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These are just miscellaneous interesting
tidbits of classic Los Angeles bar, restaurant, hotel
and building history. If you want more details and
pictures visit the rest of the site starting with
THE HOME PAGE FOR LOS
ANGELES BAR & RESTAURANT HISTORY .
The first booth on the left as you enter
Musso and Frank's Grill from Hollywood Boulevard
was Charlie Chaplin's favorite table. I don't
know if they still do it, but for years when a kid would
order a tuna fish sandwich at Musso's, it would come
with a face on the top by cleverly placing olives and a
pickle for the features.
The interior of the Fred Harvey
Restaurant at Union Station (still fairly intact)
was created by Mary Jan Colter.
Henry "Hank" Charles Bukowski Jr.
- during times he could afford it, hung out at the
Musso and Frank Grill bar and became friends with
longtime Musso's bartender Ruben.
Dave Chasen, founder of
Chasen's Restaurant was born in Odessa, Russia. Ben
Dimsdale, owner of various restaurants including the
Windsor, was also of Russian heritage - with his parents
born in Minsk. Mickey Cohen was the son of
Russian Jewish parents, his mom being born in Kiev.
"Prince" Michael Romanoff of Romanoff's
restaurant did not have a drop of Russian blood.
Jules Salkin was the architect used for
some of the later versions of Perino's Restaurant
and Romanoff's Restaurant (although I'm not sure
if it was for the exterior or interior). Alexander
Perino, the founder of Perino's, was thought to be so
exacting that he ordered every piece of lettuce to be
inspected before being placed in a salad.
Ontra Cafeteria, Holloway House
and Henrici Restaurants were all owned by the same
company.
The Covina Bowl once had its own
beauty parlor.
Much of the interior including all the
old dark carved woods of Miceli's (Micheli's)
Italian Restaurant in Hollywood were originally the
interior of the original chain of Pig 'n Whistle
restaurants. The Pig 'n Whistle is mentioned in
the movie Chinatown.
The first McDonald's building
design with the protruding Golden Arches (true Googie
style) was the brainchild of architect Stanley Meston.
The Mona Lisa Restaurant opened
on September 20, 1930 and was owned in part by Rina
Mosso of the same family that owns Musso and Frank's
Grill. Rina Mosso once wrestled the gun away from an
armed bandit who was attempting to rob her restaurant.
The Gas House Cafe in Venice,
California was a big draw for the Beat Generation in the
early 1960's.
One of the aquariums at Bahooka's
has a 34 pound fish named Rufus.
Clifton's Cafeteria in the 40's
had an in-house handwriting expert and advisor for
personal problems that patrons could consult.
Clifton's is a contraction of the founder's name -
Clifford Clinton. Clifford Clinton was a long
time crusader against vice and corruption in Los Angeles
and at one point had his house bombed by enemies.
On April 8, 1924, the Casa de
Golondrina Restaurant was opened by Consuelo
Castillo. She opened the restaurant before Olvera
St. was converted into a tourist attraction.
The Tiki in front of Trader Vic's
in Beverly Hills had to have an anatomically
controversial feature removed before the store could
open for patrons including young children.
Actress Gail Russell once crashed her
car into the counter of Jan's restaurant in 1957.
Sirhan Sirhan is rumored to have eaten
at the HMS Bounty Restaurant on Wilshire before
crossing the street to the Ambassador at the time of the
Robert Kennedy tragedy.
The Tallyho restaurant derived
its name from the building where it was located, which
originally housed horses.
Prince Mike Romanoff used to eat
in his restaurant with his two dogs chowing down at his
side.
The famous Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel
hangout "Ciro's", the 1940's and 50's
nightclub, is now the Comedy Store.
The Brass Monkey Karaoke bar &
restaurant was once a bank vault.
Sharon Tate's last meal was at the El
Coyote Restaurant before her tragic death at the
hands of the Manson cult. Thelma Todd spent her last
night at the Cafe Trocadero before her mysterious
death.
The "new room" of Musso and Frank's
was once the Stanley Rose Bookstore.
The Harbor Room Bar is considered
the smallest bar in the Los Angeles metropolitan area.
The First Academy Awards were held in
the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel's Blossom
Room in 1929.
The Beverly Wilshire Hotel is built over
ground that was once a major car race track.
Two of Groucho Marx's favorite
restaurants were La Rue and Nate 'n Al's.
By the way, here are the Marx brother's real names:
Groucho was Julius, Zeppo was Herbert, Chico was
Leonard, Harpo was Adolph, and Gummo (my favorite
of the Marx brothers) was Milton. My favorite anecdote
about Groucho Marx was his comment when being told he
could not go into a pool because he was Jewish, was his
retort asking if his daughter could wade in half way,
since she was only half-Jewish.
During his 1960 campaign Richard
Nixon ate at the Stuft Shirt Restaurant in
Pasadena. Nixon was also a fan of Chasen's Restaurant
and the El Adobe in San Juan Capistrano where a
dish is named after him (and the restaurant was owned by
the head of the Orange County Democratic Party -
Richard O'Neill). Donald Nixon, President Nixon's
brother, had a restaurant called Nixon's in Whittier,
California.
Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel
threatened to kill Billy Wilkerson in the
1940's if he did not give up his interest in the
Flamingo hotel. It was Billy Wilkerson of Hollywood
Reporter fame who actually started building the
Flamingo.
The famous Player's Nightclub of
the 1940's, 8225 Sunset Boulevard is now the
Miyagi's restaurant.
The La Rue Nightclub and
Restaurant opened up in 1939. In the 60's it was
considered one of the top four restaurants in Los
Angeles, along with Chasen's, Perino's and
Scandia.
Earl Carroll's famous 1940's
nightclub, 6230 Sunset Blvd. was most recently the
Nickelodeon Theater. Earl Carroll's demise came
in the form of an airplane crash in 1948.
The grand opening of the Academy
Movie Palace at 3100 West Manchester Blvd. in
Inglewood featured the movie "Another Thin Man" with
live appearances by Myrna Loy and William Powell. No
word about Asta the dog.
The restaurant that served in the
surrealistic "Winkie's" coffee shop scene in the
movie Mullholland Drive was Caesar's
Restaurant.
The Original Schwab's Pharmacy is
seen in the movie Sunset Boulevard.
The renown 7 Seas (Seven Seas)
nightclub at 6904 Hollywood Blvd. featured artificial
rain falling on the roof.
The bar counter in the Musso and
Frank's "new room" was originally in the world
famous Musso and Frank's backroom, where the
literary crowd hung out.
Mickey Cohen was in a gun shoot
out in Rondelli's Cafe in Sherman Oaks,
California. Mickey Cohen once handed out
dollar bills to 70 different orphans at a Thanksgiving
celebration. Mickey Cohen also survived a hit in
front of Sherry's Restaurant (formerly Cafe
LaMaze) which was next to the Bit of Sweden
Restaurant. The scene in the movie Bugsy
where Bugsy Siegel is arguing with Mickey
Cohen was shot at the Biltmore Hotel pool.
Mickey Cohen also hung out at the Golden
Gopher Bar downtown. Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel is
buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery at 6000
Santa Monica Boulevard, near his wife "Esta". Mickey
Cohen's favorite place to shop for clothes was
Silverwood's and Bullock's Wilshire.
The Windsor Restaurant (now
the Prince Korean Restaurant) was featured in the
restaurant scene in the movie Chinatown. It is also seen
in the recent movie "Thank you for Smoking".
Winston Churchill ate at the HMS
Bounty Restaurant while staying at the Ambassador
Hotel. Incidentally, by a quirk in U.S. citizenship law,
Churchill may have derived U.S. citizenship from an
American born relative.
The famous Ben Frank's Googie
coffee shop (a Frank Zappa hangout along with
Canter's Deli) is now a Mel's Drive-In on
Sunset.
Clifford E. Clinton, founder of
Clifton's Cafeteria is credited with saving
thousands of people from starvation during the
depression, in part due to his policy of paying what you
can or pay nothing at all at the cafeteria, as well as
his numerous charities focusing on feeding the hungry.
In 1937, Clinton also headed a grand jury investigating
vice and corruption.
Restaurateur (Joseph) Stephen
("Steve") Crane was Lana Turner's second
husband. He owned the Luau in Beverly Hills
(formerly the Tropics). He married Lana Turner
twice and they had a daughter named Cheryl. He also had
a connection to Lucey's Restaurant on Melrose.
Restaurant comes from a Latin
root meaning "to restore". Ironically, after eating in
all of these classic restaurants I'm in bad need of
restoration!
Philippe's The Original French
Dipped Sandwiches and Cole's Pacific Electric Buffet
both claim to have invented the French Dipped
sandwich. The building that Cole's is housed in was once
the tallest building west of the Mississippi River.
According to the Los Angeles Times,
Pasquale "Patsy" D'Amore was the first to bring
Pizza to Los Angeles in 1939 at his Casa
D'Amore restaurant. See my great restaurateur page
for Patsy D'Amore.
Philippe's The Original French Dipped
Sandwiches to this day charges 9 cents for a cup of
coffee. (So much for the saying "That and a dime will
get me a cup of coffee"). UPDATE: Disaster has
struck and the price of a cup of coffee has been raised
to 10 cents!
Herbert Wyman had little
experience as an architect at the time he conceived the
idea for the Bradbury building. Wyman had
doubts about his abilities but supposedly took the
commission to design the Bradbury Building after his
dead brother told him to do so by means of a Ouija
Board.
The Caricature of Jimmy Durante
hanging in the Vine Street Brown Derby took up
two framed pictures, one for most of his face and the
second for the rest of his nose.
Frank 'n Hank's bar is seen
briefly in the opening credits of the movie "Barfly" but
no one at the bar seems to remember Henry "Hank"
Charles Bukowski.
The Ship's Cafe, owned by the
Biltmore Hotel owner Baron Long, actually
looked exactly like a Spanish sailing ship.
A light on top of the Capitol Records
Tower supposedly signals "Hollywood" in Morse
code.
Mike Romanoff of Romanoff's
Restaurant claimed to be Prince Michael
Alexandrovitch Dimitry Obelensky Romanoff of the Russian
Czarist family. While it has never been proven with
certainty what his real identity was, it appears his
real name was Harry F. Gerguson born in a Jewish
orphanage in the U.S. or Lithuania.
Canter's Deli was once the
Esquire Movie Theater.
The Shirley Temple non-alcoholic
cocktail was invented at the Wilshire Brown Derby
Restaurant.
Al Levy, one of the earliest
famous Los Angeles Restaurateurs, got his start selling
oyster out of a cart on Spring St. in the 1880's. His
long term famous restaurants were the Al Levy Grill
at 617 S. Spring St. and Al Levy's Tavern, at
1623 N. Vine St. He was closely associated with
another great restaurateur Mike Lyman, who took
over Al Levy's Tavern, when Levy died in 1941. Levy is
credited with being the first to create the Oyster
Cocktail. Mike Lyman's, being across from the Vine
Street Brown Derby, was one of Mickey
Cohen's favorite restaurants.
Wilshire Boulevard is named after H.
Gaylord Wilshire who was a socialist with a picture
of Karl Marx hanging in his office. Wilshire
started Wilshire Boulevard by carving a four block
Street out of a field he owned on what was then the
boondocks of Los Angeles. The builders of the
Gaylord Hotel / Apartments named the place after
Wilshire without his permission. He promptly sued
the builder and in settlement they offered him a room in
the apartments for life (which I don't believe he ever
used - he died soon after the settlement).
Alexander Perino was hired to
oversee the food at the Tropicana Hotel in Las Vegas at
its inception.
Marcel LaMaze, one of Hollywood's
greatest restaurateurs, also built a cafe in mundane
National City, CA that still exists.
The first owners of the famous
Nikabob Restaurant were Nick Krause, Paul Perrot (of
Montmartre and Ambassador Hotel fame) and the great
Robert "Bob" Cobb of Brown Derby Restaurant
fame (the name being made up of two of the owners, Nick
and Bob, first names). Other contractions:
Du-Par's started in farmer Market in 1938 by James
P. Dunn (Du) and Edward W. Parsons (pars). Clifton's
Cafeteria comes from a contraction of the founder's name
"Clifford Clinton".
In 1911, the oldest restaurant in Los
Angeles was "Jahnke's". It featured yodelers as
entertainment. It was owned by Adolph Jahnke at 1st and
Spring.
W.W. "Tiny" Naylor (the nickname
Tiny came from him being six foot four and weighed 320
pounds) started Biff's (his son's name) in 1948.
The Tiny Naylor chain started in 1957 at Wilshire and
Virgil. Tiny Naylor died in 1959.
Ptomaine Tommy's, 2420 N.
Broadway, Los Angeles, was a very famous place that
opened in 1919. Famous for the hamburger they called
"the size" which was the first to have beans on it
(though apparently not chili?). It closed in 1958.
Charlie Parker had a regular gig
at the Tiffany Club at 8th and Normandie in Los
Angeles, California for a while. Bird is of course
universally recognized as the greatest Sax player ever
with John Coltrane, I guess, coming in a close
second. Perhaps my favorite living saxophonist is
Jimmy Heath. While we're at it, did you know
the Bette Midler hit song "Twisted" is sung to
the tune of a Wardell Grey Tenor Sax solo?
Wardell Grey was found dead under mysterious
circumstances in the desert near Las Vegas on May
25, 1955. He had been scheduled to open the Moulin
Rouge Night Club in Las Vegas during that time.
Actor James Dean ate his last
dinner in the famous Villa Capri restaurant in
Hollywood. One of the main dishes at the Villa Capri was
"Steak Sinatra" since Frank Sinatra was once co-owner
with Patsy D'Amore. Sinatra and Joe DiMaggio once
asked Villa Capri owner Patsy D'Amore to go along
with them on a raid of a hotel room where DiMaggio
believed Marilyn Monroe was having a tryst. D'Amore
decided not to go. Sinatra and DiMaggio broke into
the wrong room and had a few legal problems as a result.
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