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Yes--it's 4472, once between Fremont Place and Fremont Place West, which I have in the hopper for an upcoming Wilshire Boulevard house history. Dr. Nelson's shenanigans (including his work as an abortionist) are only part of the story--in 1931 the house was raided while in operation as a speakeasy, and then a woman was stabbed to death in the house's servants' quarters.... Not your usual genteel Wilshire Boulevard house. A color shot of the front door: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-l...72wilshire.jpgwilshireboulevardhouses.blogspot.com |
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Can we identify any other buildings here? -- Across Vine from NBC is Wallich's Music City. Going east or toward the top of the photo from NBC is the Hollywood Palladium. And across the street (behind the Sunset Vine Tower in the photo) would be where the Earl Carroll Theater Nightclub was. In this photo is there a building under construction, barely visible, directly across the street from the C. Dome? |
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The Shadow Knows...
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Producer Budd Schulberg says, "Coop might have been the Babe Ruth of the Hollywood boudoir league. It was whispered down the studio corridors that he had the endowments of Hercules and the staying powers of Job." page 91 His wife attested that "he had many girlfriends." "At the time, tales of the star who spoke softly but carried a big stick spread despite his gentlemanly silence." page 91 About the line you quote: It was purportedly told to Hedda Hopper who had inquired about her affair with Cooper. "Accurate or apocryphal?" writes Stenn. He personally interviewed actresses Esther Ralston and Lina Basquette and Tui Lorraine Bow, a good friend of Clara's who had married Clara's father, though was younger than Clara, and they all concur on it's validity as "She said things like that all the time" and "She and Gary had a pretty hot affair and Clara talked about it a lot." page 94 Clara Bow's IT CAFE on Vine Street at the Hollywood Plaza Hotel: http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_ngQ3iBKx2G.../ItCafe+2.jpeg felixinhollywood Matchbook: http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/...7382_1_sbl.jpg Askville |
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Re: Bungalow court on steroids
On the county assessor's website it's listed as two adjacent parcels, 470 and 480 S. Burlington Avenue, with nine and ten units respectively. The build date is 1921, leading me to wonder if it was originally intended as a tourist hotel of some kind. Presumably it wouldn't have been a motel because even in 1921 there probably wasn't much parking around here. I'm thinking tourists because after all, people are generally a lot more willing to put up with such congested quarters for a night or two than for an indefinite period. It's depressing to see that these are now apparently permanent residences.
After all, motor courts were very popular in the 1920s and 30s, e.g. the "walls of Jericho" scene in It Happened One Night. Quote:
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At first glance I thought this was just a dual walkway, but obviously it was intended for cars since it's connected to the street (where the photographer is standing). So what did they do with their cars once they drove in there? (or was only used when a tenant was moving in or out) -just a thought mind you. __ |
The Tower Auto Court
http://imageshack.us/a/img443/1194/hvp2.jpg ebay detail of the tower (is that a clock?) http://imageshack.us/a/img33/8307/f3n8.jpg address: -it looks like 10880 Ventura Blvd. -so shouldn't it say N. Hollywood? http://imageshack.us/a/img22/149/mvup.jpg -the court included a small gas station http://imageshack.us/a/img844/6296/czca.jpg I hope we can dig up some more information on this place. __ |
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abortions--speakeasy--murder. A noirish trifecta. __ |
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One person I know that lives in a similar place like this one drives his car through the middle of the apartments, like this, and on the opposite end, through an archway, which it appears there's one in this photo, there is a garage area for the tenants to park. I admit that when I visited several times I didn't know this "was" a driveway until I saw a car drive by one day looking out his window. It is aesthetically pleasing as when you're there you don't think of it as a driveway. It's also a bit jarring when you do see a car driving in it. Many of the places I've seen like this are up a bit of a hill to the entrance off the street and the driveway part to the street has concrete steps in the middle for people to climb up to the apartment area. |
Here's three more of the 1963 color shots of Cinerama under construction. It's a shame they're not zoomable like the USC pictures.
http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...ACinerama2.jpg lapl.org http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...ACinerama3.jpg lapl.org http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...ACinerama4.jpg lapl.org There are also 4 color shots from 1965. This one shows the sad, empty lot where the NBC building once stood. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...ACinerama5.jpg lapl.org Martin Pal, the building under construction directly across the street from Cinerama is the RCA Building. GW posted a good period picture of it almost exactly three years ago: Quote:
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I checked the vintage aerial that Flyingwedge posted and didn't see any parking areas or garages. I'll go back and take another look. __ |
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https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-G...2520PM.bmp.jpgGSV It was at 10980 Ventura, just east of the southeast corner of Vineland. It was later called the Tower Motor Hotel. There is still a filling station on the corner. Looks like a Mr. and Mrs. Donovan were the hosts. |
I decided to take a closer look at Annetta Court.
originally posted by Flyingwedge http://imageshack.us/a/img823/317/0dmm.jpg It looks like there is a flagpole-like structure in the middle of the 'drive'. (as well as a group of people discussing the situation) http://imageshack.us/a/img89/8416/dbxm.jpg __ |
circa 1945
http://imageshack.us/a/img801/8927/5kn1.jpg ebay map courtesy of Santa Fe Bus Lines and the Glass House restaurant/1945 http://imageshack.us/a/img850/3014/15va.jpg http://imageshack.us/a/img23/7609/yjku.jpg ebay __ |
Cinerama lobby...
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http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...ps64424572.jpg |
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Early attempt to capitalize on "special" motor oil requirements of each car? Compartments are marked with various car makes/models, suggesting each tap contains car-specific "specially formulated" lubricant. Wonder whether each maker was consulted, let alone approved, of each blend. This might explain why some oils are mysterious, e.g., "Marvel." This might also explain why the business was not long-lasting. Suspect the tower structure was nothing more than an office and showroom. Expect the spigots were purely decorative. Service was more likely performed in one of the service bays in the background. Selling/dispensing oil would prove messy, if not tedious, given the pictured turnabout. But maybe the "system" was more about service rather than volume. The report concerning the 10-year lease price seems suspect, unless the spigots were for dispensing a "different" type of lubricant frowned upon by the temperance movement or the property contained producing wells. :shhh: Ask for the complementary air freshener. http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...TJKYI7KUL3.jpg http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...TJKYI7KUL3.jpg http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...M6FT5522K7.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...M6FT5522K7.jpg http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_i_AovfzNXg...el-498x720.jpghttp://1.bp.blogspot.com/_i_AovfzNXg...el-498x720.jpg |
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