A rich trip into a vanished place and time, Lost Hollywood tells the story of the world's most image-conscious city through the fantastical places and people who once held center stage. From Marion Davies' extraordinary Santa Monica playpen Ocean House, known as Xanadu by the Sea, to America's first luxe housing development, Whitley Heights, and its now-iconic Mediterranean architecture, long gone building projects are brought back to vivid life. This delicious and engrossing book also unearths fresh details on classic institutions from the Hollywood Canteen to the Garden of Allah, from the Brown Derby and the Cocoanut Grove to the legendary Pickfair. Lost Hollywood resurrects a colorful and evocative era in the history of the movies and will delight and inform even the most knowledgeable film buff.
I got this book as a .99 freebie on Thirftbooks and couldn't wait to read it, but I should have listened to other reviews -- Wallace makes far to many claims with misinformation, some small, some large, that midway through he had lost his credibility with me and I stopped reading. Wish it has been better.
Lost Hollywood
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
This book had some stories that I had never heard of. It was well written and informative.
Enormously entertaining
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
You know that famous "Hollywood" sign perched on its hill? Well, the view from my front window includes that hill's reverse slope. That back side has ... nothing, which is about all I knew of Hollywood's golden era despite the fact that I've lived in the environs of Los Angeles just about all of my adult life. From the vantage point of such abysmal ignorance, I found LOST HOLLYWOOD to be one of the more entertaining and interesting books I've read recently.In twenty-three chapters, journalist-author David Wallace takes the reader as far back as the 1870's to begin his narrative, most of which focuses on the evolution of the Tinseltown movie industry, its stars, and associated glitz from around 1911 through the glory years of the 20s, 30s, 40s, and into the 50s. Each chapter has its own stand-alone topic, e.g. Cecil B. DeMille, D.W. Griffith, Rudolph Valentino, Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, the arrival of "talkies", the Hotel Hollywood, the studio contract system, the Hollywood sign, gossip mongers Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons, the stars' cars, the stars' yachts, the Cocoanut Grove, the Hollywood Canteen, and Schwab's drugstore. Much of the volume's diversion value lies in the fascinating, sometimes titillating, trivia it contains. Did you know that womanizer Errol Flynn's custom-built Packard had a passenger seat that became a bed at the touch of a button, and the license plate read "R U 18"? Or that New York opera star Geraldine Farrar was paid two dollars per minute of daylight for every day she was in Hollywood filming "Carmen"? Or that the fake palm trees in the Cocoanut Grove were leftover props from Valentino's film "The Sheik"? Or that Paulette Goddard got the female lead in "North West Mounted Police" after slapping her bare foot on director DeMille's desk knowing it would appeal to his foot fetish?My only criticism of LOST HOLLYWOOD is that it cries out for more pictures. True, there's a relevant period photo at the beginning of each chapter, but it just isn't enough. At 188 pages in paperback, it's a book I was compelled to read in a single day, reluctantly wasting time on other nuisance activities like my job, sleeping and household chores. Is LOST HOLLYWOOD a masterpiece? Nah! It's simply great fun.
A NECESSARY VOLUME FOR EVERY HOLLYWOOD LIBRARY
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
David Wallace's Lost Hollywood is a necessity for any Hollywood or motion picture library. From the Garden of Alla and Schwab's Drugstore, to Ciro's, Romanoff's, and Perino's, Wallace has found lost Hollywood, and he has served it up in dozens of tasty tales. Not only has he found lost Hollywood treasures, he has also put to rest some legendary Hollywood mysteries: what were the true circumstances of director Thomas Ince's sudden death, following a cruise on Hearst's yacht? Was Lana Turner truly "discovered" sipping a soda at Schwab's Drugstore? What was really going behind closed doors at the legendary Hotel Hollywood?This volume could have coined the expression "a real page turner". Impeccably researched and written, this is a book that we have needed for forty years, and, now, thanks to David Wallace, the wait has ended!
A Thoughtful and Insightful Exploration
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Wow! Somewhere between the historical riches and the conversational bluestreaks that make this book so insightful, a billiant and delicate light shines--a light that illuminates a place I never knew existed; a light which studies that place with the grace and wonder it deserves. Welcome back to the real legends--an electrifying read!
EXCITING, RICH and SHARP
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
LOST HOLLYWOOD is a provacative leap into the lives of those titanic silver screen heroes of the 20s and 30s. The place that is now so mythical and cheesy (really little more than nepotism and a sign on a hill) is unearthed by the author, and in this book he makes the romantic and glamorous Hollywood glisten--the legends themselves awakened, jerking, jumping, wailing and playing. Hollywood will once again be the place of dreams because of this book...
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