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Airport Gardens Supper Club / Continental Club
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http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=5154 http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=5160 http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=5155 If FabFiftiesFan has it right, here it is, looking super swanky and way more New York than Glendale: http://img1.etsystatic.com/007/0/592...30921_b24t.jpg Trisha Bennett - Etsy FabFiftiesFan relates that Continetal Club patron and protector, Mayor Frank Shaw, was recalled in 1938, making way for crackdown-on-vice Mayor Fletcher Bowron. Bowron, if anyone recalls, was the one unseated fifteen years later by the powerful LA businessmen's "Committee of 25" because he wanted to reserve Bunker Hill (and a few other developer-coveted spots) for affordable housing. Opponent Norris Poulson, The Committee of 25's puppet, slid into office with funding from "Citizens Against Socialist Housing", known by its acronym, "C.A.S.H.". So blatant. I love LA. GW references Jim Heimann & his research. Always reliable. The Continental Club rates a couple of mentions in Heimann's Out With the Stars (1986) but no pix :-( I never tire of zooming around the Wonder City of America map: http://www.bigmapblog.com/2011/los-a...-america-1934/ |
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-u...llsign1000.jpgEbell LA
I'd always thought of the Ebell Theater as a "neighborhood theater"... but it looks huge in pictures on the club's website here. I had no idea. It looks like the tall section parallels the stage and does hold lights, flats etc. |
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http://thumbs.trulia-cdn.com/picture...s-CA-90026.jpgtrulia http://photos2.zillow.com/p_d/IS-3uayngf6gnkt.jpgzillow http://photos1.zillow.com/p_d/IS-3uj6k88cxgf1.jpgzillow http://photos2.zillow.com/p_d/IS-1u85ty8yluwkd.jpgzillow This Apartment is located at 858 North La Fayette Park Place, Los Angeles CA. 858 N La Fayette Park Pl is in the Silver Lake neighborhood in Los Angeles, CA and in ZIP Code 90026. The average listing price for Silver Lake is $814,858. 858 N La Fayette Park Place. Rent is $825 month for 350 square foot studio apartment. 4195 square feet, built in 1915. Wonder if they are renting out Otto's attic, and how many square feet did he have? |
James Lileks in his blog today talks about urban renewal in his hometown of Minneapolis...but the statement applies just as well to Los Angeles.
"Ever since urban renewal knocked down Bumtown, it’s been a ghostland, and fifty years later it’s just starting to get its spirit back. As usual, a Great Plan was responsible - an Olympian mind looking down on maps and buildings, and seeing clean lines and pure structures arranged with pure cerebral logic. You can say one thing about these schemes: they always look good from on high." Also: "Like most of Gehry's work, it's glass-shards in a Jiffy-Pop bag. It's not as if they had to go classical on the site - but almost anything streamlined Moderne from the 1939 World's Fair would have fit, and have adopted itself to the glories the site presented. As modern and spare as Moderne was, it still belonged to the previous tradition. It belonged." "But everyone wants a Gehry; everyone wants a Neimeyer. Just one! And if there's a piece of the past we have to sacrifice, well, there's plenty of that. Until there isn't." http://lileks.com/bleats/archive/12/1212/120612.html |
Lafayette Park Place
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The grand McKinley mansion was located at 310 Lafayette Park Place. I remember visiting that house many times as a toddler. (My mom and the McKinleys remained good friends all the rest of their lives.) Here are some excerpts from a magazine article about MHM from 1946. It contains the only picture I have of the now-vanished McKinley mansion (other than the one in my mind's eye). The place was a real palace inside. It was certainly the biggest house I had ever been in, at that age. Does anyone here have a better/larger picture of this house? I'd guess the most likely candidate for this would be GaylordWilshire! https://otters.net/img/lanoir/maytorhmckinleymag1.jpg https://otters.net/img/lanoir/maytorhmckinleymag3.jpg https://otters.net/img/lanoir/maytorhmckinleymag4.jpg Mom at UMM's flagship Viewpark chapel at 3719 West Slauson, in 1941. https://otters.net/img/lanoir/momutt...070641_lap.jpg I still have the Winton wristwatch Mother is wearing there. It was a gift to her from Mr. McKinley. -Scott |
Crosby, Columbo & Vallee
Hi noirish cronies ! (pardon my english, I'm french, I live in Paris).
I started reading the thread from page one in January (about 3 pages a day). I've just made it to the current page. I knew nearly nothing on L.A. (except from the novels by Raymond Chandler), now I am becoming a scholar ! I guess I could draw by heart by now a map of the old Chinatown/Plaza area and Bunker Hill. I've been eager every day to read not only from vintage L.A. but from this society of similars thinkers with various sensitivities which I hold in high esteem : the hugely inquiring and enthusiastic E_R ; the aesthete GW (more in the « Magnificent Ambersons' » way than in the « Double Indemnity ») ; the detectives Sopas and Gsjansen (please come back !) ; the scholars Beaudry and Scott ; the adventurer 3940Dx (Rosslyn Hotel tunnel) ; the family concerned Ninja55 ; the surveyor Fhammon ; the novelist Michael Ryerson ; the passionate newcomer Tovangar2 (who restarts to my delight our favourites Chinatown/Plaza & Bunker Hill) and all the others... Thinking back to those 500 pages, I guess I've found the peak of the spirit of the thread (« not only noirish but everything L.A. » as once the founder said) at Betty Katz by Michael Ryerson (page 491 #9805). Well, I have something noirish to share : nobody talked yet about Russ Columbo. http://img706.imageshack.us/edit_pre...&action=rotate russcolumbo.com That forgotten singer was as famous as Bing Crosby and Rudy Vallee in the early Thirties and had a perfect microphone technique (do you agree, Mr Steve Hoffman ?) and an outstanding legato. It's still worth listening to him. http://img191.imageshack.us/edit_pre...&action=rotate lastfm.com.br [Quoting Wikipedia] On September 2, 1934, Columbo was shot under peculiar circumstances by his longtime friend, photographer Lansing Brown while Columbo was visiting him at home. Brown had a collection of firearms and the two men were examining various pieces. Quoting Brown's description of the accident: « I was absent-mindedly fooling around with one of the guns. It was of a dueling design and works with a cap and trigger. I was pulling back the trigger and clicking it time after time. I had a match in my hand and when I clicked, apparently the match caught in between the hammer and the firing pin. There was an explosion. Russ slid to the side of his chair. » The ball ricocheted off a nearby table and hit Columbo above the left eye. Surgeons at Good Samaritan Hospital made an unsuccessful attempt to remove the ball from Columbo's brain; he died less than six hours after the shooting. Good Samaritan Hospital http://img855.imageshack.us/edit_pre...&action=rotate flickriver.com Columbo's death was ruled an accident, and Brown exonerated from blame. His funeral mass was attended by numerous Hollywood luminaries, including Bing Crosby and Carole Lombard who was romantically involved with him. AlvaroLegido |
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Hello Scott... Well, I'm pretty sure that that house was made an L.A. Historic-Cultural Monument and then got torn down, maybe in the '80s--there was lawsuit etc... I'll have to go digging. |
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More Christmastime Hollywood courtesy of Vintage Los Angeles, this time from 1953:
http://img268.imageshack.us/img268/3...312hollybl.jpg |
310 S Lafayette Park Place...
There are quite a few articles on the McKinley House. Here are two from early 1989: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-R...moNEWcompl.jpgLos Angeles Times Jan 2, 1989 https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-m...childcompl.jpgLos Angeles Times Jan 9, 1989 |
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Thanks, GW! -S |
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I've been avoiding posting the following since it is not in Los Angeles, but since we're on the subject of Gehry and new buildings in old styles... Just west of downtown Las Vegas, there is a new development area on land that was formerly owned by Union Pacific. It is slowly being built out, and thankfully since it was previously a rail yard, they did not have to destroy a bunch of old buildings or neighborhoods to do it. One of the new buildings is the Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health, which can best be described as a shiny silver office building midway through the process of melting in the Las Vegas heat: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...2010-12-10.JPG Lou Ruvo Center - South West Corner - 2010-12-10 [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], by Cygnusloop99 (Own work), from Wikimedia Commons Or maybe instead of 'extreme heat' Gehry was thinking 'a building as seen by someone with brain problems'. But anyway, there is a far more appealing building just around the corner. The name of the whole area changed to Symphony Park once the Smith Center for the Performing Arts came on board. It is an art deco masterpiece and would fit in well among the beautiful art deco work that still remains in LA. It's no Richfield Building, but it's pretty impressive. A search yielded a picture from February in another thread but I thought I would throw a few pics in here. Hoover Dam was clearly an inspiration, and this is easily the most fantastic thing built in southern Nevada since the dam. I took these photos when I went to a LV Philharmonic performance in April, about a month after it opened. https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-3...0/IMG_5778.JPG https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-H...0/IMG_5733.JPG https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-h...0/IMG_5711.JPG https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-8...0/IMG_5750.JPG https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-6...0/IMG_5757.JPG https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-N...0/IMG_5765.JPG https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/--...0/IMG_5766.JPG In a place known for its artificial facades and lack of permanence, we finally have something truly built to last. |
Meanwhile, back in L.A....
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As soon as I saw the gray building on the right, I thought, aha! I know I've seen it before. I was certain we looked into here once before...possibly in connection with the Black Dahlia... or did a movie star once live there? Anyway...I couldn't find anything with the %&#@ing "search" feature here ... I'm sure we were once in this bend of freeway, at the door of that gray building... and then I remembered Mabel Monohan: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=1235. It was none other than BARBARA GRAHAM, Noir Princess, who once lived at 1438 Wright Street... well, Rycroft, I know this isn't really about the coral-colored building you were asking about, but I wonder if its story can top 1438's? |
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http://testaae.greenwood.com/aae-fil.../C8336-R10.jpg "Barbara Graham in courtroom. (Herald Examiner Collection/Los Angeles Public Library) Quote:
http://testaae.greenwood.com/doc_pri...ooks/greenwood ..and here: http://www.johngilmore.com/Books/preview_graham.html http://www.johngilmore.com/Books/ima...m_victim.1.jpg http://ww1.hdnux.com/photos/10/03/76.../5/628x471.jpg http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/articl...in-2630485.php "Bloody Babs" |
Disney Auditorium
[QUOTE=FredH;5927712]James Lileks in his blog today talks about urban renewal in his hometown of Minneapolis...but the statement applies just as well to Los Angeles.
"Like most of Gehry's work, it's glass-shards in a Jiffy-Pop bag. It's not as if they had to go classical on the site - but almost anything streamlined Moderne from the 1939 World's Fair would have fit, and have adopted itself to the glories the site presented. As modern and spare as Moderne was, it still belonged to the previous tradition. It belonged." "But everyone wants a Gehry; everyone wants a Neimeyer. Just one! And if there's a piece of the past we have to sacrifice, well, there's plenty of that. Until there isn't." If you want ugliness to dominate your city, be sure to hire Gehry as your architect. His designs are nothing more than wadded up tin foil made-large into a grotesque structure. Here is Mr. Gehry 'designing' a building. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...las606/tin.jpg |
The pulpit, lectern, and organ from the old St. Paul's Cathedral (Episcopal) are now at St. James' Episcopal Church on Wilshire at St. Andrew's Pl. The Cathedra is at the Diocesan Center on Echo Park Ave.
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Damn! I still miss that job after all these years. |
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Well, Scott, the McKinleys are a complicated bunch to sort out. It seems that there were multiple Maytor Hoppenyan McKinleys (what could be the derivation of the name "Maytor Hoppenyan"?)... the one in your illustration was born in 1902; his father, MHM Sr., was born in 1878 and died in L.A. in 1952--perhaps he owned the house before Junior? Interestingly, it seems that there was also a Maytor Hoppenyan (no McKinley) who is listed in L.A. directories before WW2, and who is described elsewhere as having been in the funeral business back in Wisconsin... possibly a cousin who came to L.A. with the rest of the family? Anyway, as a fan of The Loved One and The American Way of Death and with my own experiences arranging my mother's funeral not long ago (getting into fits of laughter with my siblings over the various "options" such as a release of turtle doves or some absurd such--NOT appreciated by the waxen morticians), I find the whole business strange and opportunistic... but it seems that even sanctimonious morticians can have noirish private lives.. love this story of Maytor and Maxine... (could your mother have known Maxine?)... https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-U...andalcompl.jpgLos Angeles Times |
Architects and controversial buildings.
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Here it is:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8_Spruce_Street |
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