Tour of the famed Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park
I am so looking forward to leading THIS tour of the amazing, touching and trippy LA Memorial Pet Park for Altas Obscura on March 20th! It promises to be a purr-iffic time!
I am so looking forward to leading THIS tour of the amazing, touching and trippy LA Memorial Pet Park for Altas Obscura on March 20th! It promises to be a purr-iffic time!
What an inspirational woman to write about for THIS Lost Landmarks- my 75th Lost Landmarks for Kcet, and probably my last. The daughter of an expat aristocrat, Ida made a fortune as a Wild West Pioneer and became one of early LA's greatest philanthropists, a leader in business and culture, and just one hell of a human being.
I am so psyched to be co-leading THIS tour of the infamous St. Francis Dam disaster site on Feb 28th. It is such a joy to bring living history to folks through the awesome Atlas Obscura.
Who knew the famed lair of Hugh Hefner, the faded Tudor mansion of the infamous grotto and lubed up bunnies, was once a high society hot spot? In THIS story for Curbed LA, I take a peek into the oh so blue blooded early days and the now infamous Playboy Mansion West.
In THIS story for Atlas Obscura, I explore the dangerous, glamorous world of early ballooning and the vital role played by women. As someone who is most content earthbound, I am in awe of these corseted, cosseted women who threw off their misogynistic chains and took to the chilly skies.
What a joy to write this happy tale! I took a look at Chinatown's iconic Little Joe's restaurant in THIS article for Kcet Food. It was basically a mom and pop Olive Garden, with a real big heart and a real deep soul.
I absolutely loved writing THIS story for Kcet Lost Landmarks. Rudolph Valentino, Doris Duke, rumors of ghosts, whispers of murder...too much money, too much fame, too much luxury, too much isolation. Beware of the gilded cage...it can turn you into a kookoo bird. Such is the moral of the lives and loves of the inhabitants of Falcon Lair.
Happy New Year everybody! In THIS newest Lost Landmarks for Kcet, I take a look at the history of the Pacific Coast Club in Long Beach- which is basically every preservationist worst nightmare. Happy Reading!
I am so excited to be leadingTHIS Jan. 23rd Atlas Obscura tour of the abandoned old zoo at Griffith Park. Lions, tigers and a killer polar bear named Ivan the terrible...Oh My!
Nothing puts me in the Holiday spirit like visiting old Victorian homes, or as I like to think of them- gingerbread cookies come to life. So I just loved making THIS map for Curbed, featuring the best examples of existent Victorian architecture in all of LA.
I lovepirates! I love islands! I love the Lost Colony! I love sailing! I love mysteries! Therefor THIS article for Atlas Obscura, where I explore the legend of the pirate nation of Libertatia, is probably my hands down favorite story of all time. Enjoy!
I have always wanted to live in a place just like the Hollywood Hotel. In THIS Lost Landmarks for Kcet, I take a look the famed early Hollywood Hostelry where silent stars took tea, danced into the night, and courted in rocking chairs on the broad porch...ah the romance of the past!
I absolutely LOVED writing THIS history of the lifelong friendship between Mary Pickford and Frances Marion for Atlas Obscura. These two brilliant, ball busting and innovative minds helped transform the movie industry into the most powerful medium of the 20th century. More importantly, they never stopped loving and supporting each other, even when life got tough and the industry they helped create passed them by.
I am so excited to be leading THIS tour for Atlas Obscura on Dec. 13th:
In the 1920s and 30s, Palisades Beach Road in Santa Monica was one of America's most exclusive and fabled streets.
Dubbed by various wags "the American Riviera," "Rolls Royce Row," and the "Gold Coast," this low stretch of oceanfront below the craggy Palisades featured 30 or so eclectically-styled summer homes. Many of these "cottages" were designed by California's most noted architects: Richard Neutra, Wallace Neff, Julia Morgan, John Byers, Paul Williams, and Webber and Spaulding.
But the reason for this neighborhood's international fame had nothing to do with its innovative architecture and everything to do with its residents, who included the most powerful men and women in the movie business. Stars like Cary Grant, Mae West, Peter Lawford, Orson Welles, Harold Lloyd, David Niven, Errol Flynn, Greta Garbo, and Anita Loos frolicked in the surf after long days at the studio. Most famous of all was Marion Davies' gargantuan"Beach House," where epic, star-studded parties lasted all day and night.
Join me as we take a beachfront walking tour of the Gold Coast. We will view the exteriors of the remaining homes of heavyweights like Mary Pickford and Norma Talmadge, and recount tales from the storied coast's scandalous past. At the end of the excursion, we will take a docent led tour through the lovely Marion Davies Guest House, designed by Julia Morgan, the legendary architect of San Simeon.
Once upon a time I spent many a late hour at the Formosa Cafe with my equally eager young Hollywood friends. So while writing THIS article for KCET, I was thrilled to learn that my absolute idol and North Carolina soul sister Ava Gardner frequented this fabled spot, where she could order a scotch on the rocks without a single word.
Since I was a little girl, I have been absolutely obsessed with the four beautiful martyred daughters of the last Tsar of Russia. All these years later it was a pleasure to write THIS story for Atlas Obscura about their kick-ass friend, who survived and thrived after a devastating revolution that many say her own manipulative father helped cause...
My buddy Drew Mackie wrote THIS fascinating take on the new and twee Clifton's Cafeteria for Frontiers Magazine. He asked me what I thought about it- and of course I was more than happy to oblige.
While I am writing this note, I have Unsolved Mysteries on in the background. Appropriate, since in THIS story for Curbed LA, I take a look at the infamous Sowden House in Los Feliz. Was the Black Dahlia murdered there? I don't know. But it is certain that for a few years in the 1940s, the famed Lloyd Wright fortress was an absolute "house of evil."