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In the above photo, I like the stance of the woman crossing the street. She's almost angled backwards, though she might be trying to avoid being hit by the car. Is that sailor's cap the wrong size? I thought spelling words incorrectly (not cleverly as they seem to think it is) was a newer phenomenon. Notice the spelling of "thoroughly" on the billboard above Melody Lane.*** The headline on that vendor's paper looks huge. I wonder what happened that day? (Though on looking at some of the other photos the headlines on most of the papers look huge. Maybe it was standard then, or every headline was huge during the war.) By the way, it was either cloudy or a bad case of smog in those other great pictures taken for LIFE magazine. You can hardly see down the boulevard. ***Thoroly is listed, however, in some dictionaries: 1.) (rare) Alternative spelling of thoroughly. Usage notes: This spelling is seldom found nowadays. However, the spelling is occasionally employed as shorthand. Origin: Proposed as a phonetic spelling of thoroughly in 1898 by the American National Education Association. Quote:
it's pointing north, I am assuming it was for the Pilgrimage Play presented each summer at the Pilgrimage Theatre in the Cahuenga Pass, renamed the John Anson Ford Amphitheatre in 1976, near the Hollywood Bowl, built in 1920 for the purpose of presenting that play. A brush fire destroyed it in October of 1929 and it was rebuilt, opening again in 1931. I say I assume the sign is for this because on the theatre's current website's history page, HERE, it states: After re-opening in 1931, The Pilgrimage Play was again performed here until 1964, interrupted only by World War II. This photo would make that debateable. |
We've visited Hollywood Blvd. (during WWII) several times lately and in looking for something
else I came across this 1941 photo. Well, it's a screengrab from the film "1941" of one of the miniatures of Hollywood Blvd. https://hustonsite.files.wordpress.c.../05/1941-8.jpg Warner backlot of Hollywood Blvd.: https://images.static-bluray.com/reviews/10792_4.jpg Though movie recreations are often meant to be general rather than historically accurate, I wondered if anyone had ever seen Hollywood Blvd. decorated with anything other than Christmas Trees along the street, rather than the Santa Claus option chosen by the art director of this film? If anyone doesn't know, this film is loosely based on several Los Angeles and Los Angeles area events from the time period including the shelling of an oil tank by a Japanese submarine near Santa Barbara, the Zoot Suit riots, and the February 1942 panic attack when people thought we were being raided by the Japanese--or by UFO's according to some "Alien Files" program I saw recently. The film used other miniatures as well, like an aerial view of the city with the HOLLYWOODLAND sign featured so that one character can shoot off the "LAND" part, and a miniature of the amusment park (Ocean Park) pier in Santa Monica. I enjoy many of the quirks of this film, but as a whole it can give you a headache. To me it's more like a wind-up toy that spurts and sputters and entertains you for a bit before you move on. On revisiting it awhile ago it was nice to see a film with all of the special effects done in camera and not one obvious CGI moment to interrupt it. |
:previous: When I first glanced at that photograph I thought it was from Blade Runner. (squint & you'll see what I mean)
I came across this interesting building quite by accident the other day. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...540/vz60tl.jpg gsv It reminds me a bit of the vintage buildings at Venice Beach, but this building is located at 2517 Pasadena Avenue in Lincoln Heights. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...911/am6PRK.jpg detail / gsv view showing the side of the building http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...538/YjjZfH.jpg gsv I haven't found a build date yet (it's oddly missing from the real estate sites I looked at), but I found this interior photo of what looks like a hallway. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...540/6F18Ml.jpg http://www.loopnet.com/Listing/16072...os-Angeles-CA/ *I just realized it's the same space as the photo below. (so no, it isn't a hallway) Several sites mention 30 ft. wood beamed ceilings (see below) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...673/g48zu7.jpg https://foursquare.com/v/reincarnati...b0b13f4c7786ba One of the real estate sites had this interior photograph. I'm having a hard time picturing this layout in this building. Did the real estate site make a mistake? http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...661/Iar2VA.jpg http://www.loopnet.com/Property-Reco...031/XKT1Vzz5Q/ :previous: click the link to check it out. I re-checked the aerial to see if there was any circular aspects to the design. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...537/Tk4Cv6.jpg google_earth Nope.. |
Man Leaps From 21st floor of City Hall.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...540/D7WUEq.jpg eBay "Michael Roomanoff, who was acquitted in Los Angeles three years ago on chargers of being a 'Hollywood Ponzi', today leaped to his death from the 21st floor of the city hall. Roomanoff left a note directing that his debts be paid off by a $30,000 policy. Police had to retrieve the body from the roof by means of ropes." "The body struck the tile on the roof about three stories from the ground." 12/14/1934 -note the crushed tiles...and then he rolled to the edge. __ http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...910/Yv1GSg.jpg eBay |
Lupe Velez impersonating Adolf Hitler.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/537/H1RFV9.jpg eBay reverse http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...540/NrvxQI.jpg 1941 http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...538/jagu8J.jpg http://hawaiiana.us/contents/en-us/d13.html |
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I Can Hold A Position.....
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I did find out that Dave The Model was somehow associated with this building at one time. http://www.meetup.com/LosAngelesFigu...nts/120437032/ He and a group of other models wanted to start a modeling something in this building. LA's only contortionist male art model, with nine years' experience. Naturally flexible, yoga trained, sculptor background and a narrative posing style. He also runs drawing workshops from time to time. ArtModelDave.com "I CAN HOLD DIFFICULT POSES FOR HOURS IF NEED BE. AS A CONTORTIONIST, YOU MIGHT BE SURPRISED AT WHAT I DEEM COMFORTABLE. AS A MODEL, YOU WILL FIND THAT I AM..." Here is Dave Larson ...Model, who's motto is "Hire me". Here's his website..he sounds serious and he lets you know he's interested in ''ladies''. http://www.artmodeldave.com/index.html http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...psptpyifsg.jpg http://www.artmodeldave.com/index.html |
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http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...e/IMG_1764.jpg http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...e/IMG_1765.jpg The Pilgrimage Play- apparently they had ceased it for a while, but it just happened to have been revived for the first time since the war when those photos were taken. It opened July 31, 1944, was supposed to close the week of Aug 20 but due to demand they held it over until the week of Sept 3. http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...belle/8144.jpgLAT 8-1-44 http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...lle/9-3-44.jpg LAT 9-3-44 :previous: the 1941 blackout situation being referrenced above was a reaction to the immediate war emergency, not related to the west coast dimout regulations in place 1942-Oct 1943 that I cited earlier; |
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Re the great photo on the previous page with Burgess Meredith:
Victor Moore's partner-in-crime William Gaxton is standing to the left of the pillar and Walter Huston, father of John is to the right. Wynn Murray is the blonde woman just to our left of Huston and am I totally mistake, but is that Lou Costello in the foreground left? |
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http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=15881 http://imageshack.us/a/img15/1232/ekr1.jpg ebay |
I went to a party at this site a couple of years ago. The occupants told me it had been a funeral home.
Cheers, Jack[/QUOTE] Quote:
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Daily News http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...673/x3UhA5.jpg http://www.ebay.com/itm/L-A-DAILY-NE...item4d32e8b1eb :previous: note that the Black Dahlia is still in the news two years later. Who is Jack Sands? __ |
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/633/VdQ9Wn.jpg
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Winifred Murray http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...911/QsV39I.jpg http://ifyoucanplayscranton.blogspot...ed-murray.html __ |
Parenthetically. . .
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mrfredmertz, thank you for identifying William Gaxton! That face was so familiar, but I couldn't quite connect it with the name, because I am only really familiar with him in his silent-film days. It was driving me nuts!
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https://farm1.staticflickr.com/295/1...6b016c40_c.jpg https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3720/...8147e847_c.jpg It had been Woodsmen of the World lodge rooms, until (from what I can tell) Los Angeles Undertaking, Inc. moves in in the early '20s. They do some major work in 1933, including, according to permits, "Install stone & concrete at entrance" so I'm guessing that's when the Gothic tracery went in. Interestingly, in 1926 a permit is granted for 2517, all the way to the corner to 2525, 23,000sf, $125,000, John Paxton Perrine-designed theater for West Coast Theaters, Inc. Which is apparently never built. It's Los Angeles Undertaking from the early '20s until, at some point between '41 and '43, it becomes part of the Pierce Brothers chain, and remains so until the early '60s from what I can tell, and then it's a number of outfits, e.g. Funeral Consultants of America, and, at least since the early '90s, the A. Chau Funeral Home. It's de-mortuaried about ten years ago, I think |
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First off, a couple images that I think are new to the USCDL. Whittingtons: https://farm1.staticflickr.com/257/1...ec8392d2_b.jpg https://farm1.staticflickr.com/348/1...976a3e21_b.jpg USCDL She's 1916, her architect, J F Kavanaugh. https://farm1.staticflickr.com/483/1...6bd34816_o.png southwest contractor, 1916 Flash-forward to January, 1971. The Holton Arms is owned by the Orthopedic Hospital behind it. Some notes from Cleveland Wrecking: https://farm1.staticflickr.com/344/1...ddf5f703_b.jpg ladbs |
Beaudry, thanks for the information on 2517 Pasadena Ave.
"it's been de-mortuaried about ten years ago." lol :) and for the additional information and photographs of the Holton Arms. |
2517 Pasadena Avenue, Lincoln Heights
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https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-b...20512%2BAM.jpg It had me confused as the building looks like it could have been a theater, with the round room being the "lobby" and the space with the 30' ceilings the "auditorium" (with room for a balcony). The timber-work hints at the long-vanished ceiling: https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-3...15318%2BAM.jpg loopnet Viewed from the back, one sees modern(?) windows: https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-k...30903%2BAM.jpg gsv (Terrific street lamps in that part of town. They go on for blocks and are in pretty good nick.) That was a Richfield station to the east of the Woodmen of the World building: Quote:
Members of the Pasadena W.O.W. lodge show off traditional Woodmen regalia (1897): https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-e...94027%2BAM.jpg lapl Thank you e_r for the very interesting find. I had a lot of fun trolling through the seven pages of permits for that corner and reading up on W.O.W.. |
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The W.O.W. had meetings for kids at my grade school in the 1950s. I went to a meeting and joined the ''fraternal'' club. You were required to buy a ''W.O.W. life insurance policy'' to be a member. I bought the policy, which is kind of ridiculous for an eleven year old kid! I went to a few corny ''woodsy'' meetings and finally dropped out. I figured it was just a scheme to sell life insurance. I had the policy for a few years until it finally expired due to my non-payment. I think the policy was $8 a year. Even today in 2015 Ripoff Report has a large file on this insurance company: http://www.ripoffreport.com/r/Woodme...policie-154740 |
Vincent Lamouroux at the Sunset Pacific
Remember the Sunset Pacific Motel at Sunset and Bates?
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and coming along just fine (the motel itself is still bright white): https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-I...50801%2BPM.jpg IAmNotAStalker (<--- more pix at the link) |
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and wanted to walk a few blocks over there to see it, but my friend did not. |
NoirCityDame, you had mentioned that your father signed up for the Navy in WWII out of Fairfax High School
(at 17!) and I wondered if you have any Los Angeles related photos of him you could share with us? Did he ever visit the Hollywood Canteen or any U.S.O.'s in L.A.? I hope you don't mind the query. Also, you have found alot of good newspaper items to add to many posts and I wondered if you have, or can find anything about this (below) that I inquired about once? Thanks. Quote:
clarification about dates for The Pilgrimage Play. As an aside, I noticed in the ad you posted that "The Hollywood Pilgrimage Bowl" has it's address as 2580 N. Highland Ave. and, I'm assuming, when the freeway was built, the address changed to 2580 Cahuenga Blvd E. as the Ford Amphitheatre's now addressed. (Hollywood Bowl is still 2301 N. Highland Ave.) Some Pilgrimage Theatre photos and related info: Here's a 1931 photo showing the beginnings of construction for the Pilgrimage Play Theatre after the previous structure built in 1920 had been burned in a brush fire in October, 1929. http://waterandpower.org/Historical_...nstruction.jpgLAPL Image Archive Front entrance to the Pilgrimage Theatre in Hollywood, ca. 1931. http://waterandpower.org/3%20Histori...ge_Theatre.jpgCSL Image Archive Postcard view of the Pilgrimage Play Theatre seating and stage, ca. 1931. http://waterandpower.org/A%20Histori...e_Interior.jpgLAPL Image Archive Here's a daytime photo of the way the Pilgrimage Play Theatre and the Hollywood Bowl looked during 1944. http://waterandpower.org/2%20Histori...ge_Theatre.jpgCSL Image Archive Additional information says: --During WWII the Pilgrimage Play Theatre was deeded to Los Angeles County and converted into dormitories for servicemen. (It was?) --In 1942, Hollywood Bowl audiences were limited to 5,000 due to war-related safety concerns. http://waterandpower.org/Historical%...Bonds_1944.jpgTable Magazine: L.A. Observatory One or both of these may have been posted before. Spotlights abound at a War Bonds event at the Hollywood Bowl. On June 14th, 1944, radio actors and actresses performed at the Hollywood Bowl during a war bond program. CBS broadcast the event live. http://waterandpower.org/Historical%..._War_Bonds.jpgLAPL Image Archive By the way, the Pilgrimage Play Theatre, now called the John Anson Ford Amphitheatre since 1976, is closed this summer. From an L.A. Times article: The rumble of construction machinery and the thwack of carpentry will be the summer sounds for 2015 at the 1,196-seat county-owned outdoor John Anson Ford Amphitheatre, which is closing for at least a year and a half for a [near] $20-million renovation project. While the makeover is underway, the dancers and musicians who usually hold sway at the theater will fan out to other, as yet undetermined venues around Los Angeles County. |
:previous: Very interesting post Martin.
Have we seen this on NLA before? http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...538/yMDp36.jpg http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...540/o7e0vS.jpg found in an old file of mine. The so-called 'slums, blight - crowded' were to be replaced by this $200,000 apartment complex. (what is that in today's money CityBoyDoug?) 1950 http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/901/yLG8tn.jpg http://photos.lapl.org/carlweb/jsp/F...olNumber=34631 "Eileen O. Laverty shows model of $200,000 apartment complex to be built on Bunker Hill, called one of the greatest developments in downtown Los Angeles." (unrealized) I believe it says 'coliseum on the white round building. (*actually it says Auditorium) __ |
"1924 Original PASADENA Photo HOUSE on SO. EL MOLINA & ALPINE ST. California."
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...911/nFaAw9.jpg http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...907/MbokDz.jpg reverse http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...540/Zoiy0C.jpg I drove the google-mobile in the vicinity and located the house at 979 S. El Molino.http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/320...910/1NmqTb.jpg http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...673/uAHz77.jpg gsv ..and it's a Greene & Greene! "Located in Pasadena's Madison Heights neighborhood, this historic Greene & Greene Craftsman was commissioned by Dr. Samuel Crow in 1909. The house was subsequently purchased by Edward Crocker, who was responsible for doubling the size of the property by purchasing land to the west of the residence and enhancing it with extensive gardens and out buildings designed by Henry Greene. Built on a U-shaped plan with a center courtyard, the 3,168 square-foot bungalow features four bedrooms, three baths, formal living and dining rooms, two fireplaces, a sunroom with stained glass skylights, wood-paneled halls, a separate guest cottage, swimming pool, and detached garage with caretaker's quarters." The property has been owned by the same family since 1958! __ the garage, mentioned above, is very large. here it is http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...661/RjCExc.jpg redfin aerial http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...909/WYtdnb.png I think this must be the garage (red arrow) __ 979 S. El Molino's neighbor is an attractive Craftsman as well (below, on the left) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...540/iGmmbq.jpg gsv Perhaps it's a Greene & Greene as well. __ Thanks for the additional information on 2517 Pasadena Ave. tovanger2. I tried to locate a photograph of the 'Woodmen' without success. I noticed the street lamps too. I'm glad you mentioned them. |
Early entrances to the Hollywood Bowl (no specific dates :(, sorry)
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...538/MxvGKK.jpg eBay http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/537/KTvAmg.jpg http://www.californiarestorationandw...ollywood-bowl/ ...and finally, the model for the Streamline Modern/Art Deco entrance designed by George Stanley (commissioned by the WPA) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...537/PGw40T.jpg http://artdecosociety.squarespace.com/ __ CityBoyDoug, I somehow missed your earlier post about the contortionist model working out of 2517 Pasadena Avenue. The building seems to attract 'bohemians' as of late. ;) |
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Interesting lamp post / utility pole combination. |
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FIVE POINTS
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...538/sJA3IB.jpg google_earth This impressive old garage (red arrow above) is just a block south of 2517 Pasadena Ave (outlined in blue). -street view June 2009 (in later views the façade is partially covered in vines) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...633/O6qc04.jpg gsv It's located at 2450 Daly Street. note the impressive art deco detailing around the large doors. (the folding metal screens might be original as well) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...673/aM9w64.jpg gsv I need some help on it's history. |
:previous:Telephone Company garage, building permit dated 26 Aug 1935
(Pac Bell is still across the street) It's now the Daly Lofts per LA. curbed http://la.curbed.com/archives/2010/0...ln_heights.php: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-V...10608%2BPM.jpg Video of one unit Loopnet calls them the "Telephone Company Lofts" Lane Barden lives there: Quote:
gvs july 2007 https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-F...25407%2BAM.jpg gsv july 2014 |
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I don't mind at all. It was my grandfather, the 17 year old. I'm sad to say I don't have any LA related photos from his navy days (only some shipboard ones) or stories of him visiting the USO. I suspect when he was in town he had to make the rounds to the relatives houses. It was hard to get him to talk about old LA or WWII, though I was interested in both. I'll look through my mom's photos anyway. I know she does have one of the boys at some unknown nightclub posing with bandleader Dick Jurgens and Johnny "the Phillip Morris midget." One of the sisters got the bulk of the familty photos; I got to glance through them once only- a certain coolness exits between her family and ours, stemming apparently from my mom calling her daughter "Sleeping Ugly" at a slumber party in 1962. The phrase "get over it" comes to mind, but I know I'll not likely ever see those pictures. My grandmother Lorraine was also an LA/Hollywood girl and her friend was dating a local sailor boy, Jack Howell, who came to their apartment with some of his buddies one afternoon and they posed for some photos. http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...obelle/011.jpg Lorraine and some sailor buddies. http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...obelle/009.jpg Jack Howell. His girlfriend, Flo, wrote on the back of this one "He took some cuter ones but I'm stingy!" I wish I knew Jack's family; I have pictures from their wedding June 29, 1946. http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...obelle/008.jpg I don't know his name but it's so LA with the white stucco and huge poinsettia. I see he has a comb in his pocket. The fire in 1942. I did find a report of it in the LA Times, 12-13-42.It didn't take long to finger the suspect for it- Jimmy Jordan, age 16. Poor Jimmy- I hope the FBI wasn't too hard on him. http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...e/12-13-42.jpg http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...e/12-14-42.jpg LAT 12-14-42 This was the only picture I came across, via eBay. Not the greatest and has the dreaded watermark. http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/k...-12-42fire.jpg ebay Nice information about the Bowl and the Play. I've been trying to track down some recordings from those Bowl rallies. I came across the mention of a plan to turn the place into dorms for servicemen, but not confirmation that it was acted on. |
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$200,000 in 1950 is really not that impressive! I expected a more substantial number as well. What cost $200,000 in 1950 would cost $1,940,689.04 in 2014. Also, if you were to buy exactly the same products in 2014 and 1950, they would cost you $200000 and $20733.68 respectively. |
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Los Angeles Alligator Farm
As we're out in Lincoln Heights, I thought I'd add one or two more pictures of the Los Angeles Alligator Farm. The Farm was on Mission Road from 1907 to 1953 when it moved to Buena Vista, across from Knott's Berry Farm, and renamed "The California Alligator Farm". It closed in 1984, after a 77 year run, and (per wiki) the critters were shipped to a private estate in Florida.
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https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-8...92513%2BAM.jpg lapl Herman J. Schultheis Collection And the dark underbelly of the alligator business. LOL. Alligator Farm workers, exhibiting a variety of facial expressions, package babies for sale / shipment: https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-V...83643%2BAM.jpg lapl Interesting neighborhood, even had a Natatorium: https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-B...03744%2BAM.jpg 1921 Baist Today (note Selig Place): https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-G...04250%2BAM.jpg google maps ------------------------------------------------------------ Wonderful post NCD re wartime romances and the Christmas mail fire. I really enjoyed it. Thank you. |
Thanks tovanger2 and oldstuff for the information on the old telephone co. garage on Daly Street.
Close Call. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...661/tT4uNl.jpg eBay "Elysian Park's moving mountain finally collapsed on the night of Nov. 26th. The 'avalanche' carried some one million tons of earth down above a viaduct demolishing the re-enforced concrete structure. Here is a big boulder that which 'pressed' against an automobile which had been parked on the street below the mountain." 11/28/1937 http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...540/f4pgmn.jpg This is my favorite. Amazing http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/908/0fz9tA.jpg http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/vie...198/zz0025gn14 :previous: Can anyone read the name of the hotel? *never mind. I just realized I could enlarge the photograph further. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...673/Qhs8sv.jpg And there's a train I didn't see before. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...673/AQNMTN.jpg originally posted by Martin_Pal back in March 2015. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/538/Axzr1g.jpg Martin's post includes many other photographs and information on the event. http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=26980 __ Here are a few more recent finds that I don't think we've seen on NLA. below: A week before the massive slide. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...673/HJZevY.jpg eBay info. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...538/4p2zEf.jpg "rapidly widening" http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...537/YAujtr.jpg eBay http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...540/aIINv5.jpg close up of Dayton Street viaduct damage http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...912/07fjOh.jpg eBay http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...661/ztEwoq.jpg __ |
1924 Original Photograph Rooming House 432 N. Hill St. Los Angeles California Chas. Brown.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...537/UE9PE2.jpg eBay enlargement http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...538/6aidzR.jpg two 'twin' houses? _ |
'mystery' man with the bedroom eyes.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...633/40DG8t.jpg eBay I think he's sweet on Beverly. detail http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...537/NbjPV3.jpg :previous: the photographer was 'Bruno of Hollywood' Gerry spelled with an I...I bet he was in show business. ;) Does anyone recognize him? __ |
Some shots of 1971 LA, grabbed from the "Cannon" series.
We start at the Hotel Always Open, because evil, like rust, never sleeps: http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Cannon1.jpg Evil hits the street, and the game's afoot. Oops, this LA: the game's a-wheel. http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Cannon2.jpg Our hero stealthily picks up the tail of an innocent: http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Cannon4.jpg Whom he prepares to rescue in the sumptuous courtyard of the Hotel Always Open: http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Cannon3.jpg Meanwhile, in the better part of town: http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Cannon5.jpg And after making all well, our hero reflects on what it must be like: http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Cannon6.jpg Thought the crew might get a few moments of amusement from locating the locations :-) Cheers, Earl |
Leo Katz mural "Youth Arisen", Frank Wiggins Trade School, Los Angeles, 1935.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...540/aJuHKZ.jpg http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/vie...198/zz002883gp I posted this is because I was wondering if the mural was still intact at Abram Freidman Occupational School (formerly the Frank Wiggins Trade School) but then I noticed this side-note in the description: " The central panel (the one pictured above) was removed from the Frank Wiggins Trade School lobby and returned to the Public Works Administration in 1935. The other two panels were returned in 1939." -UCLA Archives Does anyone know...is there a repository for WPA artwork? I'd really like to know if "Youth Arisen" has survived. As a reminder, here's the school. Quote:
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I second the motion, NCD, thanks for sharing the photos and family intrigue! Quote:
Though a point of contention for your family, sharing it with us made me laugh, thank you! Quote:
The other sailor, with the comb, stunned me a bit because he's a spittin' image of my young neighbor, Lenny! __ Thanks for the Union Station fire info and photo...I didn't know they'd found the cause of it! I guess they put 16 year olds to work overnight back then. And smoking, too! I guess I hadn't realized the fire was in a tented area. Imagine some of the stories caused by 35 tons (!) of holiday mail during World War II disappearing? Lost letters and gifts. Burnt photographs. Hurt feelings. Confused children. Missed opportunities. G.I. mail that wasn't delivered. Information never to be known. "It's the thought that counts." Most people probably would never have known about the fire and wonder about what happened to their mail. Some may have used it to their advantage: "I bought you this expensive gift...it must've been in that fire!" :tup: to you! |
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so that they don't or won't interfere with each other. That didn't happen when I attended the Bowl on a Friday night sometime in the 90's. One of the featured performers that night was Rosemary Clooney. Playing at the Ford Amphitheatre was a punk rock group, I believe. So, throughout the concert one also had the occasional background track of a completely opposite musical style. It was a hot summer night and, reminiscent of Streisand's famous rendition of "Silent Night" sung in her summer night concert in Central Park back in the 60's, Rosemary sang "White Christmas" from the popular film she had starred in, but it was a disonant version you'd never want to hear again. The Bowl management profusely apologized, on stage, and said they were trying to do something about it. (But what could they do at that point?) Quote:
Loved these photos, E_R, particularly the unusual "model" one of the new entrance, which opened in 1939. They should've put more cars in it, though! :P A couple interesting Hollywood Bowl notes I found along the way: View of the Hollywood Bowl as seen from the top of the seating, looking down towards the stage, 1923. http://waterandpower.org/Historical_..._Bowl_1923.jpgLAPL Image Archive In 1923, the Hollywood Bowl’s first 150 boxes were built. Also in 1923, the Hollywood Bowl’s debt was paid off and the mortgage was burned (!) on the Bowl’s stage. Among the donors who helped retire the debt were three-time presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan, who made a $100 donation.Info from: L.A. Philharmonic Bowl Moments Also from L.A. Phil's Bowl Moments: In 1923, with the re-paving of Highland Avenue sure to disrupt the Hollywood Bowl’s season, Bowl leader Artie Mason Carter [AMC-heh!] took to the streets to protest the city’s work. She and another woman manned “battle positions” in rocking chairs (with their knitting) in the middle of Highland Avenue and refused to allow crews to break up the street. Protesting roadwork on Highland Avenue, 1923. http://waterandpower.org/3%20Histori..._Bowl_1923.jpgHollywood Bowl Philpedia The result? Paving was rescheduled for the 1923 Bowl’s off-season. ___ I didn't know this: Hollywood High School held its first graduation at the Hollywood Bowl in 1920 and has continued to do so each year since then. Undated: http://waterandpower.org/Historical_...graduation.jpgLAPL Image Archive |
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but there does not seem to be any indication of where it went |
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https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-q...33818%2BPM.jpg wiki Quote:
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Thanks, tovangar2, it dawned on me after I'd made the inquiry it might be a camera! ___ There's been a dozen or two posts showing incarnations of Carpenter's Drive-In's. HossC's post #17962 has photo's of Carpenter's Drive-In and links to some other posts of the same. Segments from the above post: Quote:
http://waterandpower.org/4%20Histori...e_In_1940s.jpgDWP What caught my eye is this: This Carpenter's Drive-In replaced the one located near the northeast corner of Sunset and Vine (6265 Sunset Blvd), which was torn down in 1938 to make room for the new NBC Radio City building. I looked through most all of the posts on NLA concerning this Carpenter's at Sunset and Vine and I don't think it's clear that we 1.) knew the Drive-In was remodeled (rebuilt) because it moved across the street to make way for the NBC Building that was being constructed, or 2.) that there were two Carpenter's for awhile across the street from each other. At least I didn't know that. The info that HossC posted: "The 1936 CD lists [Carpenter's] at 6285 and 6290 Sunset Blvd." indicates two locations, then, maybe they did have one on both corners for a time? (And the info I posted says the address was "6265", slightly off the CD list.) And speaking of the NBC Radio City building being constructed, I have no idea what this was originally published in, but I found this link to a three page 1938 article titled "Is Radio Moving to Hollywood?" and it's about the NBC building construction and the possibility of radio moving to L.A. from N.Y and what will Hollywood do? There's a few photos and some tidbits like: "The construction was delayed by the recent floods." (1938.) http://www.durenberger.com/resources...LYWOOD0638.pdf |
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Arthur Heineman is also credited with designing the first motel, Motel Inn in San Luis Obispo. My apologies if we've covered all this stuff already. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...2880459%29.jpgWikipedia |
Fresh from Muscle Beach, Venice, CA
;)
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Its very easy for me to see why this mural didn't really sit well with the cultural mores of the 1930s. Its the central figure that goes over the edge and sits squarely in the realm of what is called today ...soft core porn. His ''proportions'' are wildly off key and for some reason... just plain kinky. Its one thing to be classically nude and its another to be in your face as this fellow appears to be. It doesn't bother me but I can see why a lot of 1930s people would say..."I don't think so." The various symbolisms scattered throughout the saga are harmless and excruciatingly vague. Even the pendulous breasts eagerly echo the Daliesque women of that era. But its that precursor of a Speedo that leaps at you, as if to assault, and wants to collide with your face. Now, if the artist wanted to achieve the effect I describe above....he achieved it in spades.:tup: |
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