Southern California Photography by Alan Pavlik, editor and publisher of Just Above Sunset
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Photos and text, unless otherwise noted, Copyright © 2006 - Alan M. Pavlik

If you use any of these photos for commercial purposes I assume you'll discuss that with me

These were shot with a Nikon D70 - using lens (1) AF-S Nikkor 18-70 mm 1:35-4.5G ED, or (2) AF Nikkor 70-300mm telephoto, or after 5 June 2006, (3) AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor, 55-200 mm f/4-5.6G ED. They were modified for web posting using Adobe Photoshop 7.0

The original large-format raw files are available upon request.

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Visitors from February 28, 2006, 10:00 am Pacific Time to date -


Wednesday, 14 June 2006
Hollywood Murals Old and New
Topic: Historic Hollywood

Hollywood Murals Old and New

Mural on the west wall of Grauman's Chinese Theater, Hollywood Boulevard
Wednesday, June 14, Flag Day 2006, blazing hot in Hollywood, and up on the boulevard there's this odd mural in a parking lot, inviting you into the darkness of Grauman's Chinese Theater. It opened May 18, 1927 with the premiere of Cecil B. DeMille's "The King of Kings." It's still going strong. And now it's air-conditioned. And she's smiling.

















Also, on the same west wall of the theater, there's a reminder of the old days - when the world was back and white, and cute or glamorous, or both, side by side. Yep, that's Shirley Temple on the left, leaving her prints in the concrete out in front of the theater. When that second level movie star from the forties, Ronald Reagan, became president, he appointed her, now Shirley Temple Black, our ambassador to the United Nations. She was not angry and self-righteous and blustering like that John Bolton fellow the younger Bush sent up to the big blue building on the East River. She was fine. Things go better when run by movie people from Hollywood, and not by Texans? Perhaps.

The mural is a bit ratty these days, and in the upper right there's the real world intruding again - the painfully and impossibly blue sky. Who's the blond? Someone long gone.

Mural on the west wall of Grauman's Chinese Theater, Hollywood Boulevard



Across the street, the new movies get their own wall. Superman Returns - on June 30th as a matter of fact.

Note this -

As the hype machine shifts into high gear for the upcoming release of "Superman Returns," some are reading deeply into the film whose hero returns from a deathlike absence to play savior to the world.

"It is so on the nose that anyone who has not caught on that Superman is a Christ figure, you think, 'Who else could it be referring to?' " said Steve Skelton, who wrote a book examining parallels between Superman and Christ.

As the hype machine shifts into high gear for the upcoming release of "Superman Returns," some are reading deeply into the film whose hero returns from a deathlike absence to play savior to the world.

... Some have also seen the hero as a gay icon, forced to live a double life with his super-self in the closet. A recent edition of the gay magazine "The Advocate" even asked on its cover, "How gay is Superman?"

But the comparison to Jesus is one that's been made almost since the character's origin in 1938, said Skelton, author of "The Gospel According to the World's Greatest Superhero."
Whatever.

Superman promo on office building across the street from Grauman's Chinese Theater, Hollywood Boulevard



Superman promo on office building across the street from Grauman's Chinese Theater, Hollywood Boulevard



Old Hollywood - the roof of Grauman's Chinese Theater and the tower at the El Capitan -

 Old Hollywood - the roof of Grauman's Chinese Theater and the tower at the El Capitan, Hollywood Boulevard



Posted by Alan at 7:47 PM PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
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Updated: Wednesday, 14 June 2006 7:54 PM PDT
Thursday, 8 June 2006
Architectural Detail and Hollywood History
Topic: Historic Hollywood

Architectural Detail and Hollywood History

Lamppost at the Hollywood Guaranty Building, 6331 Hollywood Boulevard at Ivar
To the right, a lamppost at the Hollywood Guaranty Building, 6331 Hollywood Boulevard at Ivar, a twelve-story 1923 Beaux Arts office building by the architects John C. Austin and Frederick M. Ashley.

Charlie Chaplin and Cecil B. De Mille invested in this building and the gossip columnist Hedda Hopper worked here. Charlie Chaplin, Al Jolson and Cecil B. De Mille all once had their offices in this building. The Bank of America owned it for a time, and the building was sold in 1988 to the Church of Scientology in a straight cash transaction. It's now the executive offices for the international operations of those folks.

The building is dull. The lamppost is cool.


















Below, details of the Security Pacific Bank Building at 6383 Hollywood Boulevard, at Cahuenga, from 1921 by the architects John and Donald B. Parkinson - also know as the Cahuenga Building, Philip Marlowe's office in Raymond Chandlers The Long Goodbye. It's part of Raymond Chandler Square, previously covered in these pages here. The building has interesting detail.

Details of the Security Pacific Bank Building at 6383 Hollywood Boulevard, at Cahuenga, from 1921 by the architects John and Donald B. Parkinson



Details of the Security Pacific Bank Building at 6383 Hollywood Boulevard, at Cahuenga, from 1921 by the architects John and Donald B. Parkinson



Details of the Security Pacific Bank Building at 6383 Hollywood Boulevard, at Cahuenga, from 1921 by the architects John and Donald B. Parkinson



Details of the Security Pacific Bank Building at 6383 Hollywood Boulevard, at Cahuenga, from 1921 by the architects John and Donald B. Parkinson



The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Pickford Center for Motion Picture Study, 1313 North Vine at Fountain, built in 1947-48 as a radio and television studio facility and designed by Claude Beelman and his associate, Herman Spackler, and recently restored by Offenhauser/Mekeel Architects. It's amusing.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Pickford Center for Motion Picture Study, 1313 North Vine at Fountain



Notes -

The Academy's Pickford Center for Motion Picture Study was dedicated in honor of Mary Pickford, the legendary silent film actress, in 2002. In addition to the 286-seat Dunn Theater, the building houses several Academy departments, including the offices and collections of the Academy Film Archive and the Science and Technology Council.

? It is the oldest surviving structure in Hollywood that was originally designed specifically with television in mind.

Cadillac dealer Don Lee got into broadcasting to stay competitive with his friend Earle C. Anthony, a Packard dealer, who bought radio station KFI as a method of appealing to his customers. Lee bought KRFC in San Francisco and KHJ in Los Angeles, ultimately building the chain to 12 west coast stations. On Wednesday, November 5, 1930, Don Lee station KHJ and Paramount station KNX broadcast the third annual Academy Awards on Lee's Pacific Coast network.

Lee began dabbling in television in 1930 by hiring Harry Lubcke, a laid-off assistant to Philo Farnsworth, the inventor of television. Lubcke set up a station on the top floor of Don Lee's Cadillac headquarters at Seventh and Bixel streets. The station used the call letters W6XAO. Since tv receivers didn't exist yet, Lubcke designed and provided free schematics to electronics enthusiasts in the Los Angeles area to build their own. After 100 or so had built receivers, W6XAO, Channel 1, began to broadcast an hour a day, six days a week.

Though named for him, Lee, who had died 14 years earlier, never saw this building.

The building was the original home of Los Angeles Channel 2, which is now KCBS-TV, through the 1950s.

It was the studio for Johnny Carson's earliest mid-'50s television appearances before "The Tonight Show," including "Carson's Cellar" and "The New Johnny Carson Show."

It was the original home, from 1964 through 1971, of California Community Television, which grew into PBS station KCET.

It was the home of KHJ-TV in the 1950s.

It was ABC's headquarters for the Los Angeles 1984 Olympics and the home of many ABC television shows.

Among other shows broadcast from 1313 North Vine Street were: Queen for a Day, Heart's Desire, What's the Name of That Song?, Don Lee Music Hall, My Friend Irma, Jimmy Wakely Show, Bill Stulla Show, Oxydol Show, Your Claim to Fame, Joey Bishop Show, Barney Miller, Dating Game, Newlywed Game and The Andersonville Trial.
Ah but for real Hollywood history you can't the Knickerbocker Hotel, 1714 North Ivar Avenue, just off Hollywood Boulevard, built in the early twenties. It has a cool history, first a luxury apartment building, then a hotel, now apartments for seniors, almost all of them Russian. In the old days Rudolph Valentino hung out at the hotel bar, and liked to tango there. Harry Houdini made a deal with his wife Bess that if he died before she did he would try to contact her from the great beyond. On Halloween 1926, exactly one year after he died, she conducted a séance on the roof of the Knickerbocker, but he, or his spirit or whatever, didn't show. She tried that each Halloween up on the roof for the next ten years. No good. Oh well.

And then there's D.W. Griffith. He died of a stroke on July 21, 1948 under the crystal chandelier in the lobby. And that strange actress Frances Farmer was arrested here in 1942, dragged from her room, and that ended in her lobotomy and all. They made a film about it. The word is William Faulkner and Meta Carpenter, a script girl at Fox, began their eighteen-year affair here. Marilyn Monroe honeymooned here with Joe Dimaggio in January of 1954, and Elvis Presley stayed in suite 1016 back in 1956 while he was shooting "Love Me Tender." Who else lived here? Frank Sinatra, Barbara Stanwyck, Lana Turner, Mae West, Laurel and Hardy, Larry Fine of the Three Stooges, and Cecil B. DeMille. And William Frawley, who played Fred Mertz on "I Love Lucy," lived here for decades and on March 3, 1966, died of a heart attack on the sidewalk in front of the place.

Knickerbocker Hotel, 1714 North Ivar Avenue, just off Hollywood Boulevard



Quite a place. You can't get in now, even to see the chandelier in the lobby. History is over. The building has been "repurposed."


Posted by Alan at 8:23 PM PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
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Updated: Thursday, 8 June 2006 8:49 PM PDT
Saturday, 27 May 2006
Classic Hollywood
Topic: Historic Hollywood

Classic Hollywood

The El Capitan theater on Hollywood Boulevard - Friday, May 26, 2006
At the historic El Capitan theater on Hollywood Boulevard. Friday, May 26, 2006 - noted without comment.

History -
The El Capitan Theatre is a fully restored movie palace at 6838 Hollywood Boulevard in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles. It is owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company.

When the theater opened in 1926 as "Hollywood's First Home of Spoken Drama," it featured a Spanish colonial exterior designed by the architectural firm of Morgan, Walls and Clements, and a lavish East Indian interior by theatre designer G. Albert Lansburgh. It was later completely remodeled in the moderne style. In 1941, "Citizen Kane" made its world debut here. Senator Richard Nixon delivered his famous Checkers Speech from the theater in 1952, then a NBC studio.

After many years of disuse, The Walt Disney Company purchased the theater and paid for a fourteen million dollar renovation. The theater reopened in 1991 with the premiere of "The Rocketeer." In recent years, many of Disney's feature films have premiered here, accompanied by live stage shows.
Dumbo is back. Nixon isn't.


Entrance Detail -

Entrance detail, the El Capitan theater on Hollywood Boulevard



Entrance detail, the El Capitan theater on Hollywood Boulevard



Posted by Alan at 4:03 PM PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
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Updated: Saturday, 27 May 2006 4:06 PM PDT
Wednesday, 24 May 2006
Hollywood Lived Here
Topic: Historic Hollywood

Hollywood Lived Here

There are still a few of these little bungalow apartments in some parts of Hollywood. They were built in the twenties by the studios for their stars, or at least for the second-stringers who would become stars. Most have been torn down and replaced by strip malls or modern "courtyard" apartment buildings, or by asphalt parking lots. This one below, a classic, is across the street and a few feet south of the old Charlie Chapin Studios on La Brea. The studios opened there in 1919, and this place probably went up soon after. It's amazing that it survived.

For a giggle, see this -

Hollywood Lived Here
The semi-glorious and sometimes gory history of Hollywood apartment living.
Nikki Finke - LA Weekly - Issue of April 29 - May 5, 2005

The key passage -
L.A. apartments have been the scene of grisly Hollywood suicides, murders and accidents. The condo complex of 875 Bundy Ave. in Brentwood became famous after Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman were found knifed to death on June 12, 1994. (After O.J. Simpson stood criminal and civil trials for the murders, the large numbers of looky-loos caused the condo association to change the street number to 879 and change the appearance of the entrance.) Inside an apartment at 139 Fraser St. in Santa Monica, model-actress Margaux Hemingway committed suicide with an overdose of pills on July 2, 1996, the same day her grandfather Ernest Hemingway took his life 35 years earlier. In 1981, actor William Holden was found dead in an apartment at Shorecliff Towers at 535 Ocean Ave. in Santa Monica after falling, striking his head and then bleeding to death. In an apartment at 86575 Comstock Ave. in Westwood, 22-year-old comic sensation Freddie Prinze committed suicide by shooting himself in 1977. In 1976, Rebel Without a Cause co-star Sal Mineo, 37, was robbed and stabbed to death in the carport of his apartment building at 8563 Holloway Drive in West Hollywood. The daughter of TV host Art Linkletter (Kids Say the Darndest Things) jumped to her death from her sixth-floor apartment at 8787 Shoreham Drive in West Hollywood. And one of the biggest crimes in Hollywood took place in 1922 when silent-film director William Desmond Taylor was shot in the back of the head in his bungalow apartment in Alvarado Court on S. Alvarado St. in Westlake Park. The murder sent shock waves through the film community because Taylor was a celebrity, several movie figures were implicated and the neighborhood was affluent. Not only was the murder never solved (sound familiar, O.J. and Robert Blake?), but, as with most historical spots in L.A., that apartment complex is now a parking lot.
And you remember how The Doors' LA Woman opens -
Well, I just got into town about an hour ago
Took a look around, see which way the wind blow
Where the little girls in their Hollywood bungalows
Are you a lucky little lady in the city of light
Or just another lost angel... city of night
City of night, city of night, city of night...
There's even a techno-trance band called Hollywood Bungalow, but they probably don't live here.

La Brea Court bungalow apartments, Los Angeles



A decade later the film industry had generated a ton of money and edifices like this went up, the west facing wall of something or other on the southeast corner of North Sycamore and Hollywood Boulevard. The thirties were fun too.

La Brea Court bungalow apartments, Los Angeles



Posted by Alan at 6:31 PM PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
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Updated: Wednesday, 24 May 2006 6:34 PM PDT
Tuesday, 9 May 2006
The Eye: Looking Down on Ghosts
Topic: Historic Hollywood

The Eye: Looking Down on Ghosts

Billboard with big eyes, Sunset at Crescent Heights, Los Angeles (Sunset Strip)Tuesday, May 9, 2006 - a gloomy day in Los Angeles. The marine layer rolled in off the Pacific overnight and it's dark all day, until the sun burns off the murkiness in late afternoon. On the television one of the cable channels is running Arthur Dreifuss' Riot on Sunset Strip (1967). It's pretty awful - "A police captain (Aldo Ray) is caught between businesses operating on the Los Angeles Sunset Strip who don't like the punks hanging out, and his belief in allowing the kids their rights. But when his daughter (Mimsy Farmer) gets involved with an unruly bunch, his attitude starts to change."

But then it was filmed and released within six weeks of the actual rioting on Strip, one block south and one block west, on November 12, 1966. There are a few of shots of Pandora's Box, the old club, long gone - the site, at the southwest corner of Sunset and Crescent Heights, is now a bus stop, a little island of concrete. But the movie is awful. Mimsy Farmer? Better to get out, as dark as it is, and run some errands.

At the Chevron station, diagonally across the intersection from where Pandora's Box once stood, there is this eye looking down on the site. It's spooky. The eye is looking down on ghosts.

What ghosts? Behind the traffic island where Pandora's Box once stood there's a crappy strip mall, with McDonalds and El Pollo Loco and a bunch of smaller fast foot joints, and a big bank. This is where "The Garden of Allah" once stood. You can read all about it here - Joni Mitchell's song "Big Yellow Taxi" ("pave paradise, put up a parking lot") is supposed to be about the Garden of Allah, because Buffalo Springfield's song "For What It's Worth" is partly about the closing of Pandora's Box in 1966 to widen Sunset. (Mitchell and Neil Young both lived just up the hill in Laurel Canyon at the time.) And the front of the strip mall where the "Garden of Allah" once stood is where photographer Helmut Newton was killed in a car crash in July 2004, his silver Cadillac SRX rolling out of the Chateau Marmont across the street and into a pole. He'd had a heart attack.

"The Garden of Allah," was sort of an apartment complex - a series of bungalows and cottages. The private bungalows were filled, on and off, by the likes of Errol Flynn, Clark Gable, Greta Garbo, W.C. Fields, Humphrey Bogart, F. Scott Fitzgerald, the Marx Brothers, and Orson Welles. It's been said Tallulah Bankhead swam naked in the pool there, and Marilyn Monroe was discovered sipping a Coke next to the pool.

They're all dead, and the place is gone -
F. Scott Fitzgerald lived here in the beginning of his Hollywood decline. Zelda was installed in an expensive sanitarium somewhere back east, their daughter Scotty in public school, and a recently-recovered trove of studio material indicates that Scott was really working. (Everybody seems surprised that he cranked out more than 2000 hand-written pages in pencil.) Scott lived here in those years just before dating the young pastry named Sheila Graham and trying to finish The Last Tycoon and struggling to make sense of studio employment and fighting an uphill battle to stay sober by drinking a lot of Coca-Cola. In fact, Graham wrote a book-length book about the Garden of Allah, called "The Garden of Allah."

George Kaufmann stuffed himself in the back of a laundry truck to get from the Garden of Allah to the railroad station at the height of the Astor affair, to avoid a subpoena.

Robert Benchley set up his temporary Hollywood residence in the Garden of Allah, among other east coast writers when they came out west to torture themselves with illusions of quick easy movie cash, their anxieties uncoiling in the permissive climate. Benchley was leery of traffic and called taxis to take him everywhere - for instance, to Schwab's Drugstore, directly across Sunset Boulevard.
Schwab's Drugstore is gone too. It was closed in 1986 and ten years later replaced with a fancy complex anchored by a Virgin Megastore, with a six screen movie place and a California Pizza Kitchen. The eye is also looking at that.

See this -
In the movie "Sunset Blvd," William Holden's character calls Schwab's Drug Store "headquarters; a combination office, coffee klatch, and waiting room" for Hollywood writers. And so it was. F. Scott Fitzgerald (author of "The Great Gatsby") had a heart attack here in 1940, while buying a pack of cigarettes. Songwriter Harold Arlin wrote "Over the Rainbow" (from "The Wizard of Oz") by the light of the Schwab's neon sign. Charlie Chaplin and Harold Lloyd used to play pinball in the back room. And the rumor still persists that Lana Turner was discovered at Schwab's, but it isn't true.
Sic transit gloria mundi. But the billboard is cool.

Billboard with big eyes, Sunset at Crescent Heights, Los Angeles (Sunset Strip)



Hollywood landmarks, Sunset at Crescent Heights, Los Angeles (Sunset Strip)




Hollywood landmarks, Sunset at Crescent Heights, Los Angeles (Sunset Strip)



Footnote:

The Whisky A Go-Go website has a bit of interesting history of the Sunset Strip, reprinting a 1981 article by William Overend from the Los Angeles Times, from November 1981. The key section is this -

... As early as 1964, it looked like the last of the old days had ended, to columnist Paul Coates of The Times.

"Sun has set on the Sunset Strip," the headline read.

Coates recalled how in earlier years he could remember Humphrey Bogart and all the other glamorous movie stars living it up in places like Ciro's. When Bogart would bring his chauffeur into Ciro's with him and take his usual corner booth, that meant he was planning to do some "serious" drinking.

On the stage at Ciro's in the old days, wrote Coates, he had seen performers like Joe E. Lewis, Sophie Tucker and Pearl Bailey.

What he found in 1964, however, was "a gaunt little lass doing a frantic Watusi or whatever it is they're doing currently."

That was too much for him. "It used to be a glittering boulevard in the silly old days," he wrote. "Now it is just a rather seamy street."

As far as a lot of people were concerned, however, it just kept getting worse in the next few years.

Rock 'n' Roll changed things, most folks agree. Instead of the old movie stars and gangsters, the Strip was covered with teenage rockers.

Most of the old supper clubs and restaurants suffered serious losses because their old customers didn't want to be on the same street with the new Strip people.

The mere sight of them was almost more than Bruno Petroletti, one of the owners of the elegant Strip restaurant known as LaRue, could stand. "It's not a pleasant thing to see them walking around," he said in early 1968.

Responding to the menace, the sheriff's department started cracking down on the invading teenagers, arresting them by the truckload for curfew violations, but they just kept returning.

On Nov. 12, 1966, near a rock club called Pandora's Box at what was then the corner of Sunset and Crescent Heights, about 1,000 demonstrators protested the tight enforcement of the curfew laws.

Some threw rocks, others chased all the passengers off one bus and tried to set fire to another, and most of them didn't seem to have much respect for there elders. In retrospect, this may have been the low point in relations between teenagers and adults in Los Angeles.

While it wasn't much compared to what happened in Watts the previous year, it was generally described as a riot.

There were demands in the City Council for an investigation into the "Major uncontrolled rebellion" and a tough stand from County Supervisor Ernest E. Debs, who represented the area.

"Whatever it takes is going to be done," said Debs. "We're going to be tough. We're not going to surrender that area or any other area to beatniks or wild-eyed kids."

If they couldn't keep them off the Strip, they could at least stop them from dancing. That was the strategy worked out by Debs and Sheriff Peter Pitchess, who had vowed that his department wasn't going to be "reduced to a baby-sitting organization."

They appealed to the County Public Welfare Commission to take away the dance permits of the Strip's most popular rock clubs, among them, the Whisky A Go Go and Gazzarri's.

Even in the climate of the times, however, that idea was rejected. Instead, they 86'd Sonny and Cher, who had sided with the teenagers, from a ride in the Rose Bowl Parade that year.

They also demolished Pandora's Box.

Where Pandora's Box once stood, an access lane of Sunset now curves into Crescent Heights.

Lt. James Cook, operations supervisor for the West Hollywood station of the Sheriff's Department, still marvels at the job of road expansion that was done. "They bulldozed that sucker and paved it over," he recalls.

The violence inspired a movie called "Riot on Sunset Strip", which starred Aldo Ray and Mimzi Farmer, and led the Times to a glum assessment of the Strip's possible future.

"It is a sorry ending for the boulevard that once was Hollywood's most dazzling area," an editorial declared. "The boulevard may never regain its past glory."

But not everybody thinks the '60s were so bad, and you can even find some people who think they were the Strip's best years.
Maybe, but the movie about the riot was awful.


Posted by Alan at 7:52 PM PDT | Post Comment | Permalink
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Updated: Wednesday, 10 May 2006 12:48 AM PDT

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