The steel frame of the new Los Angeles City Hall nears completion in downtown Los Angeles, 1927

The steel frame of the new Los Angeles City Hall nears completion in downtown Los Angeles, 1927Angelenos could finally see what shape their new City Hall would take when its steel frame neared completion as it had in this 1927 photo. I wonder if they knew it would become an icon of the city. That building in the front was called the Temple Block, which was a popular office building home to all sorts of professionals: lawyers, bankers, photographers, hatters. Around since the 1860s, it fell victim to the march of progress when it was decided that LA needed a new City Hall, which opened the following year, on April 26, 1928.

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Huge crowds gather at Broadway and 7th St to watch a War Loan Drive parade, downtown Los Angeles, 1944

Huge crowds gather at Broadway and 7th St to watch a War Loan Drive parade, downtown Los Angeles, 1944Until I found this photo, I didn’t know that War Loan Drives sometimes took the form of a parade, but Angelenos sure turned out in droves to watch this one down Broadway in downtown Los Angeles. This is the intersection of 7th Street, where the Loew’s State Theatre played movies all night to accommodate wartime shift workers. The day this photo was taken (in 1944) “Laura” was playing, which is surprising because Lowe’s was an MGM theater and “Laura” was a 20th Century-Fox production. If you look closely to the right, you can see a 5-lamp street light (known as an “electrolier”) with 4 of its 5 bulbs blacked-out on top like the one I posted a couple of days ago.

It’s impossible for me to recreate the 1944 photo, but here’s what the Loew’s State Theatre looked like in September 2021. Like many old theaters in downtown LA, it is now a church.

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Crowds gather at night outside Schwab’s Pharmacy, 8024 Sunset Blvd, Hollywood, 1950

Crowds gather at night outside Schwab’s Pharmacy, 8024 Sunset Blvd, Hollywood, 1950I’d love to know what was going on that night in 1950 when this photo was taken outside Schwab’s Pharmacy at 8024 Sunset Blvd. Was something momentous happening along the boulevard to draw the crowds out of Schwab’s? Or had the place been evacuated? Either way, I bet all the gossiping, schmoozing, flirting, laughing, and networking that was a constant part of the Schwab’s scene still went on regardless.

** UPDATE ** – Someone sent me a Getty’s Image post which said: “The scene outside Schwab’s drugstore, Hollywood, where people gathered to congratulate Sidney Skolsky on his film The Jolson Story.”
On the IMDB listing for that movie, which came out in 1950, Skolsky is listed as one of the producers. Skolsky was famous for writing his movie gossip column from Schwab’s.

These days, a nice-but-forgettable mall stands where Schwab’s once stood. This image is from August 2020.

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The back side of Desmond’s department store at 1001 Westwood Blvd, Westwood, Los Angeles, 1925

The back side of Desmond's department store at 1001 Westwood Blvd, Westwood, Los Angeles, 1925The caption on this photo said we’re looking at the back side of Desmond’s department store at 1001 Westwood Blvd in Westwood. I guess that’s because the big sign on the top of the building is facing away from us. But that angled display window on the Weyburn Ave corner looks very nice to me, especially with that wrought iron balcony on top. This photo was taken in 1925, which explains the up-to-date flapper fashions in the window.

MrWestwood2001 on Instragram said this: “Thank you for posting this dramatic nighttime image of the historic original 1929 Desmond’s Westwood department store. Originally founded in 1862 as a hat company by Daniel Desmond, the store evolved into a highly popular Southern California fashion chain with multiple locations that featured three separate departments: a stylish men’s haberdashery, a women’s shop, and a boy’s department.

Here are two corrections to the caption on the back of the photo: (1.) this Desmond’s Westwood building opened in December 1929, not 1925. In fact, Westwood Village itself did not open until September 1929. (2.) This image shows the storefront facing Westwood Boulevard as well as the (long) side elevation facing Weyburn Avenue. The “back side” (not shown) was at the far right of the photo beneath the chimney that faced the parking lot.

Here are a few other fun facts about Desmond’s Westwood: this handsome Village building was designed by the legendary father and son architectural team of John and Donald Parkinson (who also famously designed Los Angeles City Hall, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, iconic Bullock’s Wilshire, and dozens of historic buildings in Downtown Los Angeles and on the USC campus, including the landmark Bovard Administration Building). The design choice of Spanish Colonial Revival style for Desmond’s Westwood reflected the “Mediterranean” architectural motif mandated by the Janss Investment Corporation, founders and developers of Westwood Village. Desmond’s Westwood originally featured a distinctive green Spanish clay tile roof that honored the proud Irish heritage of store founder Danny Desmond. Other notable characteristics of this charming Spanish Colonial Revival structure included thick stucco walls, rounded arches, multi-paned windows, a second story balcony, hand wrought iron railings, and colorful glazed ceramic Spanish tiles in a Bruin blue-and-gold motif around the main entrance. While several of the original design elements have been altered over the years, many of the major Spanish Colonial Revival architectural elements of this original Westwood Village building remain intact.”

This is the building that now stands at the corner of Weymouth and Westwood. What a shame that lovely balcony is gone. This image is from January 2021.

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A five-globe streetlight blacked-out on top at the corner of Main and 33rd Streets, south of downtown Los Angeles, circa 1943

A five-globe streetlight blacked-out on top at the corner of Main and 33rd Streets, south of downtown Los Angeles, circa 1943This photo shows us a couple of interesting things. Firstly, how gorgeous the streetlights around LA used to be. This particular model was called a Llewellyn and featured four globes surrounding a fifth, larger one. It stood at the corner of Main and 33rd Streets, south of downtown Los Angeles. The photo was taken circa 1943 and shows how the tops of streetlights like these were blacked out during WWII in case of a surprise air attack from the enemy. Does anybody know how they were blacked out? Was it paint or some sort of easily removable cap?

Susan Milner says: “It was problematic to keep the top of street lights blacked out. Ones like these they found, even good, thick marine paint chipped and flaked off due to the heat produced by the light bulbs. Various efforts were made to come up with suitable alternatives. What worked best, were newer lamp posts that had a metal piece that covered the emitted light with a metal shield that resembled a clam or scallop shell. That design, helped direct the light downward.Those eventually went in many places around LA after the war. We had those for years until newer light technology like mercury vapor came in I think in the later 50s.

We didn’t have the kind of flexible plastics in the early 40s to fabricate stretchy covers for these old light fixtures. It wasn’t an issue far as black outs/brown outs for very long. After Midway (June ’42), the threat of Japanese invasion of the West coast was deemed nearly impossible. The drills pretty much ended after that. People were asked to keep their black out drapes up post Midway, just in case. We still had to use car headlight covers and dim them to boot when driving into, or approaching secure places like San Pedro, aircraft manufacturer installations, and other high security sites around the Southland.”

And this is the streetlight that currently stands at Main and 33rd (March 2020.) Not exactly an upgrade, is it?

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Fitzsimmons Market prepares for its grand opening at the northwest corner Lankershim and Magnolia Blvds, North Hollywood, circa 1940

Fitzsimmons Market prepares for its grand opening at the northwest corner Lankershim and Magnolia Blvds, North Hollywood, circa 1940Yes, sure, the big supermarkets these days have everything you need for a one-stop shopping experience, but wouldn’t it be nice if the Angeleno cityscape was still dotted with charming, distinctive buildings like this one? This circa 1940 photo was taken outside the Fitzsimmons Market at the northwest corner Lankershim and Magnolia Blvds in North Hollywood in the San Fernando Valley as it prepared for its grand opening. I don’t know what I love more: the (Streamline Moderne?) tower on the corner, the ornate streetlight, or the semaphore traffic signal next to it.

That corner is now occupied by Pitfire Pizza. This image is from September 2022:

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Color photo of Louis Armstrong in rehearsal at the Hollywood Bowl, 1954

Color photo of Louis Armstrong in rehearsal at the Hollywood Bowl, 1954The people in the front seating of the Hollywood Bowl were in for a treat on this day in 1954. On stage is Louis Armstrong rehearsing for a live telecast of “The Colgate Comedy Hour” on NBC. He performed an old Rudy Vallee number called “The Whippenproof Song” and maybe those audience members had to sit through it a number of times, but how often did you get to be so close to a master musician like that? You can see the number on YouTube.

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Announcing the release of “You Must Remember This” – A novel of World War II Hollywood

For more years than I can count (five? ten? since 1753? who can keep track of these things anymore?) I had an idea for a novel set during the filming of Casablanca. In March 2020, I started writing what I thought would be a standalone book called All the Gin Joints, but —much to my surprise—it turned out to be a trilogy when I realized that Luke Valenti and Nell Davenport had way more story to tell than I had originally given them credit for, so who was I to stand in their way?

And so here we are, a scooch over three years later, reaching the conclusion of an unexpected, unplanned, but fun and fulfilling Hollywood Home Front trilogy with the release of:

"You Must Remember This" - a novel of World War II Hollywood by Martin Turnbull Book 3 in the Hollywood Home Front trilogy

YOU MUST REMEMBER THIS

A novel of World War II Hollywood
Book 3 in the Hollywood Home Front trilogy

When the curtain rises on an entirely new life, some will stumble and some will soar.

With the end of World War II finally in sight, Ensign Luke Valenti heads home to Los Angeles, eager to be reunited with the girl he left behind. As Luke navigates his rocky transition to peacetime, he yearns for a quiet return to civilian life, but discovers the US Navy plans to make him its war-hero poster boy and keep him squarely in the spotlight.

On the other side of fame sits Luke’s home-front sweetheart, Nell Davenport, who, during Luke’s absence, has blossomed in an unexpected career. Thrilled by the excitement following her musical debut, Nell is unaware that every step she takes on the precarious road to success brings her and Luke closer to a revelation that could shatter the fragile life they are struggling to rebuild amid the aftermath of war.

From the author of the Hollywood’s Garden of Allah novels comes book three in the Hollywood Home Front trilogy. “You Must Remember This” is the story of two people striving to adapt to a world they no longer know.

~oOo~

Pick up a copy of YOU MUST REMEMBER THIS in your favorite format from your favorite retailer:

Amazon US Kindle

Amazon US paperback

Barnes & Noble Nook ebook

Amazon Canada Kindle

Amazon Canada paperback

Amazon UK Kindle

Amazon UK paperback

Amazon Australia Kindle

Amazon Australia paperback
There is a weird pricing for the paperback in Australia. Amazon can’t explain it or tell me when it’ll be fixed, only that it will be fixed “in due course.”

Apple ebook

Kobo ebook (US)

Kobo ebook (Canada)

Kobo ebook (Australia)

Goodreads

BookBub

Audiobook – COMING SOON

~oOo~

You can read Chapter 1 HERE.

~oOo~

 

~oOo~

ALSO BY MARTIN TURNBULL

The Hollywood Home Front trilogy
A trilogy of novels set in World War II Hollywood

Book 1 – All the Gin Joints
Book 2 – Thank Your Lucky Stars
Book 3 – You Must Remember This

Chasing Salomé: a novel of 1920s Hollywood

The Heart of the Lion: a novel of Irving Thalberg’s Hollywood

The Hollywood’s Garden of Allah novels

Book 1 – The Garden on Sunset
Book 2 – The Trouble with Scarlett
Book 3 – Citizen Hollywood
Book 4 – Searchlights and Shadows
Book 5 – Reds in the Beds
Book 6 – Twisted Boulevard
Book 7 – Tinseltown Confidential
Book 8 – City of Myths
Book 9 – Closing Credits

~oOo~

 

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Matchbook collection from 15 vintage Los Angeles restaurants and bars

Here’s a quick pop quiz for you: Of the 15 LA restaurants represented here in Tara Gordon’s photo, which ones have you (a) heard of, or (b) not heard of, or (c) visited personally? I’ve heard of them all but 2: Side Show and The Victor Hugo Inn (which isn’t the same as Victor Hugo restaurant that used to be on Wilshire Blvd in Beverly Hills) And I’ve only been to one of them: the Polo Lounge at the Beverly Hills Hotel. What about you?

Matchbook collection from 15 vintage Los Angeles restaurants and bars

  • HOLLYWOOD PALLADIUM – Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles
  • MOULIN ROUGE – Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles
  • BROWN DERBY – Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles
  • NICKODELL – Melrose Ave, Los Angeles
  • POLO LOUNGE – Beverly Hills Hotel, Sunset Blvd, Beverly Hills
  • THE HANGOVER – Vine St, Hollywood
  • SIDE SHOW – Hollywood Blvd, Hollywood
  • HOLLYWOOD PLAZA HOTEL – Vine St, Hollywood
  • CIRO’s – Sunset Blvd, West Hollywood
  • COCOANUT GROVE – Ambassador Hotel, Wilshire Blvd
  • BROWN DERBY – Vine St, Hollywood
  • FIREFLY – Vine St, Hollywood
  • THE VICTOR HUGO INN – Laguna Beach
  • MIKE LYMAN’S GRILL – Vine St, Hollywood (Lyman also had two restaurants in downtown LA as well as Mike Lyman’s Flight Deck and LA International Airport
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A Model A Ford as a Black and White taxicab somewhere on the streets of Los Angeles, 1930

A Model A Ford as a Black and White taxicab somewhere on the streets of Los Angeles, 1930I know that it’s very easy and convenient to call for an Uber on your phone and know exactly when and how it’s going to arrive. But just once I’d love to have called MAdison 1311 for a Black & White taxicab and have this Model A Ford show up at my front door. Is that too much to ask?

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