For
decades, downtown Los Angeles was a ‘no go’ area for many, especially for those
who lived elsewhere in this sprawling city. Even now, there are still those who
live in the west who wouldn’t dream of making the short journey, unless it was
for an event at the Walt Disney Concert Hall, or Contemporary Art Museum or
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Notwithstanding Downtown’s very own Skid Row, the
neighbourhood descended into disrepair, a centre for huge numbers of homeless
people, people with drug and alcohol dependencies, squatters and such. After its
golden heyday in the 1930s, large swathes of property were demolished to make
way for high-rise institutions of commerce and finance, a place of work for
people who drove in, ascended the glass and steel towers, went about their
duties and then drove away again, their feet barely touching the streets all
around.
In
recent years, however, the area has begun to change, with trendy folks taking
converted ‘loft’ apartments, artists and musicians establishing residence and
scene, and ‘happening’ new cafes and restaurants aplenty. Amidst all this
revival, the Los Angeles Conservancy has stepped up and in, dedicated to the
preservation of the city’s architectural legacy, introducing locals and visitors
alike to the delights of Art Deco and Beaux-Arts edifices dotted around the
neighbourhood while also working to advocate and negotiate with property owners
and developers to ensure that older buildings are not sacrificed to
state-of-the-art construction. Interestingly, the nearby LA river, part of which
is concretised, so often seen in films as diverse as Earthquake, Grease and (big favourite), Them!, has been given over to
internationally renowned architect Frank Gehry for further
regeneration.
Yesterday morning I took an LA Conservancy walking tour
of some of Downtown’s Art Deco architecture – two and half hours of dodging in
and out the shade, and in and out of stunning lobbies, decorated with
intricately patterned marble, brass, copper, monel and, in the one case, lalique
glass. The exteriors were equally jaw-dropping, the lines designed to draw the
eye upwards, the fascinating use of dyes and pigments to create different
colours of terra cotta, the abundance of hallmark ‘zig-zag’ and sunburst
patterns, the fascinating way that architects of the time circumnavigated 1920s
construction ordinances relating to maximum heights by adding follies, purely
decorative, flying buttressed towers, to roofs, sometimes housing clocks or the
huge lettering of whichever company had commissioned the building. As you can
tell, I could go on and on, but one spot, the James Oviatt Building, it’s worth
singling out. Its exterior is not as notable as its interiors, for this was THE
men’s clothing emporium for Hollywood’s 1930s elite and boy could you see how
and why. Gable, Tracy and Powell came here, passing the many glass display cases
and entering the chic interior, all wood counters, neat rows of drawers and
upper floor balcony. In its day there was even an outside area for a starry
leading man to check how his potential new suit looked in the LA sunshine! If
ever you visit LA, look up the Conservancy and take one of the tours -
fantastic.
A
fraught Uber-ride to West Hollywood brought me to the shop-and-cinema complex at
8000 W Sunset Blvd, to meet A and see the new film Stonewall, a depiction of the 1969 riots
on New York’s Christopher Street, when the area’s gay community fought back
against police bullying and corruption and the punitive legal constraints of the
day. I had high hopes for the film, but it was a big let-down - too theatrical
and stagey, too long, like musical theatre without the music and some horribly
clunking dialogue. Better to see a 1995 film of the same name, lower budget,
authentic locations, NO CGI (seriously!). A quick coffee and post-mortem with A
(she agreed entirely), and then back to base and a rather excellent chat
(recorded!) with a female friend of one of mein hosts, recorded because she had
spent two decades working in TV and film production her in LA. Some fascinating
insights and observations from a woman who graduated film school in LA in 1980,
full of vocation and enthusiasm, and finally quit 20-plus years later having had
enough of the grind, the farcical bastardisation of idea to development to
script to pitch to rewrite and round and around. Best anecdote? Two writers and
a production executive pitched a scrip proposal to a studio bigwig, based on an
Oscar Wilde story. Studio bigwig loved it, really loved it, but needed to know
whether this Wilde would be able to work on the script. I kid you
not!
Right,
the not-so-fat giraffe needs to shut the blinds and do his exercises before a
bit more laundry and a lot more reading and writing. Seeing my friend G this
afternoon for a walk on the (Santa Monica) beach before returning to their place
for a BBQ. Don’t think I’ve seen G since 2003, so much catching up will be had
by all!
So enjoying reading about your adventures! This is such a lovely description of the revival of downtown LA, it's magic slowly returning... wonderful to watch through your eyes.
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