Home
»
Everybody Came to Tana's
Everybody Came to Tana's
Regular price
€29.99
602 verified reviews
100% verified
Will Deliver When Available
Shipping & Delivery
Shipping & Delivery
Our Delivery Time Frames Explained
2-4 Working Days: Available in-stock
10-20 Working Days: On Backorder
Will Deliver When Available: On Pre-Order or Reprinting
We ship your order once all items have arrived at our warehouse and are processed. Need those 2-4 day shipping items sooner? Just place a separate order for them!
Close
A01=Dan Tana
american dream
Author_Dan Tana
business biography
business memoir
Category=DB
Category=DNC
cold war
communism
coppola
culinary biography
culinary memoir
eastern europe
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
food biography
forthcoming
golden age
hollywood
immigrant story
rags to riches
refugee story
restaurateur
rich and famous
serbia
soccer
soccer coach
soccer player
sports
Sports biography
sports memoir
the godfather
world cup
yugoslavia
Product details
- ISBN 9798895151099
- Weight: 585g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 13 Aug 2026
- Publisher: Diversion Books
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
The Remarkable True Story of Dan Tana
Serbian immigrant, soccer star, legendary Hollywood restaurateur, Dan Tana called himself the luckiest man alive, and lived as if it were true.
Born in wartime Yugoslavia, Dan survived bombings, displacement, and the long shadows of World War II before fleeing as a teenage soccer prodigy in search of a future. What followed reads like a modern American myth: a refugee who became a European football star, an actor, a film producer, an unlikely companion of Frank Sinatra, James Dean, and other Hollywood immortals, and the founder of one of Hollywood’s most beloved institutions.
When Dan Tana’s opened in 1964, it became more than a restaurant. It became a second home. Lew Wasserman, Fred Astaire, and John Wayne were regulars. Jack Nicholson, Linda Ronstadt, and Barbra Streisand passed through its red booths. Bobby Fischer was snuck in, Wilt Chamberlain towered over the room, Harry Dean Stanton basically lived at the bar, and generations of artists, athletes, and legends gathered not for spectacle—but for belonging. George Clooney, Leonardo DiCaprio, Joni Mitchell, Magic Johnson—the names span eras, but the feeling never changed.
Told in Dan’s warm, unassuming voice, Everybody Came to Tana’s is as much about people as it is about fame. It’s a story of friendship, loyalty, resilience, and gratitude. Of a man who crossed continents, survived history, and built a life that welcomed the world.
At once an immigrant’s journey, a love letter to Hollywood, a devotion to sport, and a portrait of a singular “lucky” life, Everybody Came to Tana’s captures a spirit that cannot be replicated—only remembered and enjoyed.
Serbian immigrant, soccer star, legendary Hollywood restaurateur, Dan Tana called himself the luckiest man alive, and lived as if it were true.
Born in wartime Yugoslavia, Dan survived bombings, displacement, and the long shadows of World War II before fleeing as a teenage soccer prodigy in search of a future. What followed reads like a modern American myth: a refugee who became a European football star, an actor, a film producer, an unlikely companion of Frank Sinatra, James Dean, and other Hollywood immortals, and the founder of one of Hollywood’s most beloved institutions.
When Dan Tana’s opened in 1964, it became more than a restaurant. It became a second home. Lew Wasserman, Fred Astaire, and John Wayne were regulars. Jack Nicholson, Linda Ronstadt, and Barbra Streisand passed through its red booths. Bobby Fischer was snuck in, Wilt Chamberlain towered over the room, Harry Dean Stanton basically lived at the bar, and generations of artists, athletes, and legends gathered not for spectacle—but for belonging. George Clooney, Leonardo DiCaprio, Joni Mitchell, Magic Johnson—the names span eras, but the feeling never changed.
Told in Dan’s warm, unassuming voice, Everybody Came to Tana’s is as much about people as it is about fame. It’s a story of friendship, loyalty, resilience, and gratitude. Of a man who crossed continents, survived history, and built a life that welcomed the world.
At once an immigrant’s journey, a love letter to Hollywood, a devotion to sport, and a portrait of a singular “lucky” life, Everybody Came to Tana’s captures a spirit that cannot be replicated—only remembered and enjoyed.
Dan Tana was a restaurateur, professional soccer player, international soccer executive, film producer, and one of Hollywood’s legendary hosts—a true citizen of the world.
Born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, he survived World War II before crossing Europe as a teenage soccer prodigy and finding his way to Hollywood. In the 1950s and ’60s, he acted in films alongside Robert Mitchum and Glenn Ford and moved easily among figures such as Frank Sinatra, Natalie Wood, and the Kennedys.
In 1964, while helping pioneer professional soccer in the United States, he opened Dan Tana’s in Los Angeles, which became an enduring gathering place for artists, athletes, and cultural icons—so woven into the city’s fabric that journalists likened it to palm trees and the Hollywood sign. In 1975, he became chairman of Brentford FC in the UK. In 2000, he joined the board of Red Star Belgrade, the club he had played for as a teenager.
Married twice, he was the father of two daughters, film producer Gabrielle Tana and designer Katerina Tana. Dan passed away, at age ninety, three months after completing Everybody Came to Tana’s.
Born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, he survived World War II before crossing Europe as a teenage soccer prodigy and finding his way to Hollywood. In the 1950s and ’60s, he acted in films alongside Robert Mitchum and Glenn Ford and moved easily among figures such as Frank Sinatra, Natalie Wood, and the Kennedys.
In 1964, while helping pioneer professional soccer in the United States, he opened Dan Tana’s in Los Angeles, which became an enduring gathering place for artists, athletes, and cultural icons—so woven into the city’s fabric that journalists likened it to palm trees and the Hollywood sign. In 1975, he became chairman of Brentford FC in the UK. In 2000, he joined the board of Red Star Belgrade, the club he had played for as a teenager.
Married twice, he was the father of two daughters, film producer Gabrielle Tana and designer Katerina Tana. Dan passed away, at age ninety, three months after completing Everybody Came to Tana’s.
Everybody Came to Tana's
€29.99
