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Forgive me for veering off-topic for a moment, but I thought this was a quintessential Los Angeles story.
There was a nasty accident on the westbound 105 freeway at about 5:15 this morning. Traffic was halted in both directions for a few hours. Some of the stranded motorists noticed that a taco truck was among the vehicles stopped there. So they got out of their cars and asked if they could order breakfast. "El freeway so paro con la explosion and they ended up stuck there with everyone else. And since people knew we had food, people started approaching us and asking for something to eat!" The taco truck served up dozens of breakfast burritos before the freeway was reopened. https://s33.postimg.cc/412u0rkn3/105.jpg [source: twitter] |
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I love that story! |
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Thanks, HossC! I thought I had checked those CD's once, but I confess they really confuse me more often than not. The time period would have been the 60's if recollection serves. Sal Mineo wasn't 21 until 1960, but I suppose they might have let him in regardless of age! I found a Silent Film Location post by John Bengston, where he talks about an early 20's Keaton film titled Cops: I’ve written frequently about the alley on Cahunega, steps south from Hollywood Boulevard, where Buster grabs a passing car one-handed in Cops, the only movie in Keaton’s oeuvre filmed completely outdoors, showing that Charlie Chaplin (The Kid, 1921), Harold Lloyd (Safety Last!, 1923) and even Harry Houdini (The Grim Game, 1919), filmed there as well. Moreover, 1651 Cahuenga, the reflected building with the diagonally cropped corner entrance standing across the street from the Keaton stunt site (see reversed image below), once a rubber and vulcanizing store belonging to Harley H. Andrews, is now a porn shop. https://silentlocations.files.wordpr...ley-pan-02.jpgJohn Bengston post [Cahuenga Alley filming may have been previously mentioned.] Looking at the present GSV photo provided by HossC and the film article, I notice at the top left is a lighted sign in the shape of a star with a tail cascading down from it...and I wondered if it was previously used for the Comet Club/Club Comet location as comets are often depicted like that, and perhaps it used that adjacent space as well. The Cinema Treasures Site has this address location listed for a Bijou Theater and describes it thusly: Located a block off of Hollywood Boulevard, the Bijou Adult Theatre was one of the numerous storefront adult cinemas that popped up in Hollywood during the 1970’s. Period photos depict a relatively small corner unit, with a surprisingly formal cinema marquee; reminiscent of the marquees seen on “classic” mainstream theatres. Programming was billed as “All color hits all nite”, triple features running continuously for a $3 admission price. The theatre first appeared in independent listings circa 1975 [right after HossC's notation that it's listed as Speak39 in 1973] and continued to regularly advertise throughout the remainder of the decade. With the arrival of home video in the 1980’s, the Bijou Theatre transitioned away from cinema operations and became a standard adult video/magazine store; replacing the formerly impressive marquee signage with a generic retail lightbox. Today, the site operates as the Cahuenga Video Adult Book Store. http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/44957 I found a photo of this at Hollywood Photographs. http://hollywoodphotographs.com/photos/lrg/MP-047.jpg The building does not have that star sign with the tail, so it probably wasn't part of the Comet Club establishment. Although, the Bijou marquee also has neon stars on it with comet tails...? |
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I'm puzzled by this a bit, if it was on TO Blvd.* it wouldn't have been displaced by the 101, since the freeway was built a bit to the south of most of TO. The one area where it was built closer to the old road was in Newbury Park near what's now Ventu Park Road. I don't think, from looking at the aerial views, that there was much displacement of business by the freeway itself(there didn't seem to be any businesses north of Newbury Road where; the freeway was built), but there was for interchanges. When they built the Ventu Park offramp in the late 60's they had to move the Stagecoach Inn up the hill from it's original location(after which it promptly burned down). *I'm kind of assuming it was on the main drag, since it was catering to travelers. |
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https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...924/GfNiDT.jpghttps://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...923/g9MWYd.jpg |
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I'll have to ask Barbara if she ever went to the Auto Wheel Cafe - I don't know when it closed, but I know that Barbara didn't know Jack when he was a child (as he is in the Auto Wheel Cafe photograph). As to the location of the Can Can bar... that, Barbara would know, as she actually worked there along with Jack. As previously noted, she said it was “within a few blocks” of the Palomino, on Lankershim. But the CDs only mention a Can Can on Santa Monica Blvd, and another on Colorado Blvd, and another in South Gate... |
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And yes, "Lines"! On consideration, the blur does look more like Santa Maria than Santa Paula... |
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https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1871/...0342022a_h.jpgScottCharles by BillinGlendaleCA, on Flickr Basically your aunt is sort of correct, while the freeway itself didn't displace the cafe, the Ventu Park interchange did. So my feeling that I might have seen the cafe may be in fact real. ETA: I spelled Stagecoach wrong(doh!). The aerial photo is from UCSB's Framefinder. |
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https://geology.com/cities-map/map-o...nia-cities.gif |
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Are you saying that you may have seen the Auto Wheel Cafe in person? If you mentioned this in a previous post, please forgive me for missing it. Looking here on Google Maps, it seems that Ventu Park Road and Thousand Oaks Blvd do not touch each other.... did they touch before the freeway was built? In your photo above (I found it on Framefinder), is the left side of the photo North? And the street running from top to bottom, is that Thousand Oaks Blvd? Lastly, is this the same Stagecoach Inn? https://i.imgur.com/l43KVJj.jpg https://www.google.com/maps/place/St...!4d-118.912092 My sincere apologies for pelting you with 9,000 questions, Bill. As this is the ONLY info I've ever come across regarding the location (my dad couldn't remember the exact location, either), I'm very curious about it - so, thank you for your help! |
...not to beat a dead horse, but
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Meyer also filmed the interiors for Ultra-Vixens inside the house (as opposed to a studio set). https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/kjeU3X.jpg big bosoms and square jaws / google books wouldn't allow me to read the following page I found a gif of the 'blue room' but I don't think I should post it on SSP but you should be able to see it HERE. ...can't wait to find the pinata room! ;) __ |
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ETA: To get your bearings...the top of the aerial is West, the bottom is East(101 goes east/west from the 134 interchange to Gaviota). So the right side of the photo is north, left is south. ETA2: I need to learn how to do one of your patented overlays in Photoshop. ETA3: Here's a annotated Google Map view(top is north): https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1843/...8ae91aef_h.jpgScottCharles_now by BillinGlendaleCA, on Flickr |
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I didn't know that the 101 existed before it became a “freeway”. I was a bit confused when you said that Newbury Road possibly was the 101... but I just Googled a number of articles online, and I believe that I understand it now. The 101 is officially a route, much like Route 66, and not an interstate highway, like the I-5 or the I-10. And before that, it was El Camino Real. Whew! It would be fascinating to know if you saw the Auto Wheel Cafe when you were a kid. Of course, we'll never know, but the thought intrigues me! Unfortunately, I have no idea when my grandmother stopped owning it, nor do I know officially when it was torn down. I wonder if that really is the Auto Wheel Cafe in the old aerial. It certainly seems to be in the right place. There are even what could possibly be the bungalows at back which aunt Barbara mentioned: https://i.imgur.com/U54iQ3l.gif |
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Many thanks to HossC for straightening out confusion about the two wholesale markets... As for the circled building--presumably it was an early representation of this building, the Central Manufacturing District Terminal... http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...intheday-1.jpg as seen in this 2012 post by FW. https://s22.postimg.cc/i7ghh8lsx/CMD...rawing.bmp.jpghttps://s22.postimg.cc/h6g8rlhip/cmdtclubad.bmp.jpg A line drawing of the tower appeared in the LAT on Feb 13, 1983; an ad for the executive facilities in the CMDT appeared in the paper on Sept 25, 1936--more on that in FW's post. More on the district in HossC's 2014 post |
You may use this app to write/measure angle of the work piece
https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...ps.drawanangle |
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Per GlendaleBill it may be more helpful to state that the Auto Wheel Cafe or similar was in "present day" Thousand Oaks. Newberry Park or Conejo Valley might be better starting points for a search since Thousand Oaks probably did not appear on many maps until the late '40s -'50s. The name evidently was decided by contest in the '20s, and as noted, the city was only incorporated in '64. https://www.toaks.org/departments/ci...office/history Quote:
Uneducated first guess: ~ mid-late '30s auto. Excerpt from 1913 So Cal Auto Club Map http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/utils/...024&DMY=512&DMhttp://digitallibrary.usc.edu/utils/...536&DMY=512&DM http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/utils/...24&DMY=1024&DMhttp://digitallibrary.usc.edu/utils/...36&DMY=1024&DMhttp://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/si...9coll59/id/339 Conejo Photo Album >> https://www.flickr.com/photos/48427568@N06/ https://i.pinimg.com/474x/27/55/5e/2...k-thursday.jpghttps://i.pinimg.com/474x/27/55/5e/2...k-thursday.jpg HWY 101 and Moorpark Rd., ~'62 https://i.pinimg.com/736x/61/09/06/6...odel-homes.jpghttps://i.pinimg.com/736x/61/09/06/6...odel-homes.jpg Goebels Lion Park (present day - 2100 Thousand Oaks Blvd ?) https://c1.staticflickr.com/8/7368/9...84ac41cf49.jpghttps://c1.staticflickr.com/8/7368/9...84ac41cf49.jpg https://web.archive.org/web/20120606...nd_exhibit.htm Jungleland went through several iterations but started out as Goebel's African Lion Park https://web.archive.org/web/20120309...landMap-LG.gifhttps://web.archive.org/web/20120309...landMap-LG.gif http://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...DMX=0&DMY=0&DMhttp://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...X=512&DMY=0&DM http://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...X=0&DMY=512&DMhttp://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...512&DMY=512&DMhttp://tessa.lapl.org/cdm/singleitem...hotos/id/59245 Food for thought. :shrug: 1937 Chevrolet https://cdn1.mecum.com/auctions/sc05...?1337523683000https://cdn1.mecum.com/auctions/sc05...?1337523683000 |
'mystery' vantage point.
I've been trying to figure out where the photographer was standing when he/she took this slide back in 1967 "Amateur 35mm Original Slide 1967, Los Angeles Night Scene" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/VUD3aq.jpg EBAY / no longer listed As most of you know, the spectacular building on the right is the 17-story Dept. of Water and Power General Offices at 111 N. Hope Street. (it had opened two years prior to when this pic was taken) Here's a closer look at the buildings down below...and closest...to the roof top where the photographer was standing. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/Ty4XaW.jpg DETAIL the bldgs are middle left in the top pic (just left of the big D in Debi) __ |
I thought the cover of the current Calendar publication for the Huntington Library might be of interest. 618 S. Spring Street, the Los Angeles Stock Exchange Building facade, 1929, Samuel E. Lunden (artist of image, Roger Hayward).
https://s26.postimg.cc/p8zph315l/LAStock001.jpg Cover, Calendar, Huntington Library, September-October, 2018. And I assume the cops are standing by to issue jaywalking tickets to the scofflaws pictured. |
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