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  #3241  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 2:07 AM
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Construction of the Hollywood Freeway, 1952. Does anyone recognize the buildings?



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  #3242  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 2:09 AM
Los Angeles Past Los Angeles Past is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Beaudry View Post
Alas, 1982 was a bit early for me. As a Northener, in '82 I was frequenting shows at the Goleta Valley Community Center, I got my drivers license in '83 and started prowling LA for gigs 'round then. I have a scar on my chin from an Olympic Circle Jerks show, for what it's worth.

As this is noirish Los Angeles, I have to say, I have never experienced more true noir than LA in the early-mid 80s. There was something about it that reeked constant and unrepentant cesspool. Punk Rock was its true and virtuous outlet. Any and all of my time spent in LA in the 80s was sick, ugly, complacent, violent, stuporous and cheap. I have scars to show for it, but no memory thereof. The pleasures I attained from its disease-addled brain are the only reason I moved to its fetid terrain. Huzzah!

X sum it up --

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGhgdxoPQbE

The Starwood --

http://punkturns30.blogspot.com/2008...ck-n-roll.html

http://thelareport.blogspot.com/2007...ns-photos.html
Holy crap, X and The Jam! I had an attitude about X back then - I thought they were posers - but of course I love them now. (The Germs were more my thing.) And The Jam! Still among my all-time fave bands. (Even though, as The Bags would say, "We Don't Need The English."

-Scott

Last edited by Los Angeles Past; Jun 12, 2012 at 10:57 PM.
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  #3243  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 2:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GaylordWilshire View Post
LAPL
Where could this have been?


USCDL
The Chelsea, at 504 S. Bonnie Brae, in 1952--doubly reminiscent of New York in that there's a Barbizon around the corner on 6th Street.


The Chelsea is now the Cameo:
Google Street View

This is a great post GaylordWilshire. I love the before and after photos.
I'm a bit confused about the sculpture at the top.....was it relocated to an empty field somewhere?

Last edited by ethereal_reality; Mar 14, 2011 at 2:35 AM.
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  #3244  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 6:58 AM
Wenders Wenders is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
Construction of the Hollywood Freeway, 1952. Does anyone recognize the buildings?



usc digital archive
In this picture picture we're in Hollywood, looking west from somewhere between Gower St and Argyle Ave, just below Franklin Ave.

Those dark apartment buildings on left foreground are on Yucca St, north side, right behind is Knickerbocker. The dark, gothic style roof belongs to Fontenoy, and the light -colored, tall building with some writing on it (we're looking at the right side of the building) is quite well known art deco building also on Yucca, just west of Vine St. It's still there http://tinyurl.com/4ghza29 It was recently restored, and it has a name too. I just can't remember it now.
Just year or two later Capitol Records building was built middle of this very same landscape, it would block the Knickerbocker view.

Here, view from 40ft south of the old picture's POV-
http://tinyurl.com/4uz4lbk

Based on that, in the old picture we see is 101 soutbound Gower St exit ramp in process.
It's only two minute walk to Frolic Room from this spot! Done it many times... Hard to believe the bar was already there when this picture was taken.

Last edited by Wenders; Mar 14, 2011 at 8:00 AM.
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  #3245  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 1:02 PM
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LAPL

LAPL
Great detective work, Wenders. Found these shots of the art deco building you mention below--the
Yucca-Vine Tower. It was designed by Henry Gogerty, who was in business until the '60s and who also
designed Grand Central Air Terminal in Burbank. The LAPL refers to it as the Pacific States Life Building.
It is now the American Musical and Dramatic Academy. Note the Piggly Wiggly to the left of the tower.


A couple of neon references to apartment or hotel buildings recently mentioned:

publicartinla
The Fontenoy--the "London" apartment building featured in
William Castle's 13 Frightened Girls.


publicartinla
The Cameo at 504 S. Bonnie Brae was once the Chelsea

Last edited by GaylordWilshire; Mar 14, 2011 at 1:15 PM.
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  #3246  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 2:25 PM
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i never get tired of photographs of semaphore signals......


Source: Corbis Images

Because she has never had an accident, Warner Bros. star Martha Vickers has been named "Miss Danger Signal 1946" by the Motor Vehicle Bureau of California, to call attention to their current campaign against traffic accidents.
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  #3247  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 2:53 PM
Wenders Wenders is offline
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Thanks, GaylordWilshire.
In your Yucca-Vine Tower picture we can also see Alto Nido Apartments (white, on far left, behind Yucca-Vine Tower, on Ivar Ave/up in the hill) that was William Holden character's home in "Sunset Boulevard." http://www.altonidoapts.com/ The building had plenty of other famous residents too, not only old time filmstars, but also more recent ones.
I knew this already in early 90's, and being already fascinated by the neigborhood, I even inquired availabe apartments in there. There was plenty, they were affordable, but I found a nicer 1930's place on Argyle (without known-history) and decided not to sign any emotion -based rental agreements.

Just couple of houses down/south of Alto Nido, but just out of frame, is Nathaneal West's home, where he supposedly wrote "The Day Of Locust." The tudor -style apartment bldg. was still there just couple of years ago. The condition looked good.

Also, if I remember right, The Fontenoy was Ronald Reagan's very first Hollywood home in 1930's. Feel free to correct me if wrong.

edit: I don't have my original source at hand right now to verify West's home, but it should be this one
http://tinyurl.com/4sj262f Alto Nido is in b.g
Probably better not call it tudor style after all. Let's call it Hollywood's idea of Europe.

Last edited by Wenders; Mar 14, 2011 at 3:25 PM.
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  #3248  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 6:52 PM
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WOW! Check out that view of Mulholland Dam! Never seen THAT before.

And now I know why....That view of the dam was short-lived. Less than 10 years.

Lake Hollywood is a man-made reservoir built in 1924 to hold more than 2.5 billion gallons of water. The reservoir is part of the Owens River Aqueduct system. The Mulholland Dam was built by engineer William Mulholland who designed and built the system of aqueducts and reservoir providing Los Angeles with most of its drinking water.

The dam is located in Weid Canyon, East of Cahuenga Pass. The dam is 210 feet high, 933 feet long and 16 feet wide at the crest with a maximum depth of 183 feet.

The Mulholland Dam was reinforced in 1933 with tons of earth on the downstream side as a precaution after the similar St. Francis Dam burst in 1928. Later studies confirmed that the St. Francis disaster was not caused by a faulty design.

The reinforced part of the dam, now covered with fully grown trees, makes the dam barely noticeable from Hollywood below.















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  #3249  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 7:24 PM
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No idea what I'm doing. I give up.

Last edited by OldFontuckyHomer; Mar 14, 2011 at 7:38 PM. Reason: My bad.
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  #3250  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 7:36 PM
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Dam Ominous!

[QUOTE=GaylordWilshire;5199860]

LAPL

Wow. Does this dam look ominous looming over Hollywood or what?
Any current pics showing a visible trace of the dam from a similar angle?
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  #3251  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 9:17 PM
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Ninja55 I'm not sure why almost all of your photos give the message that they are currently unavailable from Flickr. I hope this is just temporary because I'm so interested in these photos! I only could see 3 of the photos. I saw one of the two dancers seated...interested to see if my grandma turns up in any of them. If anyone knows why Flicker is not showing the photos please let me know! I'm bummed!

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  #3252  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 9:20 PM
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Dam ominous, indeed, OFHomer


Wonder how it felt to live here in 1928, after the San Francisquito dam burst?





Under construction, 1923






The LAPL's dating of its photos of this dam careen all over the place; it dates the one above 1937; I believe
they must mean 1927. Similarly, some shots with a fully landscaped south face are dated 1925. Oh well, sifting
through the evidence is what we're here for, right?



Wondered for a moment what the strange body of water was a right...


The dirt is piled on in the early '30s...






Looking up Holly Drive from Odin Street, December 18, 1963. The LAPL caption to this shot, for what it's worth, says that "tall pine trees above home at end of
street, grows [sic] on the front side of the Hollywood Dam." Anyway, it would seem that the dam was pretty well obscured by 1963. "Out of sight, out of
mind...."

Google Street View


All photos aside from the Google Street View: LAPL


Note to ethereal re the Chelsea Hotel's bellboy statue: it had to have been some sort of roadside advertising--don't know where this shot was taken, whether somewhere, say, just west of Cucamonga, or after it was discarded. Maybe one day it will turn up on ebay.... It would be the ultimate lawn jockey, wouldn't it?
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  #3253  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 9:27 PM
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Beaudry I agree with your 80's assessment of L.A. I remember going to see the Subhumans in '84 at the Olympic with friends but my parents only let me go if I agreed to them picking me up!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Beaudry View Post
Alas, 1982 was a bit early for me. As a Northener, in '82 I was frequenting shows at the Goleta Valley Community Center, I got my drivers license in '83 and started prowling LA for gigs 'round then. I have a scar on my chin from an Olympic Circle Jerks show, for what it's worth.

As this is noirish Los Angeles, I have to say, I have never experienced more true noir than LA in the early-mid 80s. There was something about it that reeked constant and unrepentant cesspool. Punk Rock was its true and virtuous outlet. Any and all of my time spent in LA in the 80s was sick, ugly, complacent, violent, stuporous and cheap. I have scars to show for it, but no memory thereof. The pleasures I attained from its disease-addled brain are the only reason I moved to its fetid terrain. Huzzah!

X sum it up --

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGhgdxoPQbE



Check out Wall of Voodoo. The area was a mid-20s open-air boxing arena on El Centro between Hollywood and Selma before the Hollywood Legion Stadium was built in '38. It became a bowling alley in 1959.







http://www.newwavephotos.com/WallofVoodoo.htm

The Starwood --

http://punkturns30.blogspot.com/2008...ck-n-roll.html

http://thelareport.blogspot.com/2007...ns-photos.html
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  #3254  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 9:46 PM
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Thanks GW. Makes me shudder after working below that thing for so many years.
Now I'm wondering how they would notice faults or cracks though that jungle they've installed.
I'm sure I'll be thinking about it next time I'm on set.
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  #3255  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 10:20 PM
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LAPL

LAPL
And the stepped design of the Hollywood dam is eerily reminiscent of the one at San Francisquito canyon...they
shared their design.... Better pack a rubber dingy on set....
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  #3256  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2011, 10:46 PM
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Always Pack A Rubber Dingy.

Quote:
Originally Posted by GaylordWilshire View Post



LAPL

LAPL
And the stepped design of the Hollywood dam is eerily reminiscent of the one at San Francisquito canyon...they
shared their design.... Better pack a rubber dingy on set....
I recently read about that disaster in A Bright and Guilty Place. First thing that entered my head when I saw those photos. Besides AAAAAAAAAHHHHHH!!!!

Last edited by OldFontuckyHomer; Mar 14, 2011 at 10:48 PM. Reason: Punctuation hates me.
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  #3257  
Old Posted Mar 15, 2011, 1:33 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
Construction of the Hollywood Freeway, 1952. Does anyone recognize the buildings?



usc digital archive
Great pic. Looking at this picture made me think of that neighborhood, Whitley Heights, which was partially destroyed by the Hollywood Freeway. The freeway bisected it, and took out quite a number of houses, Rudolph Valentino's included, at 6776 Wedgewood Place.

whitleyheights.org

This house was not Falcon Lair, which was his other house, the one he lived in before he died of peritonitis.

Here's The Latin Lover himself, in front of his Wedgewood Place home, with his dog and his 1923 Isotta-Fraschini.

diecast.org

Hehe! "We don't need two cars, we have a car. Not one of those new things made of chromium and spit; an Isotta-Fraschini. Have you heard of Isotta-Fraschinis? All hand-made. Cost me $28,000."-- Norma Desmond, "Sunset Blvd."

Whitley Heights, undated photo

LAPL
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  #3258  
Old Posted Mar 15, 2011, 2:02 AM
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GaylordWilshire GaylordWilshire is offline
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imcdb.com


"So Max got that old bus down off its blocks and polished it up...."


imcdb.com


oudedaf.nl


But I did like Joe's Plymouth--seen here at that fateful moment when he turned into... 10086 Sunset Boulevard....
jalopnik.com
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  #3259  
Old Posted Mar 15, 2011, 2:14 AM
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^^^
Love the pics, Gaylord.

Hmm, looking at Valentino's Wedgewood Place house, it's pretty modest, not quite a great big elephant of a place, the kind that crazy movie people built in the crazy 20s.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Beaudry View Post
Alas, 1982 was a bit early for me. As a Northener, in '82 I was frequenting shows at the Goleta Valley Community Center, I got my drivers license in '83 and started prowling LA for gigs 'round then. I have a scar on my chin from an Olympic Circle Jerks show, for what it's worth.

As this is noirish Los Angeles, I have to say, I have never experienced more true noir than LA in the early-mid 80s. There was something about it that reeked constant and unrepentant cesspool. Punk Rock was its true and virtuous outlet. Any and all of my time spent in LA in the 80s was sick, ugly, complacent, violent, stuporous and cheap. I have scars to show for it, but no memory thereof. The pleasures I attained from its disease-addled brain are the only reason I moved to its fetid terrain. Huzzah!

X sum it up --

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGhgdxoPQbE

Ah, X. I thought I read somewhere that they used to live upstairs from the Circus of Books in West Hollywood, on Santa Monica Blvd. That place is from my youth.


about.com

When I would go there to look at mags, I would sometimes be mistaken for a rent boy, which would surprise me and flatter me at the same time. Weird, I know. Out of frame and to the left is the Gold Coast, of which the alley behind was referred to as Vaseline Alley.

Here's Circus of Books in 1982. I didn't start going here to look at mags until 1987, when I was 17.

paulomurillo.com


WeHo, Santa Monica Blvd., 1982.

paulomurillo.com

Wow, the RTD. What a blast from the past. This was back when West Hollywood was still an unincorporated community (it incorporated as a city in 1984); not its own city, and outside the jurisdiction of the City of Los Angeles, and the LAPD. Being that it was County area, the LA Sheriffs patrolled the area, and were also a little more lenient than the LAPD, which is what allowed the nightclubs and speakeasies to flourish on the Sunset Strip, and the gay bars to exist on Santa Monica Blvd. I remember when the PE railroad tracks still existed on the median of Santa Monica Blvd., but by the time I was going to WeHo, the median was already landscaped, though the rail tracks were still there. I didn't realize that in the early 80s, the median was just dirt.


Vaseline Alley in 1982.

paulomurillo.com


Mother Lode, 1982. It still exists.

paulomurillo.com


I forgot about this place. International Male, 1982.

paulomurillo.com
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  #3260  
Old Posted Mar 15, 2011, 3:42 AM
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amazon.com

Reading through my WPA Guide to the City of Angels, I saw a few entries for Ninja55's restaurants:

Lucca Restaurant, 501 S. Western Ave. Ample servings of everything from antipasto to spumone in a florid setting with strolling singers.

Musso & Frank Grill, 6667 Hollywood Blvd. Dinner a la carte only. Steaks, and salad mixed at your table, are favorites.

Paris Inn (listed under Night Clubs), 210 East Market St. Dinner from 5:30 p.m. Orchestra. Dancing. Floor shows 8 p.m. and 11 p.m. Separate bar. A rather unusual bar and singing waiters. Closed Sundays.
______________________________________________

Some other entries that I thought were cool:

Perino's Restaurant, 3927 Wilshire Blvd. Table d'hote and a la carte. Specialties include scallopini of veal, chicken curry, crepes suzette, and strawberry Italienne. ("Damnit, Perino's is MY, PLACE!!)

Brown Derby Cafe, 1628 N. Vine St. A la carte only. Frequented by movie stars, especially Friday nights after the American Legion prize fights. Excellent cuisine.

The Hollywood Tropics, 1525 N. Vine St. So atmospheric you feel the rainy season coming on.

Cocoanut Grove, Ambassador Hotel, 3400 Wilshire Blvd. Dinner from 7 p.m.; couvert charge. Orchestra; dancing. Floor show 11 p.m. Bar. Very popular; consistently good entertainment.

Cafe Casino, 425 S. Main St. Prices reasonable. You can use your own judgment where to stop. Very ripe entertainment. Oldtime burlesque with seminude girls.

Beachcomber Cafe, 1727 N. McCadden Pl. Prices are slightly stiff. Specializes in Oriental food and drinks. Frequented by the many lesser Hollywood actors.

Bali Restaurant, 8804 Sunset Blvd. Dinner; no couvert, no minimum. Atmosphere in keeping with the name. Light, risque entertainment. East Indian curry a specialty.
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