Cause Célèbre
Lost in Los Angeles

Story by Chris Epting / Jan. 26, 2007

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| The Ambassador Hotel, site of Bobby Kennedy's assassination, was torn down last year. (Chris Epting)
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When it comes to historic preservation,
Los Angeles has a reputation as one of the worst cities in the
country. In 2003, when the Los Angeles Conservancy presented its
inaugural "Los Angeles County Preservation Report Card," it found
that of the 89 cities and jurisdictions in Los Angeles County,
44 earned an F in their treatment of historic landmarks.
Many great Los Angeles landmarkslike
the apartments immortalized in Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow
Taxi," the Ambassador Hotel, and a roadside icon called the
Brown Derbynow exist only as faded postcards, victims of
a churn-and-burn, pro-development mentality that, in part, has
come to define the city.
One particular example of this used
to sit at the corner of Crescent Heights and Sunset Boulevards
in West Hollywood: The Garden of Allah. The complex of 25 villas
built around a main house and pool may be the most famous apartment
complex in city history. Actress Alla Nazimova built her mansion
here in 1919 and then in 1927 added the villa-style bungalows,
which catered to many movie stars, literary giants, and cultural
icons like Errol Flynn, Clark Gable, Greta Garbo, Dorothy Parker,
Humphrey Bogart, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Ernest Hemingway. This
was where the Algonquin Roundtable writers migrated to from New
York City. Where Tallulah Bankhead famously swam naked in the
swimming pool, and where it's said that Marilyn Monroe was discovered
while sipping a Coke next to that same pool.
In 1959, the Garden of Allah was unceremoniously
torn down, after one final fête for about 1,000 people (at an auction
for the scraps of remaining furniture, bidders nearly caused a riot over
Errol Flynn's bed). While today there would most likely be a movement
to save it, in 1959 the complex had simply worn out its welcome. If it
still stood, imagine the intrigue (and commercial potential) of making
available the "Marilyn Monroe Villa" or the "Humphrey Bogart
Cottage."
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| The Garden of Allah: Party Central |
Today's garden, a parking lot |
It was replaced by a typical mini-mall complex,
and its destruction is said to have inspired Joni Mitchell to write "They
paved paradise and put up a parking lot" in her 1970 song, "Big
Yellow Taxi." For years, the bank at the site featured a scale model
of The Garden of Allah complex, which sat under a glass dome. Today, even
that model has been removed, leaving no trace of the exotic Garden of
Allah.
Bobby
The demolition of the Ambassador Hotel began
in late 2005, after a long battle between the Los Angeles Unified School
District, who wanted to clear the site and build a school; Robert Kennedy
assassin Sirhan Sirhan, who, through his lawyer, wanted to conduct more
testing in the pantry where Kennedy was shot; and preservation groups
like the L.A. Conservancy and the Art Deco Society, who wanted the hotel
integrated into the future school.
A settlement was finally reached at the end
of August 2005 that allowed the Ambassador Hotel demolition to go forward
in exchange for the establishment of a $4.9 million fund, earmarked for
saving historic school buildings in the Los Angeles Unified School District.
In January of 2006 the last section of the Ambassador Hotel came down,
leaving only the annex that housed the hotel entrance, a shopping arcade,
the coffee shop, and the Cocoanut Grove nightclub, all of which will be
reused for the school.
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| Ambassador Hotel postcard |
Mid-demolition (Chris Epting) |
But why did it have to come to this at all?
No doubt, by the time the hotel closed in 1989, the surrounding area had
fallen prey to gang and drug problems. But downtown Los Angeles has since
begun to experience a bit of a renaissance. If the Los Angeles Unified
School District had maintained it, it's not hard to imagine it being one
of the centerpieces of the downtown rebirth. As many as seven U.S. Presidents
stayed at the Ambassador, from Hoover to Nixon, not to mention dozens
of heads of state. For years, the hotel's famed Cocoanut Grove nightclub
hosted the Academy Awards and served as the launching point of such performers
as Barbra Streisand, Bing Crosby, and Richard Pryor. Infamously, and perhaps
reason alone to preserve this site, is the fact that Robert Kennedy was
shot here in the hotel's kitchen, shortly after midnight on June 5, 1968,
following a short victory speech in one of the hotel's ballrooms.
In the end, Kennedy's family may have been
the strongest voice against saving the Ambassador. Many in the preservation
community hoped that the Ambassador could have been saved, restored to
its onetime grandeur and the site of a living history museum where one
of our nation's greatest tragedies took place, but the Kennedys wanted
it destroyed.
Today at the site are scant remainders of what
once stood here. Some broken tiles in the dirt, a lone tower with
the hotel's name ghosted in the cement, and a few small pieces
of building. The school is set to open in 2010.
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| The Brown Derby |
The Derby's look today |
Hats Off
Just across the street from the former
Ambassador Hotel is the site of another Hollywood landmark that's
been stripped away… or has it? The Brown Derby restaurant, shaped
like a derby hat, was a celebrity hangout and the site of many
after-parties following ceremonies at the Ambassador. It was here
where the Cobb Salad was invented in 1937 (named for the owner,
Robert Cobb), and though other Derbies opened around town, this
was the most famous one (and the only one shaped like a hat).
The Brown Derby closed in the mid 1980s, and
it appeared that another classic (albeit kitschy) landmark was about to
be destroyed to make way for the inevitable strip mall. But it wasn't.
The actual shell of the Brown Derby was restored in the late 1980s and
placed on top of the strip mall that took its spot. Now painted orange,
it tops an Indian restaurant.
Last year there was good news for another Brown
Derby, this one located in the Los Feliz section of Los Angeles. A developer
planned to bulldoze the 1928 structure to build a five-story complex of
more than 80 luxury condos and retail shops. But the community spoke up,
and the Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to declare the entire
structure a Historic Cultural Monument of the City of Los Angeles in May
2006.
Perhaps things are changing a bit in Los Angeles.
Celebrities like Diane Keaton and Brad Pitt have elevated an interest
in architecture and historic preservation.
"In the flats of Beverly Hills, there
are still blocks of homes that for some reason have retained their
original beauty. It's sad that so many get ripped apart. I'm always
thrilled when they survive," Diane Keaton told Preservation
magazine in 2003. "Houses enrich our lives with their history
and the beauty of the architecture or their eccentricity, the
details. You have to try to preserve some originals."
Chris Epting, the author of eight
books, writes for the Los Angeles Times, Westways,
and Travel + Lesiure magazine and is the national spokesman
for Hampton Inn hotel's Hidden Landmarks program.
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