6160-6162 Hollywood Boulevard: Hotel Regent

LA Times 9/14/1924.

Many hotel projects proposed for Hollywood Boulevard in the 1920s were much hyped but never built- for example the Brokaw property, the Bartlett property, and the Shippee property. The Regent Hotel, on the south side of Hollywood Boulevard in the midst of Auto Row between El Centro and Argyle, did get built. It came along without fanfare, announced in the LA Times in September 1924.

Designed by architects Meyer and Holler, the 85-room, 4-story plus penthouse structure was built for the Christie brothers, who had a realty business as well as a film studio. the hotel rose on the site of a former orange orchard where the Nestor Film Company– with Al Christie, manager, had made some of the earliest motion pictures in Hollywood.

The Regent had its gala grand opening on April 29, 1925. A notable feature was that each room had a radio; connected to a central operating system at the room clerk’s desk, they could pick up local programs.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 4/29/1925.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 4/29/1925.

Photograph of Hollywood Boulevard featuring the Hotel Regent c.1932. LAPL photo.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 6/25/1925.

With its proximity to the early Hollywood movie studios, the Regent Hotel became popular with theatrical folk- as local papers would later put it- either on their way up or on their way down. It had become rather shabby by  November 1949, when it was purchased by Ethel McCord Nelson and her son John McCord. McCord remodeled the hotel and renamed it the Hotel Gentry.

Ethel McCord owned the Hastings Hotel in Minneapolis at this time. As she was taking on the former Hotel Regent in Hollywood, Ethel also faced federal tax evasion charges back in Minnesota for the years 1940-1945. She was convicted in 1950 and was to have done a prison term but in December 1950, the sentence was changed to a fine and 5 years probation. She married Paul A. Nelson in Minneapolis in June 1950.

While cleaning, Ethel found an Oscar in a closet; the statuette had no identifying information on it, nor could McCord trace the owner through the hotel records, as she could not later recall which room she had found it in.

Hollywood Citizen News 2/25/1950.

The hotel remained the Hotel Gentry into September 1954. In October 1954, it was taken over by Irene Vermillion Dart and her husband Kermit Dart and renamed the Hotel Vermillion.

Hollywood Citizen News 10/5/1954.

Hollywood Citizen News 9/26/1958.

The Darts were something of a real life Fred and Ethel Mertz, retired Vaudevillians managing an apartment house. Irene, as Irene Vermillion, was a stage dancer; Kermit was a musician. The two continued to perform occasionally even after becoming landlords.

Irene Vermillion (center). The LA Record 2/28/1932.

Irene Vermillion and Kermit Dart appearing in a nightclub act. San Pedro News Pilot 11/11/1949.

The hotel remained the Hotel Vermillion until August 1959, when Ethel McCord Nelson took it over again, renaming it the Hotel Hastings.

Now offering TV and radio. Hollywood Citizen News 8/12/1959.

The Hotel Hastings was the name of the hotel in Minneapolis that Ethel had managed from 1936 to 1943, when she purchased it from the Arthur Roberts Hotel Company. She sold the Minneapolis Hastings in late May-early June 1959.

Postcard view of the Hotel Hastings in Minneapolis.

Ethel McCord managed the Hotel Hastings and The Parkway in Minneapolis. She married Edward R. Johnson in 1937; they divorced in May 1940. Minneapolis Star Journal 6/23/1940.

Eating and Drinking here

The hotel’s first restaurant opened shortly after the hotel itself, in June 1925 as the Hotel Regent Restaurant.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 6/19/1925.

On March 24, 1927, ex-boxer / dentist Leach Cross opened a namesake cafe, the “Leach Cross Cafe” in the hotel’s ground floor retain space, addressed as 6160 Hollywood Boulevard.

Hollywood Daily Citizens 3/24/1927.

Like most such Leach Cross ventures, the cafe was short lived.

On March 9, 1928, 616o Hollywood Boulevard opened as McHuron’s Grill with almost as much fanfare as the opening of the hotel itself.

Hollywood Citizen News 3/8/1929.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 3/8/1928.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 3/8/1928.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 3/8/1928.

McHuron’s Grill was founded by Loren A. McHuron and Charles Eaton. Both had been previously affiliated with the Paulais Cafe at Hollywood Boulevard and Las Palmas. The grill featured a German chef. The specialty of the house became a dish called “Toad in the Hole,” which McHuron’s claimed had originated there, and that it had a copyright. It was an old English specialty, so this is questionable. There are many varied recipes for Toad in the Hole- typically it involves a clump of sausages grilled with an egg in the center. So famed was the cafe for this dish that by the early 1930s, “Toad in the Hole” featured prominently in the grill’s print advertising as well as a neon vertical sign on the outside of the building.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 6/30/1928.

Hollywood Citizen News 4/21/1932.

Hollywood Citizen News 8/3/1932.

Hollywood Citizen News 2/11/1933.

Hollywood Citizen News 10/27/1934.

Charles Eaton left the partnership in 1935 to found his own namesake Easton’s chain of restaurants. L. A. McHuron carried on with the grill until 1940. The equipment and fixtures were sold at auction in July 1940. McHuron died in 1941.

LA Times 6/30/1940.

In 1952, Joe’s Cuba Club operated in the former grill space, serving Italian dinners in addition to American fare.

Hollywood Citizen News 4/24/1952.

The Hotel Gentry also still had a hotel dining room.

Hollywood Citizen News 8/17/1954.

During its time as the Hotel Vermillion, the hotel dining room became the Dart-Inn Room, with a twin organ bar. Kermit Dart was a talented organist.

Hollywood Citizen News 12/4/1954.

In 1959, the grill space became the Cart Inn, offering German, Irish and Italian fare. The chef had been there during McHuron’s time, so likely Toad in the Hole could be ordered off-menu.

Hollywood Citizen News 11/7/1959.

In 1962, it was a wine bar called The Tender Grape.

Hollywood Citizen News 6/12/1962.

In 1964, the Hollywood USO moved into 6160 fro mthe Pantages Theater building, on what was supposed to be a “temporary” basis that lasted into the 1970s.

The hotel remained the Hotel Hastings into 1993. The building was demolished in 1994.

Toad in the Hole

6157-6161 Hollywood Boulevard: Automobile dealership

This 1-story building, at the now-gone northeast corner of Vista del Mar and Hollywood Boulevard, was built in 1919 for the Howard Automobile Company’s new Hollywood Buick showroom. It was originally addressed as 6157 Hollywood Boulevard.

The property owner was investor Harry H. Ziegler, who bought it from the E. W. Twist realty Company as part of the Del Mar tract.

Twist Realty had previously occupied this corner itself; this section of Vista del Mar between Hollywood Boulevard and Carlos Avenue, was known Cyril Drive until 1915.

Elias W. Twist was the husband of Josephine Gassagne. Josephine and her surviving siblings – Charles Gassagne, Marie (Mrs. Louis Drouet), Constance (Mrs. James Larquier later Mrs. Pierre J. Picherie), Adele (aka Jenny, Mrs. Henry Kracke) and Eugenie (Mrs. Alexander T. Hoover later Mrs. Frederick Gambold)- were the grandchildren of the French-born Los Angeles pioneer Jose Mascarel, who had settled in Los Angeles in the 1840s and served 1-term as mayor from 1965 to 1966. Among his many real estate holdings was a large parcel of land on the north side of Hollywood Boulevard (originally Prospect Avenue) between Gower and Vine. Mascarel, in his 80s, began subdividing the property in 1897. He died in 1899 and a battle over his estate ensued, initiated by his three surviving adult children. The adult children were not, as was sometimes reported, cut out of his will- they were to receive 1/3 of the sizable estate, but that was not sufficient. They didn’t want any of it going to the grandchildren- whom they accused of poisoning the old man’s mind against his children and, moreover, alleged that they were not Mascarel’s biological grandchildren.

Census records for 1850 and 1860 show Mascarel living with his wife, Cerilda Lugo and the couple’s children- Marie Conception Mascarel included. However by 1870, Jose was living with another woman, Jesus, at least two decades his junior. Cerilda died in 1887 at age 59. Jose and Jesus remained together until his death; they formalized the relationship by marrying in 1896.

Jose and Cerilda Mascarel’s daughter Marie Conception married a livery stable owner named Charles (“French Charlie/Charley”) Gassagne. They were the parents of the 6 grandchildren who became Jose Mascarel’s chief heirs. Marie C. Mascarel Gassange died sometime between 1871 and 1875.

The heirs settled out of court over the will in 1900, agreeing to split the estate 50-50. The grandchildren resumed subdividing the Del Mar tract. They sold a 5-acre parcel on the west side of Vista del Mar Drive to pioneer music company head A. G. Bartlett in November 1900.

Josephine Gassagne married Elias W. Twist in 1880. They built a large residence in Hollywood at 6129 Carlos Avenue, facing south, that in 1914 was leased to a military academy and in 1916 became the first home of the Hollywood Studio Club.

In 1912, Twist operated his real estate office at 6157 Hollywood Boulevard before selling the property to Ziegler.

Detail of a January 1913 Sanborn Fire Insurance Company map for Hollywood. Vista del Mar Dr. here was called Cyril Drive until 1915. Library of Congress.

Hollywood Citizen 1/17/1913.

Zeigler built the Buick showroom on the site in April 1919 as well as another 1-story garage, addressed as 6151, adjacent to the east for use as an automotive paint shop. The Buick showroom has a facade of artificial stone; the interior featured a blue and white color scheme.

Charles S. Howard was the Buick distributor for California. The Hollywood branch operated out of temporary quarters at 1734 Cahuenga before moving to the new building in July 1919.

Hollywood Citizen 3/28/1919.

Hollywood Citizen 7/4/1919.

Hollywood Citizen 7/11/1919.

Howard Motor Co.’s Buick showroom at 6157 Hollywood Blvd. c. 1925. The Doll ‘Em Up Shop auto painters was at 6151. This photo is from the Homestead Museum collection.

Doll ‘Em Up Shop auto painters were next door to Buick at 6151 Hollywood Boulevard. LA Times 3/15/1926

Howard Motor Co.’s Hollywood Buick showroom moved to larger quarters at 6660 Sunset Boulevard on May 1, 1936. The building was a former Packard showroom. 6157 Hollywood Boulevard in turn became the new Packard showroom of W. H. Collins.

Hollywood Citizen News 5/26/1937.

Wartime Packard ad. LA Times 9/6/1943.

W. H. Collins remained at 6157 into 1945, when he moved to 6028 Hollywood Boulevard. Abner Elliott England’s A. E. England Pontiac dealership moved into the vacated space from 6032 Hollywood Boulevard. England re-addressed the building as 6161 Hollywood Boulevard.

Hollywood Citizen News 11/9/1945.

Though the building had a new address, it retained its 1919 appearance until late 1948, when A. E. England began modernizing it. Architect Victor Gruen oversaw the remodel, which gave the building a late-moderne rounded curve on the southwest elevation and large, backlit A. E. England Pontiac signage across the front entrance. The work was completed in February 1949.

Hollywood Citizen News 12/8/1948.

Postcard view of the 1948-1949 remodeled A. E. England Pontiac building. From the Boston Public Library collection.

A. E. England Pontiac remained here into 1971. Ab England died in May 1971. In January 1972 it became Jack Poet Toyota. Toyota moved down the block in 1983.

LA Times 1/22/1972.

6161 became an auto radio shop and other auto-related businesses. Today this site is part of the Eastown Apartment complex, addressed as 6201 Hollywood Boulevard.

Notes:

Jesus only received $5 in Jose Mascarel’s will; this was reportedly satisfactory to her, having received gifts of property from him during his lifetime. She died in 1902.

Josephine and E. W. Twist lived at 6127 Yucca Avenue after leasing the mansion. She died in 1925. He died in 1930.