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Hollywood Plaza Hotel | |
Location of building in Los Angeles County | |
Location | 1633–37 North Vine Street, Hollywood, California |
---|---|
Coordinates | 34°6′3″N 118°19′37″W / 34.10083°N 118.32694°W |
Built | 1925 |
Architect | Percy A. Eisen Albert R. Walker |
Architectural style | Renaissance Revival |
Part of | Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District (ID85000704) |
LAHCM No. | 665 |
Significant dates | |
Designated CP | April 4, 1985 |
Designated LAHCM | September 29, 1999 |
Hollywood Plaza Hotel, also known as Plaza Hotel, was a 200-room hotel located at 1633–37 North Vine Street in Hollywood, California, just south of Hollywood and Vine. A popular venue for film, radio, and theatre stars of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, the building was converted into a retirement home in the 1970s.
The Plaza Hotel, built in 1924 and opened to the public on October 15, 1925,[1] was one of four major hotels built in Hollywood in the 1920s.[2] Designed in Renaissance Revival style by Walker & Eisen,[3] the hotel consisted of ten stories in a T-shaped layout, was built with reinforced concrete and artificial stone, and cost $750,000 to construct, $250,000 more than was budgeted.[4]
When the hotel opened, it consisted of 198 rooms and a ground floor that included a restaurant, beauty parlor, barber shop, ballroom, two garden plazas, and a lobby designed by George G. Benedict.[4][5] Date palms surrounded the outdoor swimming pool[5] and the name "Plaza" was featured on a large neon sign atop the roof.[2]
Due to the Plaza Hotel's proximity to the Famous Players-Lasky motion picture studio, the hotel's original restaurant, Klempter's Blue Plate Cafe, became a de facto studio annex. Greta Garbo was a regular and anytime an actor could not be located at the studio, call boys were dispatched to the restaurant.[4]
In 1928, the Pig 'n Whistle Cafe, a new location in the chain most notable for its other location in Hollywood, replaced Klempter's Blue Plate Cafe. In 1933, the restaurant changed to The Russian Eagle Cafe and Garden, in 1936, to the G. Albert Lansburgh designed Cinnabar, and in 1937, to the Clara Bow and Rex Bell owned It Cafe.[4]
Considered one of Hollywood's most glamorous nightspots, It Cafe drew clientele that included Gene Autry, Milton Berle, and Pat Buttram. Despite this, the cafe closed in 1943, after the owners lost interest in it.[2][6]
In 1928, Edward Everett Horton had his newly purchased convertible delivered to his suite on the fourth floor of the Plaza Hotel, as a publicity stunt for the dealership.[7] Bette Davis resided with her mother and dog in the Plaza Hotel when she arrived in Hollywood in 1930, and Ava Gardner also stayed in the hotel at the start of her career, but then had to move to a cheaper hotel nearby.[5]
During the 1940s and 50s, the hotel became popular with radio performers, bandleaders, and live theatre actors. Those who stayed at the hotel include Jackie Gleason, Doris Day, Joe Frisco, Edward Everett Horton, Harry James, Paul Whiteman, Hal McIntyre, and more.[6][8][9] Additionally, Johnny Grant broadcast daily from the hotel's bar,[2] Frank Sinatra frequented a barber shop in the hotel's basement,[9][10] and George Burns had an office at the top of the hotel, where he was introduced to "the most beautiful girl you’ve ever seen": Marilyn Monroe.[5]
Other notable hotel guests include Joe Di Maggio, Babe Ruth, Howard Hughes, and Ernest Hemingway.[5]
The hotel had its share of notoriety. In 1937, Ern Westmore, released after a drunk-driving charge, checked into a 10th-floor room and threatened to leap out the window; his brother Frank came to calm him down.[11] That same year, an airline stewardess was found dead in her room.[12] In 1954, an Alaskan woman released on bail after being indicted for the murder of her husband committed suicide in her room,[13] and in 1959 a woman survived an 8-story fall down the hotel's stairwell.[14]
By the early 1970s, the hotel had become derelict,[15] and in 1972, it was converted to an apartment hotel. In 2004, it was converted again, this time to senior housing. These renovations made the building "unrecognizable from the once elegant hotel of the 1920s and 1930s."[4]
In 1984, the Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District was added to the National Register of Historic Places, with Plaza Hotel listed as a contributing property in the district.[3] In 1999, the building and its neon sign were collectively designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument No. 665.[2][16]
In several I Love Lucy episodes, Plaza Hotel can be seen as a silhouette through Lucy Ricardo's apartment window.[17]
In the 1950s, the game show Queen for a Day set up a live remote broadcast location in the hotel's ballroom.[18]
[note: publication date is as of addition of HCM #1301 Venice Lifeguard Station 4/26/2024]
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