season 1 episode of ''
That '70s Show'', Red and Kitty Forman, after a failed attempt to dine at an upscale restaurant, end up back at their usual diner. After Kitty comments that the scene seems familiar, the camera pulls back to reveal them as the couple seated at the counter in the painting. • This work was featured on
100 Great Paintings.
Parodies Nighthawks has been widely referenced and parodied. Versions of it have appeared on posters, T-shirts and greeting cards as well as in comic books and advertisements. Typically, these parodies—like Helnwein's
Boulevard of Broken Dreams, which became a popular poster One parody of
Nighthawks even inspired a parody of its own. Michael Bedard's painting
Window Shopping (1989), part of his
Sitting Ducks series of posters, replaces the figures in the diner with ducks and shows a crocodile outside eying the ducks in anticipation. Poverino Peppino parodied this image in
Boulevard of Broken Ducks (1993), in which a contented crocodile lies on the counter while four ducks stand outside in the rain. ==See also==