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Zoomable versions of those images can be found in the USCDL (see here and here). They're dated as 1891, as is the additional image below which is captioned "Towne Avenue looking south from Fifth Street, Los Angeles, ca.1891". https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...5th_Towne1.jpg USC Digital Library |
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Season 5 - yes, 1981-82 is around the time Starwood got shut down because of too many neighborhood complaints...noise, drugs, punk rockers... Maybe that's why they filmed there (empty) and changed the name (gone)? I always liked Doug McClure (Trampas!). I remember once telling someone that and he said he knew his daughter. |
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I just noticed that the info about Under the Yum-Yum Tree playing at the Ivar from May 1962 to March 1964, doesn't jive with the L.A. Times May, 1963, ad for the show that says "88th Smash Week". :shrug: |
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This is perfection. |
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I am absolutely amazed by what you guys dug up on 1453 Vine Street! :worship: It had quite the history. . .from Capt. Markham's private 'villa'. . . to a company looking for dancing girls. . . . to a clubhouse for communists' organizations. It sure sucks that it was torn down. :hell: I was confused by the 'tower' portion of the roof in the image below....To me it looks like a flat. . .umm. . .parallelogram. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/jqLy8x.jpg . . .but this second image clears things right up. :) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/gYkems.jpg Any information on the large house facing Sunset Blvd?...................................................................This one. :previous: It appears to have had a porte cochere. . |
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Here is a 2nd contact sheet for Robert Frank's The Americans. He was in Los Angeles around 1955 - 56(?)....(the book was first published in France in 1958) I don't have a copy of The Americans so I don't know if any of these photographs made the cut. ... (two are circled so maybe they made it in the book) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/hqOxRB.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/WwPlbI.jpg eBay First of all, let's take a closer look at the circled photograph in the top row. #1 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/EaJURA.jpg At first I thought this guy was playing pool. Now I think he's. . . . .umm. . .manipulating puppets ? Bur-Mar Hotel bay window and the interior of a room (not necessarily a room in the Bur-Mar) with a view. #2 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/0HYbpL.jpg I'm drawing a blank on the Bur-Mar Hotel. :shrug: Two men walking through. . .the 3rd St. tunnel? #3 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/kMJxPZ.jpg I'm almost certain I've seen this one before. Chavez Ravine? #4 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/lRqm8W.jpg Mystery gate. (perhaps a cemetery?) #5 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/RJPDOp.jpg .....The dark orb is especially perplexing. . . . .more to come. . |
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Looking at the CDs, it became the Bur-Mar Hotel around 1938 (the 1938 CD actually lists it as the Burmar Hotel). Before that it was the Mecca Apartments/Mecca Hotel/Hotel Mecca. Quote:
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Thanks Hoss. I had forgotten the earlier mention of the Bur-Mar. It's good to see that photograph again.
For whatever reason here's a closer look https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/QubMwL.jpg The old wooden apartment building (St. Dunston's) to its right reminds me of some of Frank's interior photographs of rooms. I'll have to go back and look at them again. . |
Just a side comment:
While we often lament to loss of what made old Los Angeles, so many of these photos from the past indicate the shabby, derelict and just run down nature of it all. |
. . .and alot of trash in the street. (this always surprises me)
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As promised. . . . more Robert Frank from contact sheet #2. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/lYEbsk.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/oV8CsG.jpg See that 1/4 of a photo at the top of this pic. . . Here it is in its entirety. . .(sorry about the blurriness) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/9DxsUn.jpg A parked car. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/vW8aHU.jpg I'm pretty sure that's Bunker Hill in the background. We'll never figure this one out. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/47TVrb.jpg It looks like a solemn occasion....Maybe a funeral :shrug: . |
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A mystery location. Remember the 'Swim Easy' posts from a couple of weeks ago. . . Here's another with a. . .umm. . .mystery ghost. :shrug: https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/um7HrF.jpg old file / bbarr I wish I had more information for you. ....I think the best clue might be the peaked mountain on the right. And while I'm here I'd like to show you this very cool Swim Easy logo. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/XSYGaF.jpg grapefruitmoongallery |
https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...080&fit=bounds
ucla "Mary Loos, in print dress and head scarf, holding shopping bag, with young Asian man weighing watermelon on hanging scale, with shelves of vegetables in background...Miss Mary Anita Loos, niece of Anita Loos, famous author of "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" etc., between classes at Los Angeles Junior College where she is in 2nd yr....Miss Loos is shown buying vegetables for household of father, Dr. Clifford Loos, prom. Los Angeles physician. She is buying at one of the interesting Japanese-owned marts in center of Hollywood....circa 1930." Mary Loos had a brief career as an actress...her first husband was the pulp author Richard Sale, together they wrote 20 produced screenplays....her father co-founded the Ross-Loos Medical Group, the country's first HMO. https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...080&fit=bounds Apparently, she had made an earlier stop at the El Adobe market..... https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...080&fit=bounds Hollywood Blvd. at N. Kingsley Drive......the "EL ADOBE" font style on the present-day signage appears unchanged from the typeface on the 1930 shopping bag. |
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I can't help but notice on the current photo, a sign for a...Dog Resort. Only in Hollywood? Quote:
This Loos woman is buying an exotic...watermelon. |
Sunset Blvd. house
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There's a history of KGFJ (and other 24-hour stations) here ("Keeping Good Folks Joyful"). It looks like they moved to the Sunset address sometime around the end of World War II. The demo permit for 6314 Sunset Boulevard was issued on February 18, 1965 where it's described as a "family residence". |
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[QUOTE=riichkay;8998598]https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...080&fit=bounds
ucla "Mary Loos, in print dress and head scarf, holding shopping bag, with young Asian man weighing watermelon on hanging scale, with shelves of vegetables in background...Miss Mary Anita Loos, niece of Anita Loos, famous author of "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" etc., between classes at Los Angeles Junior College where she is in 2nd yr....Miss Loos is shown buying vegetables for household of father, Dr. Clifford Loos, prom. Los Angeles physician. She is buying at one of the interesting Japanese-owned marts in center of Hollywood....circa 1930." ^^^ Anita Loos (aunt of Mary) was good friends with famous iconoclast H.L. Mencken (American Mercury etc.). When Mencken made his famous visit to L.A. in 1926, Anita Loos showed him around town. Mencken had a lot of funny things to say about Sister Aimee and her church, the Hollywood studios etc..I wonder if Anita wrote "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" because her good friend HL proposed to a blonde? It might be interesting to see pics here of HL's 1926 trip to nourish L A. They must exist....he was very famous at the time. |
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