6100 Hollywood Boulevard: The Bungalow Church

LA Times 5/21/1910

Located on the southwest corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Gower, the Hollywood Christian Church dedicated its new home here on May 21, 1910. The building was a former residential home, a vine-covered bungalow set amid sloping lawns, pepper trees and palms, and the church was fondly known as the “bungalow church.”

Los Angeles would have other bungalow churches. The trend was considered a particularly Southern California phenomenon, like open-air grocery markets.

LA Times 1/1/1914.

Detail of a 1913 Sanborn Fire Insurance Company map for Hollywood. Library of Congress.

The Hollywood Christian Church was founded in 1888 by merchant B. F. Coulter of the department store and the Rev .M. L. Yager who organized the Disciples of Christ Church. It originally met at a school in Coldwater Canyon, later site of the Beverly Hills Hotel, sharing the space on alternating Sundays with the Southern Methodists. In 1890, the church built a small building in Cahuenga near Sunset on land donated by Helen M. Judson Beveridge, wife of the ex-Illinois governor John Lourie Beveridge.

Having outgrown that space, in 1910 they began looking for a new home and found it in a literal home at what was then Prospect Avenue and Gower.

1908 classified ad for the residence at 6100 Hollywood Boulevard that became the Hollywood Christian Church, LA Times 8/4/1908.

LA Times 5/21/1910.

The area was still largely rural and there were several other churches along the Boulevard. The church removed some walls to make room for the congregation but left the fireplace and window seats to create a home-like atmosphere. A deep side porch was enclosed with glass for the Sunday school room.

In 1920 the church acquired land at 1717 Morgan Place (later renamed Gramercy Place) just north of the Boulevard and in December 1921 revealed plans for a large new church to be built on it, designed by Robert H. Orr. Greek Revival in style, the new building would be quite different from the humble bungalow church.

LA Times 1/1/1922.

Hollywood Christian Church at what was now 1717 Gramercy Place c. 1937. Herman J. Schultheis photo, LAPL.

The church sold its bungalow home in December 1921 but continued to occupy it as a tenant, renting from the new owner while the new building was under construction. On April 5, 1923, the congregation moved out of the bungalow and began holding services in the Sunday school building of the Morgan Place property.

In May 1923, the former “bungalow church” building opened as a cafe with music and dancing called “Gypsyland.”

Gypsyland, Hollywood night”Where Joy Reigns Supreme.” Killjoys soon put an end to it. Hollywood Daily Citizen 5/30/1923.

Boulevard Karens went ballistic, aiming their criticism at the church for having allowed a rowdy cabaret to move into its former space. Pastor W.F. Richardson had to explain that they were no longer the owners and had no say over what the new owner (Christie Realty Co.) did with the property. Gypsyland was gone in a blink, anyway.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 7/26/1924.

The bungalow was next occupied by the Paul Gerson dramatics school. Born in England in 1871, Paul Gerson was a stage actor who founded an acting school in San Francisco about 1904. His Hollywood branch opened at 6100 on August 25, 1924. It remained through January 1929.

LA Times 1/27/1929.

As of March 1930, the property resumed a religious use as the home of the Spiritualist Science Church of Hollywood run by Dr. Mae M. Taylor.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 3/7/1930.

In February 1934 Packard dealer W. H. Collins leased the property’s Hollywood Boulevard frontage for one of his used car lots, while the Spiritualist Church continued to occupy the building itself.

LA Times 2/10/1934.

In November 1935, a permit was obtained to construct a Standard Oil service station and W. H. Collins began to clear his lot. The Spiritualist Church stayed until the end as well but in December 1935, the bungalow was demolished.

LA Times 11/17/1935.

The corner was a gas station for decades. Today it is a parking lot.

 

Notes:

In October 1934, the Hollywood Christian Church merged with the Beverly Christian Church to become the Hollywood-Beverly Christian Church. The building on Gramercy Place, having suffered earthquake damage, was demolished in 1988.

The Spiritualist Science Church moved to the Castle Center at Franklin and Argyle in December 1935.

 

5955 Hollywood Boulevard: Florentine Gardens

Florentine Gardens. LAPL photo.

Florentine Gardens cabaret restaurant, at 5955 Hollywood Boulevard was the third of 4 buildings constructed on the former Brokaw ranch property.

The project was announced in the LA Times on November 28, 1937. The Times’ parent company, Times Mirror Company, owned the land on which it would be built, having acquired the Brokaw ranch parcel about 1932-1933. It granted a lease to Guido Braccini, Inc., who (with his unnamed investors) would build and operate the restaurant.

Braccini was born in Italy in 1879. He came to the USA in 1903 and settled in San Francisco. He’d sold Italian statuary in the ‘teens and later founded Lucca’s Italian restaurant. A second Lucca’s opened in Los Angeles in 1933. Braccini sold his interest in Lucca’s before embarking on the Florentine Gardens project. The new restaurant would seat 1000 persons, with private banquet rooms and a dance floor that could hold 200 couples. Plus it had 2 acres of free parking.

LA Times 11/28/1937

Architect Gordon B. Kaufmann designed the structure. It originally was to have open-air gardens. The finished design did have a faux-garden effect in the dining room, but the huge dance floor was covered with a neon-lit dome.

Gordon B. Kaufmann’s original design for Florentine Gardens. LA Times 11/28/1937.

The lease deal was still being finalized in late May 1938, but construction finally got underway and was substantially completed by late Fall 1938.

The Florentine Gardens under construction. Hollywood Citizen News 10/15/1938

 

Florentine Gardens nearing completion. LA Times 11/6/1938

 

The lobby.

The domed, neon-lit dance floor.

The dining room.

Florentine Gardens held its grand opening on December 28, 1938. It would be competing with- and often compared unfavorably to- Earl Carroll’s new cabaret restaurant at 6230 Sunset Boulevard, which had opened 2 days earlier on December 26.

LA Times 12/27/1938

The new venue was popular for dining and dancing; its house band’s music aired over the radio nightly. But it was hard to fill those 1000 seats. On January 10, 1939, the restaurant began opening in the afternoons with “luncheon dansant” specials to try to draw the lunch-hour crowds.

Hollywood Citizen News 1/9/1939

LA Times 2/4/1939

On February 15, 1939, dance instructor Maurice Kosloff staged a classical ballet floor show at the Florentine Gardens. In general, though, the venue tended to operate more as a restaurant with entertainment as a sideline. That would change in the new year.

LA Times 2/15/1939.

Famous fan dancer Sally Rand appeared at the Florentine Gardens between Christmas 1939 and New Years’ Day 1940. (She needed cash). LA Times 12/23/1939.

In his 1957 memoir, “Blondes, Brunettes and Bullets,” Nils T. Granlund, aka NTG or “Granny” to his friends, says that Florentine Gardens was drowning in red when he agreed to take over its entertainment wing in early 1940.

NTG came from Prohibition-era Broadway where among other things he helped pick out showgirls for Flo Ziegfeld and Earl Carroll. He would take credit for discovering Ruby Keeler, Joan Crawford and Barbara Stanwyck from those days. He’d worked with Texas Guinan as emcee at speakeasies like Frank Fay’s El Fay Club. The relationship between gangsters and nightclubs was described by NTG in his memoir:

“In those days, if you wanted to do business with the nightclubs you did your bargaining with gangsters; it was impossible to avoid contact with them. Anyone who had anything to do with show business in those places had to know gangsters, had to deal with the mob… Blondes, brunettes, redheads, male and female, stars and chorus girls and workers in the vineyards were all mixed up with the gangsters, whether they liked it or not. If you were in show business and you worked in a night club, the club was owned by a member of the fraternity, for only mobsters had the money to afford places big enough to have entertainment.”

There’s no reason to think this changed with the end of Prohibition. Gangsters having got a foothold were not likely to give up such a lucrative income source.

Nils T. Granlund (NTG) c. 1946.

Guido Braccini sold the Florentine Gardens circa early 1940. His name was closely associated with the advertising up to December 1939 but not after that. When NGT began staging its shows, his boss was Frank R. Bruni. Bruni served president and general director of the Gardens. Max Sisenwein was treasurer and general counsel. Harry Barg was secretary and assistant manager. Dave Gould, who had created dances for Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in the movies, was choreographer.

Announcing the arrival of Nils T. Granlund. LA Times 2/27/1940.

NTG’s first show for Florentine Gardens, on March 10, 1940, was called, fittingly, “Hello Hollywood.” He wasn’t shy about self promotion .

LA Times 3/13/1940

LA Times 3/24/1940

 

LA Times 3/31/1940

 

LA Times 4/21/1940

NTG and the new management put Florentine Gardens back in the black- so much so that just a few months after his arrival- in August 1940- the venue was able to embark on a $25,000 expansion- increasing its seating capacity from 1000 to 1500 and almost doubling the size of the dance floor. Sweeping staircases were added to either side of the orchestra stage and a balcony was added. The project also included removing columns from the dining room, and the booths were terraced, ensuring a good view of the floor from all angles.

LA Times 2/27/1940

 

NTG often booked artists he had known in the old Broadway days- like Sophie Tucker, Ted Lewis, and Harry Richman, and brought in newer discoveries like Ozzie Nelson.

Celebs packed the audience for the opening of King of Jazz Paul Whiteman at Florentine Gardens December 4, 1941. Three days later, the US was at war. The war years were boom times for Gardens and other nightclubs.

The Zanzibar Room, Florentine Gardens’ re-vamped jungle-themed cocktail lounge, opened in January 1942. The Mills Brothers opened in the Zanzibar Room on July 29, 1942 while NGT’s “Spirit of Victory” review played in the main showroom.

The Zanzibar Room cocktail lounge.

 

LA Times 7/26/1942

LA Daily News 7/29/1942

Chorus girls in NTG’s reviews at this time included Yvonne DeCarlo, who would soon go on to fame in the movies, and burlesque star Lili St. Cyr, who appeared under her real name: Marie Van Schaack.

Lili St. Cyr- as Marie Van Schaack appeared in a sketch called “Hollywood Canteen” in NTG’s “Petticoat Army review in October 1942. The famous Hollywood Canteen had just opened. LA Times 10/7/1942

 

In 1942, NTG also produced a film for Monogram Pictures, called “Rhythm Parade,” shot at Florentine Gardens and featuring its house orchestra Ted Fio Rito, its comedian “Candy” Candido, its chorus girls, the Mills Brothers, and NTG himself. The film opened at the Colony Theater down the street from Florentine Gardens on New Years’ Eve. In 1944, NGT (with the Florentine Garden girls) would also make an appearance in RKO’s “Goin’ to Town,” a film featuring radio characters Lum and Abner as well as Paramount’s “Take It Big.”


LA Daily News 12/31/1942

Florentine Gardens in March 1943 during the run of NGT’s “Thrills of 43” review with Ann Corio, Milton Britton, Pinky Tomlin, Paul Regan, Cy Landry and others.

 

NTG often booked talented artists he had known in the old Broadway days like Sophie Tucker, Ted Lewis and Harry Richman. LA Times 10/20/1943

Though he’d saved the Florentine Gardens, the relationship between NTG and Bruni became strained. NTG still emcee’d for Florentine Gardens, but Bruni took over producing the reviews. Beginning with the “Swinging in Victory” review featuring the Mills Brothers, Bruni used comedian Eppy Pearson as MC while NTG toured with a group of Florentine Gardens beauties.  When the group was due to appear in New York City in December 1945, it was widely rumored that NTG was opening a new club on Broadway- possibly started by NTG himself as a trial balloon.

Having packed the Zanzibar room nightly in the Summer of ’42, the Mills Brothers made a triumphant return to the Florentine Gardens as headliners in 1945, having since recorded their smash hit, “Paper Doll.” Hollywood Citizen News 5/2/1945.

The NTG Florentine Gardens tour reached Chicago in January 1946. They appeared at Colosimo’s, where NTG had last performed 7 years earlier before coming to Hollywood. Unfortunately the Tribune’s critic Will Davidson rated the show Not Too Good.

Granlund responded by telling syndicated gossip columnist Lou Sobol that he had been offered a half interest in Colsimo’s plus a “huge salary” to run the show their but that he had “decided” to return to Hollywood.

NTG on tour with the Florentine Gardens beauties 1945-1946. They appeared at the (new) Colosimo’s in Chicago in January 1946. Chicago Tribune 1/10/1946

In February 1946, it was announced that NTG would host a Monday-Friday daytime radio show, “You’re in the Act,” to be broadcast from the Florentine Gardens on CBS starting March 4, 1946. Panned by critics, it did not last long. NTG also resumed emcee duties for Bruni’s Florentine Gardens’ reviews.

LA Times 3/7/1946

 

Actress-model Jean Spangler appeared in the Pinky Lee comedy review “Laffs with Pinky,”  which opened October 14, 1946 but does not appear to have been a regular Florentine Gardens dancer.  She went missing in October 1949, the presumed victim of foul play. Valley Times 11/29/1946

LA Daily News 10/14/1946

In November 1946, NTG did return to Broadway, staging shows at the Greenwich Inn. In March 1947 he moved to the new Rio Cabana Club at Broadway and 52nd. John Chaplin of the New York Daily News noted that his jokes did not appear to have changed in 20 years. He returned to emceeing at Bruni’s Florentine Gardens. His old pal and fan favorite Sophie Tucker opened on September 8, 1947 and ran through November 1947. When she left, NTG was again sidelined.

LA Daily News 8/25/1947

On November 14, 1947, gossip columnist May Mann reported that NTG and Mark Hansen were going to open a 12-story hotel on Hollywood Boulevard near Gower, with a cabaret on the roof. Construction was to begin “shortly.” This project never happened.

Mark Hansen was a theater owner whose holding included the Marcal Theater just up the street at 6025 Hollywood Boulevard near Glower. There’s no reason to think he had any connection to the Florentine Gardens at this date.

Hollywood Citizen News 11/14/1947

 

Florentine Gardens in late December 1947-early January 1948 during Beatrice Kay’s run, which opened December 29, 1947. “Christmas Eve” at the Hawaii Theater next door opened December 31, 1947. California State Library photo.

 

Lili St. Cyr made her return to the Florentine Gardens as a headliner on March 1, 1948. The show included “Think a Drink Hoffman” and Paul Valentine- St. Cyr’s husband at this time.  Hollywood Citizen News 2/28/1948

By 1948, nightclubs, like movie theaters, were experiencing a significant drop in patronage since the boom of the war years.

NTG returned to the Florentine Gardens in March 1948 as emcee for headliners The Ink Spots. Critics, however, now found his audience participation antics, in which businessmen would be called upon to take off their ties, roll up their pant legs and join the beauties on stage,  rather stale.

On May 13, 1948, Frank Bruni announced that Florentine Gardens would close after Ethel Waters’ engagement ended on May 17, 1948 and undergo a remodeling to become a legitimate theater, including turning the bandstand into a full stage. Further, he said, it would be known as the Florentine Theater Restaurant beginning with the opening of George White’s Scandals on June 3, 1948.

George White Scandals opened at the newly renamed “Florentine Theater Restaurant” on  June 3, 1948. LA Times 6/3/1948.

The Florentine Gardens, or Florentine Theater Restaurant, was shuttered only two days after the opening. Trade publication Variety reported in August 1948 that Bruni’s debts were said to be in the $100,000 range. The corporate owners- Florgar, Inc. headed by architect S. Charles Lee, were supposedly considering operating it themselves. Lou Walters, of New York’s Latin Quarter nightclub, was also reportedly interested in taking it over. In September, 1948, the equipment and fixtures were offered up in a bankruptcy sale.

LA Times 9/19/1948

In October 1948, gossip writer Edith Gwynn reported that NTG (who had lately been staging reviews for Zucca’s Opera House) wanted to reopen the Florentine Gardens. On November 29, 1948 local papers reported that the new owner was Harold Stanley, and it would reopen with a new look on Christmas Eve. The opening date was later pushed back to mid-January. It finally reopened, with a new name as well, on February 7, 1949 as the Cotton Club with Count Basie headlining.

Hollywood Citizen News 2/1/1949

Even the great Count Basie couldn’t keep the doors open, however, and 5955 Hollywood Boulevard was soon shuttered again. It was offered for sale or lease in April 1949.

LA Times 4/10/1949

On June 28, 1949, it was reported that the “new Florentine Gardens” would reopen July 1 under the management of Mark M. Hansen and Eddie Allen. Hansen was said to be a part owner as well; if so, the actual owner was still Flogar, Inc.  The first show under Hansen would be a Gay 90s review, Grandfather’s Follies. Jimmy Grier, an old favorite from the Cocoanut Grove in the early ’30s, would provide dance music. Critics generally praised the show, but didn’t rave.

The New LA Mirror 7/9/1949

Two weeks after the Florentine Gardens reopened, Mark Hansen was shot in his home at 6024 Carlos Avenue, Hollywood, by a young woman named Lola Titus, who had recently worked as a taxi dancer at LA’s Roseland Roof and Dreamland Ballroom. Hansen survived. He told police that Titus was upset that he wouldn’t put her in his show at the Florentine Gardens. Titus’ explanation of a lovers’ tiff was more plausible.

Hansen had occupied this address, which was near his offices in the Marcal Theater building, since at least 1936- originally with his wife and two daughters- before the Florentine Gardens was even built, let alone any association between him and the nightclub.

Titus was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon in September 1949. She was deemed insane after the trial (as it worked then, defendants were tried first then assessed for competency) and sent to Patton State Hospital.

Lola Titus in court, 1949.

A new review, Follies Bizarre” opened August 8, 1949. On September 30, 1949, the venue ushered in a “vaudeville police” with the “Florentine Follies.”

LA Mirror 8/25/1949

LA Daily News 11/19/1949

Florentine Gardens wound down after the new year and does not appear to have been open regularly, though special banquet events would still be held there.

On February 20, 1950, Zucca’s Opera House burned down just before its new review, “Virgin Island,” was to open. The show must go on, however; Hansen and Zucca struck a deal and on February 24, it opened for a show to benefit the actors at the Florentine Gardens, renamed Florentine Gardens Opera House. The show then moved to the Paddock Club, a former ballroom on Riverside Drive.

LA Mirror 2/24/1950

In April 1950, Paul V. Coates of the LA Times reported that NTG was dickering to buy the Florentine Gardens, but that did not happen. Instead, on August 30, 1950, the Hollywood Citizen News reported that the Hollywood Canteen Foundation was buying the Florentine Gardens building and equipment to reactivate the Hollywood Canteen in early 1951 under the direction once again of Bette Davis and John Garfield.

The famous Hollywood Canteen for servicemen’s entertainment had operated on Cahuenga Boulevard from October 1943 to November 1945. (My post on the Canteen can be found here). The Canteen had earned $500,000 by selling the rights to use its name to Warner Brothers for the “Hollywood Canteen” film; the Foundation had been formed to manage this money and with the US now in the Korean War a new Canteen seemed like the thing to do with it. S. Charles Lee, as president of the building’s owner (Still Flogar, Inc), officially revealed the plans for the building’s purchase on November 2, 1950. There were not yet enough service persons in Los Angeles at the time to warrant an immediate opening, however. The Canteen would use the Gardens as a nightclub and rented out for special events until it reopened the new Hollywood Canteen- if it ever did. On December 15, 1950, the Police Commission granted the Hollywood Canteen a public dance hall/cafe permit.

LA Times 11/2/1950

Bette Davis herself announced in March 6, 1951 that the Hollywood Canteen would reopen at 5955 Hollywood Boulevard on July 4, 1951. The opening was pushed back to Labor Day “or thereafter.” It still had not opened by the end of 1951 but was used for other events.

The Hollywood Canteen Foundation, owners of the Florentine Gardens, rented the building for special events while planning to reopen it as the new Hollywood Canteen. Hollywood Citizen News 4/3/1952.

The building never did reopen as the Hollywood Canteen.

The Valley Times 12/4/1954

On July 8, 1955, completely revamped for office use, the building became the headquarters of the Retail Clerks Union.

Hollywood Citizen News 7/8/1955

The building would go on to have other uses, including a dance club. In 2005, the City proposed building a new fire station on the site. Owner Kenneth MacKenzie refused to sell, wishing to preserve the building. The city suggested that the facade could be incorporated into the design. The building was ultimately preserved and is extant today as a performance venue, still known as Florentine Gardens.

Notes:

Guido Braccini was threatened with deportation in April 1940, accused of violating the terms of his naturalized citizenship. Ultimately it was dropped. In June 1942 he opened the Louisiana restaurant at 5665 Wilshire Boulevard (formerly the Wilshire Bowl), which became Slapsie Maxie’s in November 1943. In 1950 he opened a new Lucca’s restaurant in Richmond. He died in 1960.

NTG continued to produce shows and hosted talent contest shows on television in the early 1950s. He wrote his memoir, published in February 1957 and was planning to stage shows for the Flamingo Hotel, Las Vegas. He was killed in Las Vegas on April 21, 1957 when a taxi he was riding in was hit by another vehicle.

Lola Titus would tell police her real name was Beverly Alice Bennett but Lola Titus was the name she was born with. Newspapers cited her age as anywhere from 23 to 25; she was actually only 21; her correct birthdate was March 15, 1928. She died at Patton State Hospital in November 1958, age 30, and her body was shipped back to Pennsylvania where her mother and sister still lived; her father died in July 1949 less than two weeks after the Hansen shooting.

5947 Hollywood Boulevard: The Brokaw Property

 

The Brokaw home at 5947 Hollywood Boulevard. LAPL photo.

The 2-story ranch home of John B. and Ida H. Brokaw, set amid lemon orchards, was located on 10 acres on the north side of Hollywood Boulevard (then Prospect Avenue) between Bronson and Gower extending north almost to Franklin. The residence was originally 539 E. Prospect Avenue; as of 1913 it was 5947 Hollywood Boulevard.

Brokaw, a buggy maker from Ohio, came to California on a visit in the 1880s and bought up 30 acres in the heart of Hollywood. He returned in 1892 and bout a 2-1/2 acre tract that he had planted with lemons; in 1894 he purchased the 10-acre tract that became the ranch home. Near the home, the Brokaws planted cypress and cedars and more exotic specimen trees and shrubs. The couple didn’t reside in Hollywood permanently, however, until after 1900; the 1900 US Census shows them still living in Ohio.

By 1901 Brokaw had decided to sell off his orchard property, other than the home ranch, in 1- to 3-acre tracts, through agent Alex Culver. The next year he would also sell tracts in Brokaw Tract #2, across the street from the family ranch on the south side of Hollywood Boulevard.

Ad for the first Brokaw Tract, along Hollywood Boulevard between Bronson and Gower, not including the family ranch parcel. LAT 11/17/1901.

 

The Brokaws did NOT move from the family ranch, however. In the 1910 US Census, they are at 539 E. Prospect, where John lists his profession as “rancher.”

Detail of the 1913 Sanborn Fire Insurance Company map showing the Brokaw home at 5947 Hollywood Boulevard.

Portion of a 1913 Sanborn Fire Insurance Company map showing the Brokaw ranch property at 5947 Hollywood Boulevard and some of the buildings built in the vicinity since the tracts were sold in 1-3 acre parcels starting in 1901. Library of Congress.

They were still living at the ranch, since re-addressed as 5947 Hollywood Boulevard, in the US census of 1920.

Excerpt of the 1920 US Census. National Archives.

 

In February 1921, Ida leased a 3-story brick building at 1320 S. Main Street in downtown Los Angeles to the Los Angeles Auto Engineering Company. In November 1921, John, the former buggy maker, announced the opening of his new auto body shop here.

LA Times 11/6/1921

 

On September 1, 1922 local papers blared the news of a gigantic 717-room. $6,000,000 hotel to be built in Hollywood on the Brokaw ranch property that would be known as the Hollywood-California Apartment Hotel. To be built by the Davenport Corporation, Noel Davenport told reporters he had secured a 99-year lease for the Brokaw ranch where the hotel would be built. Sketches of the mammoth project, by architect H. H Whiteley, were splashed across the front pages of the major local papers. It even made the mountains look small.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 9/1/1922.

 

On January 17, 1923, Davenport breathlessly announced that rather than leasing the property from Brokaw, the company had just completed paperwork to buy it outright. This was not true. The work of removing the old Brokaw residence would begin within 2-weeks, he said; the company would then build itself a 1-story admin structure and a month after that, excavation of the hotel would commence. None of this would happen, either. The Brokaw residence was not going anywhere anytime soon.

 

Hollywood Daily Citizen 1/17/1923

 

Ten months passed, then on November 13, 1923, the LA Times reported that the Davenports, “well-known Southern California hotel men” were building at 1002-room hotel on the Brokaw ranch house property. They wrote this as if it was the first time anyone was hearing about this project. Almost all details provided are verbatim from previous announcements. Work, they said, was to begin within 60 days and would be complete by the end of 1924.

LA Times 11/13/1923

LA Times 4/24/1924

Sixty days came and went. Nearly five months into 2024, Davenport announced that work on the $6,000,000 Hollywood-California Hotel would start within a few weeks (At least this time the paper acknowledged its previous reporting). Ads selling stock in the project, featuring a drawing of an entirely different building, sketched by architects Curlett & Beelman, appeared in local papers on May 5, 1924. Ida H. Brokaw was among the asserted board of directors.

LAT 5/5/1924

 

On May 22, the promoters held a presentation at the Jonathan Club. Curlett & Beelman showed of the plans. Finance director David A. Coleman said they’d sold a bond of $2,500,000 and almost half the preferred and common stock was subscribed.  June 15, 1924, yet another drawing of the $6,000,000 hotel appeared (again) in major local papers. Davenport said preliminary construction work was to begin the project the first of next week and dismantling of the Brokaw homestead was to start immediately. That did not happen.

LAT 6/15/1924

 

It’s the last we hear of the hotel on the Brokaw ranch property. In 1925, Brokaw was the victim of a swindle, also coincidentally involving a $6,000,000 project- in this case a fake railroad merger that burned many LA businessmen, bankers and politicians. The bunco artists behind the swindle. Thomas Hennessey and Harry D. Hibbs were exposed by Brokaw in May 1925. They were found guilty in September 1925. Brokaw’s investment was variously reported as $10,000, $30,000 and $100,000.

LA Times 5/8/1925

LA Time 5/8/1925

 

John Brokaw died, age 74, on August 9, 1926 at his ranch home at 5947 Hollywood Boulevard.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 8/10/1926.

The ranch house property became the subject of a lawsuit brought by Ida Brokaw against Guarantee Trust & Title Company, the executors of her late husband’s estate. The title company asserted that she had signed away her rights to the property in 1924 in a document conveying her share to her husband. Ida argued that she had not understood the document she signed. The court agreed on August 27, 1929,that Ida was the victim of fraud, and her signature on the document was the result of duress and undue influence.

 

LA Times 8/28/1929

Ida continued to live on the ranch property, with her brother Will C. Higgins, in 1930, when a 1-acre section of the grounds were made into a miniature golf course.

1930 US Census showing Ida Brokaw living at 5947 Hollywood Boulevard.

The miniature golf craze was at its height in the summer of 1930. Another old ranch property down the street at 5261-5263 Hollywod Boulevard had a course put in around the same time. Ralph B. Smith’s “Shady Greens” opened with the address 5937 Hollywood Boulevard on June 28, 1930. It did open the next season, 1931, but that was it.

“Golf in a Garden.” Shady Greens ad, 6/27/1930. Hollywood Daily Citizen.

In May 1932, the site opened as the Hollywood Garden Bridge Club, using a part of the gardens for outdoor bridge club gatherings. The club was founded by Mrs. Elaine Warren McIntire, who added an orchestra stage and toilets. Concrete pads installed for shuffleboard during Shady Greens’ run were used as a patio with a canvas canopy overhead.

LA Times 5/22/1932

Ida still lived at 5947 Hollywood Boulevard in 1931 and into 1932. Sometime between 1932 and early 1933, the property was acquired by the owner of the Los Angeles Times, the Times-Mirror Corp. and Ida moved out.

In 1933, the property served as an outdoor venue for the Los Angeles Kennel Club’s national dog show, addressed as 5945 Hollywood Boulevard- the only time this address was used. When the Los Angeles club hosted the event again in 1936, the address used was 5937.

Hollywood Citizen News 5/19/1933.

LA Times 5/4/1933

In December 1936 owner Times Mirror obtained a permit for a cafe building, to be built at 5931 Hollywood Boulevard. Designed by architect Gordon B. Kaufmann, it occupied part of the ranch property next to the concrete decks where the golf course/bridge club had served outdoor meals. The unfinished building was leased to William Klute for a cafe, to be known as the Palms Grill. (It has its own post here).

The Palms Grill c. 1937. Schultheis Collection, LAPL photo.

In February 1937, Times Mirror commissioned a building designed by architect A. B. Sedley, to be construction on the west end of the property, at 5959 Hollywood Boulevard. As with the Palms Grill, it was leased before construction began to a grocery store and would open as the Hollywood Food Mart (it will have its own post).

5959 Hollywod Boulevard as the Hollywood Food Mart, c. 1937. LAPL photo.

In November 1937, another project for the parcel was announced: the Florentine Gardens cabaret restaurant, to be constructed at 5955 Hollywood Boulevard. Also designed by Gordon B. Kaufman, it would open in December 1938 (it has its own post here).

Florentine Gardens at 5955 Hollywood Boulevard. LAPL photo.

the Brokaw ranch house was being used as a boarding house in its last years. A permit to demolish the residence was obtained on June 9, 1938.

Ad for the Brokaw ranch house. Hollywood Citizen-News 8/19/1936.

Finally, in November 1939, Times Mirror announced a theater was to be built on the last vacant part of the parcel, to be known as the Hawaii Theater. (It has its own post here).s 5939 Hollywood Boulevard, it reportedly occupied the site of the Brokaw ranch house itself.

Sketch of the proposed Hawaii Theater, 5939 Hollywood Boulevard. LA Times 11/19/1939

 

Notes:

Ida H. Brokaw was buying property in Los Angeles as of 1888. Even after moving from the ranch, she remained in the vicinity of her longtime home. In 1934-1936 she lived at 6060 Franklin Boulevard. By 1938 she was at 1781 Gower. In financial difficulties later, she spent her last years in an apartment with her brother at 1765 N. Vine. Her brother died in February 1948. Ida passed away in July 1948 at age 90.

5610 Hollywood Boulevard: Home of the Star Car and more

Hollywood Daily Citizen 11/13/1925

In 1925, the Christie Realty Company commissioned architects Morgan, Walls & Clements to design an elegant little building at 5610 Hollywood Boulevard to be the Star Motor Company of California’s new Hollywood showroom and garage. Though only one story, the high ceiling of the interior made it seem nearly two stories. Huge arched windows let passing motorists speeding along Hollywood Boulevard to glimpse the shining models inside the showroom. The company, with its parent, the Durant Motors Company, held a gala grand opening on November 14, 1925.

Hollywood Daily Citizen 11/13/1925

Hollywood Daily Citizen 11/13/1925

Hollywood Daily Citizen 11/13/1925

It remained an automobile showroom into late 1930; in 1931, Durant Motors, like many auto companies during the Depression, ceased production.

In February 1931, Albert Columbo, brother of singer and bandleader Russ Colombo, applied to the Police Commission for a permit to open a nightclub at the now vacant 5610 Hollywood Boulevard. Russ had performed with Gus Arnheim and His Cocoanut Grove Orchestra and was well known to local radio listeners but was not yet a huge recording and film star.

Sheet music for “Lies,” introduced by Russ Columbo, the “California Radio Star,” 1931.

The nightclub, called Cafe Pyramid, opened on April 2, 1931 with acts of vaudeville, a mammoth floor show, stage and screen stars in impromptu acts (? !), Egyptian novelties, and dancing to Russ’ orchestra.

Despite the lights and gayety, the brothers Columbo were not in the club business for long. Russ traveled to New York later that year, where he gained national fame and in that pre-swing era would rival his former Gus Arnheim compadre Bing Crosby as the country’s #1 swooner crooner. Sadly, he was killed in an accident with a gun on September 2, 1934.

Ad for the opening of Albert and Russ Columbo’s Cafe Pyramid. LA Times 4/1/1931

Gene Morgan took over the space, which he called the Pyramid Club. It debuted on March 10, 1932 but was no more successful than the Cafe Pyramid. The club had closed as of May 1932, when several of his staff filed a suit, asserting that they had never been paid. Some were owed less than $20.

As Gene Morgan's Pyramid Club. LA Times 3/9/1932

 

The building had various uses for a few years and at times sat partially vacant. A fire damaged part of the interior in February 1937; at the time it was being used to store some old talking picture equipment.

In April 1937, the Edith Jane School of Dance announced that 5610 Hollywood Boulevard would be its new home. The school was run by dancer and foil champion Edith Jane Plate and her husband, also a sabre champion and fencing instructor to the stars, Ralph Faulkner. Shortly after moving in, they announced that the school would be called the Falcon School. The name was later changed to Falcon Studios.

5610 Hollywood Blvd. as the Edith Jane School of Dancing, 1937. Herman J. Schultheis photo, LAPL.

Hollywood Citizen News 4/10/1937.

LA Times 8/29/1937

Falcon Studios remained at 5610 until June 1943, when they moved to 5526 Hollywood Boulevard so that 5610 could be used for defense purposes. For more about Falcon Studios, see my post for 5526 Hollywood Boulevard.

After the war, in 1948, 5610 became a beauty product manufacturing plant for the Waval Thermal Company. A fire broke out here on May 14, 1948, stopping traffic along the Boulevard. It could have been worse had the flames reached the barrels of oil stored in back for use in the cosmetic manufacturing process.

Another fire at 5610 Hollywood. Hollywood Citizen News 5/14/1948.

The building was again reconstructed. It was put up for sale in 1949 and had another series of unremarkable uses for another 45 years. The building did whatever was required of it and was rewarded by being demolished in 1995, the fate of many historic buildings along the boulevard following the January 1994 Northridge Earthquake. The current 5610 Hollywood Boulevard is a new building constructed on the site.

 

The Hollywood Canteen

The Hollywood Canteen opened on October 3, 1942 at 1451 N. Cahuenga Avenue as a free entertainment center for servicemen in uniform. Co-founded primarily by Bette Davis, John Garfield and Mervyn LeRoy, it was modeled after the Stage Door Canteen in New York.

On February 7, 1942, the American Theater Wing had announced it was opening a canteen for servicemen in the unoccupied Little Club beneath the 44th Street Theater at 216 W. 44th Street in New York City. Staffed by Broadway actors, musicians and other theater workers, it opened on March 2, 1942 after a public open house on February 28 and March 1.

On March 26, 1942, AP columnist George Tucker reported that Bette Davis had appeared at the Stage Door Canteen and danced with the soldiers, sailors and marines. The column appeared in papers nationwide into early April 1942.

On June 2, 1942, LA Times arts writer Edwin Schallert returned from a visit to Broadway and reported: “I learned in New York that Bette Davis is much interested in establishing a Stage Door Canteen for the entertainment of servicemen on the Coast and that the idea is about to become a reality. In sprawling Los Angeles and Hollywood, I’d say they’d need several.” Gossip columnist Hedda Hopper also reported that Bette Davis, John Garfield and other top stars wanted to open a local Stage Door Canteen, identifying the prospective location for it as Ciro’s nightclub on Sunset Boulevard. Hopper thought a Hollywood Stage Door Canteen was unlikely to succeed, and questioned whether it was even needed since there was already the Hollywood USO and other similar facilities.

In fact, a Hollywood canteen was about to open- the Hollywood Guild Canteen, organized by Anne Lehr, wife of a former studio executive, Abraham Lehr. Anne had founded the Hollywood Guild in 1935 to air aged and indigent persons from the film industry. On May 15, 1942, she expanded her efforts to include a relaxation and entertainment facility for servicemen. It was up and running by July 1942.

Bette Davis would serve as chair of the Hollywood Guild Canteen but continued to pursue opening a Hollywood version of the Stage Door Canteen. On August 17, Davis and the Hollywood Victory Committee announced that that a Stage Door Canteen-style facility would be coming to Los Angeles. The following day Luella Parsons reported in her syndicated column: “Bette Davis finally will get her Stage Door Canteen only it will be called the Hollywood Canteen.”

Hollywood Citizen News 8/17/1942.

A series of fundraisers were held that month to raise money for the Hollywood Canteen- the first was a premiere for the film “The Talk of the Town” at the Four Star Theater on August 29, followed by dinner and dancing to Benny Goodman’s orchestra at Ciro’s. Ticket sales for the sold-out event raised some $5000 for the Canteen. The next day, Joan Bennett staged a garden party benefit at her Holmby Hills home, located at 515 Mapleton Drive.

Los Angeles Daily News 8/25/1942

The Hollywood Canteen was officially organized as a nonprofit on August 24, 1942. The following day, the Los Angeles Daily News reported that the Hollywood Barn building at Sunset and Cahuenga had been leased for the Hollywood Canteen. The space was donated for the duration by the owners, brothers Frank and Walter Muller and Sarah A. Laughlin. Film industry professionals donated their services to renovate and redecorate the structure.

Entrance to the Hollywood Canteen. LAPL photo.

Originally bearing the address  6426 Sunset Boulevard, the place had opened as The Latin Quarter’s Cafe, affiliated with artist Finn H. Frolich of the Norse Studio Club, in May 1924. The club featured themed rooms, including a pirate room, a Cleopatra room, and a “room of all nations.” Not a commercial success, the Latin Quarter was sold to Ward McFadden, original builder/owner of the Ship Cafe in Venice, and his associate Charles Simpson. It reopened on Halloween night, 1924, but didn’t last long. Frolich maintained a workshop at 6426 through 1925 at least.

As The Latin Quarter Cafe. LA Evening Express 5/21/1924

LA Times 10/31/1924.

In May 1928, the venue was offered for lease as a store or workshop and briefly housed a woodworking studio, then a catering company.

LA Times 5/20/1928.

On November 8, 1932, bandleader Buddy Fisher, “the nation’s joy boy,” who had recently completed an extended engagement at Eugene Stark’s Bohemian Club on Santa Monica Boulevard, applied for a dance hall permit at 6426 Sunset Boulevard. It opened on December 22, 1932 as the Hollywood Barn, a new nightclub with a farm theme.

As Buddy Fisher’s Hollywood Barn. Los Angeles Times 3/18/1933

Decorated by Jack Schula of the Hollywood Roosevelt’s Blossom Room, the Montmartre, Al Levy’s Tavern and others, the Barn had “old fashioned rafters, hay mows, grain bins, corn shucks, a cider press and other rural features,” including live animals- chickens and pigs. “Buxom farmers’ daughters” served as waitresses, while “pretty dairy maids” churned fresh butter nightly. Fisher modeled the club after one he reputedly ran in Chicago.

LA Post-Record 11/8/1933.

The last mention found of Fisher’s association with the Barn was May 1933. On May 26, 1933, it was raided by the LAPD vice squad for illegal sales of beer. By September 1933, police told the Hollywood Citizen News it had responded to at least 18 calls to the Barn to “quell disturbances, stop fights and arrest drunks in the vicinity.” Residents complained that it was being “conducted in a noisy manner.” On November 7, 1933, its beer license was revoked. Police asserted that it has become a hangout for bootleggers (hard liquor was still illegal) and gangsters.

By January 1934, it was operating as the Hollywood Stable (sometimes advertised as the Hollywood Stables as well). It was one of 20 nightclubs raided by the State Board of Equalization (which regulated the new State liquor laws) over the weekend of April 21-22, 1934, which was not uncommon in the early days of legalized alcohol sales.

As Hollywood Stables. LA Times 1/24/1934.

As the Hollywood Stable. LA Post-Record 3/24/1934,

As Hollywood Stables. LA Times 10/27/1934

Or was it the Hollywood Stable? The owners couldn’t seem to make up their mind. The address contains a typo- it was 1453 N. Cahuenga, not 1543. LA Times 11/17/1934

As the Hollywood Stables Cafe. LA Times 8/17/1935.

The Hollywood Stable/Stables faced additional suspensions of its license for violating liquor laws. By August 1935, it was known as the Hollywood Stables Cafe and was using the address 1453 N. Cahuenga rather than 6426 Sunset Boulevard. It appears that a service station was built on the prominent Sunset Boulevard corner of the parcel, prompting the address change.  The Hollywood Stable Cafe continued to operate through 1935 at least.

LA Daily News 8/16/1938.

In August 1938, now using the address 1451 Cahuenga, it briefly served as a venue for Wayne Moore’s new Hollywood Drunkard, with a gala opening held August 11-13, 1938.

As the Gay White Way. LA Times 10/21/1938.

On October 21, 1938, the old barn building opened as another nightclub, the Gay White Way.  By September 1941, it was the Rancho Grande theater cafe. It was likely vacant at the time the Hollywood Canteen leased it.

LA Daily News 9/12/1941.

The Hollywood Canteen’s volunteer workers transformed the structure, painting it white and adding a rope sign to the front entrance, in keeping with the Western theme. Inside, artists of the Screen Cartoonist Guild (many of them from Disney, including Mary Blair, Lee Blair, Marc Davis, Retta Scott and Earl Murphy) under the supervision of Elmer Plummer, created a 326-square foot mural on 4 panels, titled “Cowboy Heaven” that depicted “things cowboys dream of.” Actor-director Richard Whorf, who painted as a hobby, painted a mural for the men’s bathroom.

Elmer Plummer and the “Cowboy Heaven” mural. San Bernardino County Sun 10/14/1942.

Another part of the mural. Hollywood Citizen News 10/3/1942.

At the opening on October 3, Hollywood’s elite paid $50 for bleacher seats to watch service members enter the Hollywood Canteen, which could handle 3000 patrons a night. The club only admitted enlisted personnel- no officers were allowed. The only way civilians could enter, aside from the volunteer workers, was to pay $100 for the so-called “Angel’s Table” in the balcony.

Opening for the Hollywood Canteen. LAPL photo.

Opening night at the Hollywood Canteen, October 3, 1942. Like a movie premiere but in reverse- the bleacher seating held Hollywood’s elite. The stars of this show were the US service members.

Bette Davis addresses the crowd at the opening. LAPL photo.

Fan magazines covered the Hollywood Canteen’s opening. From Screenland magazine November 1942.

There was no cost to the regular patrons. A uniform was all they needed. Inside was a large snack bar that served food, soft drinks and cigarettes- and an autograph from the screen star hostesses. There were 30-40 hostesses to dance with and a show every hour and a half. Male stars served as busboys, and everybody helped out in the kitchen.

Waiting to get in the Hollywood Canteen.

Bob Hope at the Hollywood Canteen in 1943. UCLA photo.

Service members waiting to get inside the Canteen to celebrate its 1st birthday. LA Times 10/31/1943.

Crowd inside the Hollywood Canteen with visiting French sailors. LAPL photo.

Bette Davis, Marlene Dietrich show off the Hollywood Canteen’s Wall of Honor to Bob Hope. It depicted stars who were serving in the military. LAPL photo.

The 1-millionth patron passed through the doors before the club was even one year old- on September 15, 1943. He was First Sgt. Carl E. W. Bell of Rising Star, Texas.

Opening of the Hollywood Canteen in Hollywood 12/20/1944.

The right to use the famous name was sold to Warner Brothers for more than $500,000 (funds going to the Canteen). The film “Hollywood Canteen” opened in local theaters just before Christmas, 1944.

The hostilities in Europe ended on May 8, 1945 with Germany’s unconditional surrender. On August 14, 1945, President Truman announced that Japan had unconditionally surrendered The war was over, but Los Angeles was still inundated with visiting service members as they returned from the Pacific Theater. The Hollywood Canteen originally planned to close on its third anniversary, October 3, 1945, but due to the continued demand, it remained open through Thanksgiving Day, November 22, 1945.

Postcard view of the famous Hollywood Canteen c. 1945.

It had entertained more than 3 million servicemen. More than 11,000 actors, musicians, dancers and other film industry workers had volunteered their time.

The Canteen’s fixtures were auctioned off in December 1945.

Auction ad. 12/23/1945.

On June 13, 1946, The Hollywood Citizen News reported that the building had been leased by Thomas Lee of the Mark Twain Hotel and that Guy Francis was in charge of remodeling it as a Latin American nightclub. On July 10, Bette Davis filed a restraining order, complaining that the operators were trying to capitalize on the Hollywood Canteen’s famous name by using it in large letters on the club’s signage with “former” in tiny letters, and that with or without the “former,” it was damaging to the prestige of the wartime service organization and the cause to which it was still devoted. Bette won. In March 1947, the building became a new Armed Forces officers’ club, affiliated with the Hollywood Canteen Corporation.

As the Moroccan. The Valley Times 12/31/1955.

On October 15, 1948, 1451 N. Cahuenga reopened as the Hollywood Auditorium. a rental hall operated by Frank E. George. In November 1949 it became a theater, known as the Carousel Theater, which lasted into 1955. In November 1955, John Howard “Johnny” Caldwell announced that the venue had been completely refurbished. It opened on December 31, 1955 as The Moroccan theater restaurant.

As Le Grand Comedy Theater. LA Times 3/1/1959.

By March 1959 it was operating as the Le Grand Comedy Theater and continued into early 1966.

With the US involved in the Korean War, in November 1950, the Hollywood Canteen Foundation purchased the former Florentine Gardens nightclub on Hollywood Boulevard and planned to reopen it as a new Hollywood Canteen but ultimately it did not happen.

Hollywood Citizen News 12/21/1966.

 

On December 20, 1966, the Hollywood Citizen News reported that the building, said to have significant dry rot, was torn down for a parking lot. Slabs of sidewalk survived containing the names of servicemen who celebrated the first anniversary of Pearl Harbor at the Hollywood Canteen on December 7, 1942. Janis Paige, who made her movie debut in the Hollywood Canteen film, received the pieces of sidewalk.

Notes:

There was another, unrelated, Latin Quarter nightclub in the 1960s located at 5521 Sunset Boulevard.

There was also a modern era unrelated Hollywood Canteen cafe located at 1006 Seward St.

La Conga – 1551 N. Vine

La Conga was a Hollywood nightclub that capitalized on the Latin music craze of the 1930s and early 1940s, which overlapped with the Hawaiian craze; in fact, the Hawaiian-themed Tropics nightclub was located just a few doors down.

The 2-story building that housed La Conga, at the southwest corner of Vine and Selma, was built in 1925 by architects Dodd & Richards in the Italian Renaissance style. It included the addresses 1449 to 1559 North Vine.

Architectural drawing of the Vine and Selma building, LA Times, 1/25/1925.

The completed building. LAPL photo.

Completed by the fall of 1925, the upper floor housed a ballroom, The Hollywood Roof, addressed as 1549 N. Vine, from 1925 to 1930.

Ad for the Hollywood Roof 12/8/1926. LA Daily News.

1549 N. Vine then became the Hollywood Gardena as of January 1931, then on October 6, 1932 it opened as the Bal Taborin.

Gala opening of the Bal Tabarin 10/5/1932. LA Times.

The Bal Taborin soon gave way to the Victorian-themed The Nineties nightclub and dance hall in 1933. The club was raided by Detective Lt. Charles Hoy of the Hollywood vice squad in July 1934; Hoy claimed the bartender, Joseph Stevens, had served him whiskey in violation of new State liquor laws. In September 1934, two young women, Margaret Thorpe and Peggy Page, were arrested for performing a fan dance at the club.

Ad for 1549 N. Vine as The Nineties 5/12/1934.

It soon thereafter ceased to be a nightclub and on November 16, 1935 the space opened as The Hollywood Associated Studios.

Ad for the Hollywood Associated Studios 2/14/1937.

Back to 1551.

In August 1925, Tony Merlo, “Hollywood character and restaurant man” leased space on the first floor of the yet-to-be-completed building’s first floor, addressed as 1551 N. Vine, for a cafe serving Italian fare. Tony Merlo’s Italian Restaurant opened by December of 1925. Capitalizing on his Hollywood connections as well as the location, across the street from the Lasky/Famous Players studio, Tony promised that “all the movie people eat here.”

Unfortunately for the restaurant business, Lasky/Famous Players moved in 1926 to a new home on Marathon Street near Melrose (see my previous post about that property, here).

Ad for Tony Merlo’s 1/2/1926.

By 1930, 1551 N. Vine was Bernie’s Cafe, operated by Nathan Bernstein. It was raided by federal dry agents on September 17, 1930 after receiving complaints that the place was selling bitters, consisting of 48% alcohol, to minors. Bernstein was sentenced to 6 months in jail and received a $500 fine. (The old Jim Jeffries bar, associated with Zeke Caress, Farmer Page, Tutor Scherer and others, was also caught up in the same raid). Bernie’s nevertheless continued here into early 1932.

Dry raid at 1551 N. Vine. 9/18/1930. LA Times.

1551 next briefly operated as the “1551 Club,” reportedly affiliated with Fred Whalen, father of Jack Whalen, aka “the Enforcer,” On New Years’ Even 1933, the 1551 Club’s fixtures and equipment were sold at auction.

On May 30, 1935, 1551 N. Vine opened as Le Trianon. Again, it was operated by an actor, Eugene Borden and featured the decor and cuisine of Borden’s native France.

Ad for the opening of Le Trianon 5/30/1935.

Le Trianon didn’t last too long. By April 1937, 1559 N. Vine was known as the Dominic Tavern, operated by Dominick Ferrera, when it made unfortunate publicity- an employee, Frank Damiano, was brutally murdered with a meat cleaver during his early morning shift, ostensibly by bandits. The case went unsolved. In June 1937, Ferrera pleaded guilty to adulterating and mislabeling liquors (LA Daily News 6/10/1937).

Shortly thereafter, 1551 changed hands again. Louis Prima headlined at the unnamed club, “Hollywood’s newest,” on July 2, 1937.

So new, it didn’t even have a name. Louis Prima debuts at “Hollywood’s newest” nightclub, 1551 N. Vine, 7/2/1937.

Finally, La Conga

In January 1938, H. Goldstein, the owner of record, applied for a permit for architect James H. Garrott to design a false front inside the cafe “to represent the exterior of a Cuban plaza” and add a hardwood dance floor. Hollywood gossip columnist Read Kendall of the LA Times reported on February 3, 1938 that Johnny Meyers (a friend of Errol Flynn’s) was opening the La Conga cafe on Vine Street on February 17.

As was typical for Hollywood Clubs, there was already a La Conga in New York, which had opened in December 1937. Cuban musician Desi Arnaz, who had come to the USA with his family, fleeing the Cuban Revolution of 1933, was a performer at the NYC La Conga. Conga fever spread west to Hollywood.

Ad for “Monte Prosser’s La Conga” from National Box Office Digest 12/20/1938. Via The Lantern.

Monte Prosser was the professed owner of the Hollywood La Conga. Louis Sobol mentioned him as its operator in his syndicated “The Voice of New York” column in August 1938, and Prosser’s name appears in the advertising that year as well.

In October 1938, owners of the building that housed La Conga enlisted architects Walker & Eisen to give the structure a streamline moderne makeover, in keeping with the Hollywood Recreation Center next door, which had opened in December 1937, the Hollywood Tropics building on the other side of it, and the new West Coast home of NBC radio across the street, built on a portion of the old Lasky/Famous Players lot.

The new facade had smooth white stucco and “modernistic chrome trimmings” on black and maroon colored Vitrolite tile, and indirect neon lighting. The anchor tenant, Thrify Drugstore, opened here in December 1939.

La Conga and the future home of Thrifty Drug at Vine and Selma, 1939. LAPL photo.

The following screen shots are from the 1939 MGM short, “Rhumba Rhythm at the Hollywood La Conga” which appears to have been filmed on location. House band leader Eduardo Chavez appears as himself.

Two tourists contemplate the exterior of La Conga. Note the doorman.

A glimpse of the bar and beyond it the dance floor and stage.

The film shows a number of celebs living it up at La Conga, including Chester Morris and not yet a huge star Lana Turner.

Murals and a waitress in a sombrero.

The stage and dance floor.

Patrons do La Conga on the postage stamp-sized dance floor.

The film in its entirety can be seen on youtube, thanks to user “ShortFilm.

 

Spanish language ad for La Conga in the LA Opinión 8/25/1940.

In mid-1941, La Conga changed its name to the Copacabana, though it continued to feature rhumba/Cuban music. However, Monte Prosser (who would later front the New York Copacabana club) apparently did not follow procedure in the matter of updating the club’s license to reflect the new name, because on December 19, 1941, William G. Bonelli of the State Board of Equalization, which regulated compliance with the state alcoholic beverage control act, revoked La Conga’s liquor license on the basis that the owner, Monte Prosser, had abandoned it four months earlier.

LA Times 12/20/1941

La Conga reopened days later, on Christmas Eve 1941, with a new theme and a new name: Sugar Hill.

Ad for the opening of Sugar Hill at 1551 N. Vine, 12/24/1941. 

By early 1945, 1551 N. Vine had become the Club Morocco. The Morocco filed for involuntary bankruptcy in January 1948 and its fixtures and equipment were sold at auction the following month.

Ad for 1551 N. Vine as the Morocco, 3/24/1945, describes it as “Hollywood’s newest.”

Screen capture of 1940s film footage showing 1551 N. Vine as the Morocco c. 1947. Note the maroon Vitrolite tile.

As “Art Martin’s” Club Morocco, 1946. LA Daily News.

Postcard view of Vine Street at Selma c. 1948 showing the Thrifty Drug building and the maroon Vitrolite exterior of 1551 N. Vine.

Ad for the Morocco’s auction, 2/22/1948.

1551 N. Vine Street’s days (and nights) as a club came to an end. In December 1949, it reopened as the new Hollywood ticket office of the Santa Fe Railroad.

Dorothy Lamour added glamour to the gala opening of Santa Fe’s new Hollywood ticket office, 12/16/1949. LA Times.

Postcard view of Vine Street c. 1952 with Santa Fe’s signage at 1551 N. Vine.

Notes

Whalen was identified as the former operator of the 1551 Club in December 1935, when he was arrested, along with “James Ray” and “Paul Parker” in San Francisco for robbing a Hollywood dress shop, Lillian Herts, 9268 Sunset Boulevard, of $4000 worth of gowns and furs. See LA Daily News 12/6/1935.

Prosser, a “publicity agent” would lend his name to the talent booking agency, Monte Prosser Productions, run by Johnny Roselli, the Chicago Outfit’s man in Hollywood. Prosser would open a “Beachcomber” restaurant in New York in the late 1930s that seems to have been a ripoff of Don the Beachcomber’s, and where the Zombie is said to have originated. He also operated Monte Prosser’s Zombie Bar at the 1939 World’s Fair. He ostensibly bought the New York Copacabana Club in 1947. In July 1950, Virgil Peterson of the Chicago Crime Commission, testifying before the US Congress Special Committee Investigation of Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce (aka the Kefauver Committee) said that Thomas Cassera, “an individual closely identified with the gangster element” had operated the Chanticleer club at 8572 Sunset Boulevard with Prosser.

In November 1939, Bonelli had been accused of graft in a pay to play liquor license scandal. Bonelli denied the accusations. It is worth noting that the LA mob made similar charges against citizen vice investigators led by Clifford Clinton. The bribe trial was unsuccessful and Bonelli continued on the SBE, eventually becoming its chair, until he was finally defeated in November 1954. At that time, Bonelli was implicated in another liquor license graft probe, in San Diego. He was indicted by the San Diego County grand jury in February 1955 and ended up fleeing to Mexico , where he died in 1970.