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Pearl Au Kar-Wai, a Hong Kong based actress from the 1950's/60's. https://i.imgur.com/ky0INv7.jpg Google Books - Hong Kong Cinema: A Cross-cultural View Here she is pictured with Cary Grant. https://i.imgur.com/GRzcVyj.jpg hkmdb.com |
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rescarta.lapl.org/ I found Arden and Delman salons side by side on Wilshire Blvd, Beverly Hills in 1960. :shrug: |
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Personally, I'd love to go back to the late 30's LA. Heart of the Depression yet produced some of the most beautiful buildings in the city. What can I say, I'm mad for Deco. |
[QUOTE=CityBoyDoug;8898729]Me too but talk to Kevin about that. He wants to promote his CBD TV Show.
Damn CBD, you just can't get anything right. I at no point was promoting my tv show. You started this whole thing by spouting off about something you knew nothing about. It was put up as a joke but you had to offer your two bits. And when I corrected you, you posted information you didn't understand as a response. Seriously, stick to the past, current events are beyond you. |
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Per Google, she's still alive and 81. |
Dept of Random-- I came across this sweet church in the Times of March 25, 1907--the first service in it had taken place the day before. I was glad to find it still standing at 1201 E Vernon Avenue, with a bonus next door:
https://i.postimg.cc/yNsTgryg/stlukes1907-bmp.jpg https://i.postimg.cc/0QJbWspH/stlukestoday-bmp.jpg It sometimes happens in LA that block-number changes occur without an intervening street...the well-preserved house immediately west of St. Lukes, 1191 E Vernon, was built at 1608 Crenshaw Avenue in 1914 and moved here in 1938. https://i.postimg.cc/63KDSVRJ/1191-EVernon-Ave-bmp.jpg ***************************** KevinW: I wish there was a "like" feature on this thread.... |
[QUOTE=KevinW;8900573]
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Hello Kevin our NLA friend, sorry but it was you that made some much needed corrections to the realities of CBD oil. Then you added a brief mention of your TV show. If that was not a self promotion, what was it? Thank you for posting information about CBD. I'm sure the Forum members appreciate it as I do also. Thank you for the info on where Members can find your TV show. There are thousands of channels now and TV services, its daunting. I remember when TV Guide was great before it split in two. People are very upset these days and can be easily triggered to anger. I understand. https://secure.static.meredith.com/c...nmo/1780_l.jpg TV guide |
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RE the picture of the two cops, Delman used to be very high-end maker and seller of women's shoes. Beverly Hills maybe?
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From our friends at urban diachrony urbandiachrony "West side of Main Street - South of Republic Street." (I'm pretty sure we have seen this image on NLA) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/922/fNSaph.jpg urbandiachrony "While detailed records about the lost structures in this view are scarce, it seems that the light-colored buildings with second-floor bay windows were completed before the mid-1880s, while the larger building to the left was built in 1886. For the duration of their existence, all were taken up by a single hotel, successively known as the Hotel Oxford, the Hoffman House, and the El Jalisco Hotel. All of the buildings were demolished in 1950, apparently without much ado, during the construction of the Santa Ana Freeway. Although briefly intended to be the relocated home of the doomed West Temple Apartments, the publicly-owned land has since been used as a parking lot for the Los Angeles Plaza Historic District.".....urbandiachrony First of all: Very sad. All gone for a parking lot. Needless to say, the block would resemble San Diego's Gaslight District if someone back in 1950 had the foresight to save the historic buildings. Such a wasted opportunity. I didn't realize one hotel occupied all the buildings. ...Am I reading that correctly? :shrug: Now to find out why the West Temple Apartments was/were 'doomed'. Thanks again urbandiachrony . |
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I found this interesting photograph on a short-lived (3 months) website name LA flaneurie. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...921/y6jTZT.jpg This is the first photograph that I've seen with people riding on top of the streetcar. Are there more? Let's take a closer look. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/onPjhI.jpg laflaneurie Can anyone figure out the location? - other than "somewhere close to USC" Quote:
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This shot looks like north of Will Rogers Beach in Santa Monica; the building with the stacked letters was a restaurant on the east side of the PCH torn down in the late 1990's. (I took the liberty of deleting the watermark and color correcting in Photoshop.)http://solidgoldman.com/REV.jpg
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Either it was a cold day or this family preferred to wear a lot of clothes at the beach.
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:previous: Source indicates Eleventh and Flower Streets. Meanwhile, in 1940, Malibu https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-CqCVduA0O...beach+1940.jpghttps://3.bp.blogspot.com/-CqCVduA0OQ0/U30rsMQIK5I/AAAAAAAAPFc/wf2mLYV6pgY/s1600/Malibu+beach+1940.jpg] Malibu Inn, circa 1940 https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Si2jl8N8T...u+Inn+1940.pnghttps://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Si2jl8N8T...u+Inn+1940.png Worth a look see>> https://www.beverlyhillshistoricalso...irst-100-years |
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https://i809.photobucket.com/albums/...cadoPlaza1.jpg USC Digital Library And here's a different angle from back when this thread only had double digit page numbers. Quote:
I couldn't find Mercado Plaza in the CDs, so to try and date my USC image, I looked up Las Golondrinas Cafe at 425 N Main. It only appears in the 1937 and 1940 CDs, but the owner, Maria Cervantes, is listed there with a restaurant from 1934 until 1942. Las Golondrinas Cafe offered "Chicken In Hot Sauce, Enchiladas, Tamales, Tacos, Fried Beans with Cheese, Tortillas and All Kinds of Wines and Beers". I also found a Las Golondrinas Cafe at 406 W Sunset Boulevard (now 406 W Cesar E Chavez Avenue) from 1956 to 1973, so did it just move around the corner when the original building was demolished? The 406 location was a couple of doors down from the well-known Colima Restaurant, and can be seen as a Thai restaurant in the early GSV images. Of course, that block was demolished about four years ago. Finally, is there any connection to La Golondrina Restaurant in The Pelanconi House on Olvera Street, which has been mentioned a few times on NLA? |
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Oh my! I had completely forgotten about that photograph. I'm so glad you found it again, Hoss. hmm. . .so did anyone figure out what is going on with the ground floor? (the facade extending down Republic Street) Were they building an addition? . |
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Mercado Plaza had another location at 413 N. Main before moving to 427 N. Main from 1939. In 1942 the proprietor Katsuke Shishima was forced to sell up before he was interned. Here's an interior shot of the 413 N. Main location. It became a pool and billiards hall when the Mercado Plaza moved to 427 Main St. https://i.imgur.com/8d4aiTY.jpg americanhistory.si.edu A look inside the Mercado Plaza at 427 N.Main St. https://i.imgur.com/prjJEYe.jpg Screen capture from a short video in which Katsuke's son Bill talks about his life. https://vimeo.com/94040698 |
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Not too long ago I read about a staged fur robbery that had taken place in Los Angeles (back in the 1950s) but was never able to find any details. I think I finally found the culprit. .................................................................................................This dude. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/8huF3j.jpg tim / pinterest "Furrier to the stars Al Teitelbaum was the owner of Teitelbaum Furs on Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills. On Dec. 27, 1955, he staged a fake fur heist to get insurance money and later went to jail." While trying to find additional details about the robbery I happened upon this snapshot of Teitelbaum's Fur Store with an amazingly streamlined car parked in front of his store. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/OtaAgV.jpg kustomrama Do you think that's Teitelbaum's car?..... . .and could that be Teitelbaum standing next to it?.......Is he coordinating the fur heist? ...kidding Here's the description of the photograph over at Kustomrama "A photo of the Dan La Lee retractable streamliner that Roger Babler's parents took outside Teitelbaum Furs in Los Angeles in 1939. They lived in Monticello, Wisconsin, a small village straight south of Madison and were going on a month long honeymoon trip through the south and west. Photo courtesy of Roger Babler." At first I confused Dan La Lee with Don Lee. A comment at Kustomrama says the building in the snapshot is in Hollywood. . .not Rodeo Drive. oops. I forgot all about the staged fur robbery. :no: . |
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