Dining Rooms. Some of them become neighborhood favorites. A few of them become institutions. Then you have the rare ones that turn into something larger than life. One of them was situated just outside of Pittsburgh, PA in McKees Rocks - The Primadonna. Opening in 1986, The Primadonna reshaped Pittsburgh's dining identity, blending ambition, elegance, and Italian American tradition into a restaurant that became a cultural landmark and a family crucible.
Christina Cates sits down with Maria C. Palmer, co-author of On The Rocks, to explore the rise, impact, and emotional cost of one of Pittsburgh's most talked about restaurants. The Primadonna wasn't just a business, it was a world unto itself. A place where power players emerged, regulars became loyalists, and the dining room carried an energy that couldn't be replicated.
At the center of this world was Joseph Costanzo Jr., a man whose drive, charisma, and contradictions fueled the restaurant's meteoric ascent and its eventual unraveling. Maria takes us inside the story with clarity and candor, sharing what it meant to grow up in the orbit of a father whose identity was inseparable from the restaurant he built.
The glamour, the pressure, the expectations, the fallout: it's all there.