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Old Posted Aug 7, 2012, 4:47 PM
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MichaelRyerson MichaelRyerson is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Houston, Texas
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It was always about the land, about the riches that could be unlocked if it were chosen carefully enough,
subdivided into parcels which called out to the right demographic, if access could be insured with rail or
improved roads or both, if water and electricity could find their way in, if enough hoopla could be conjured
so that they would come and look and buy, while the coming and looking and buying was good, before the
carrying costs caught up with the cash reserves. Yeah, it was always about the land. Of course, the key
was buying at an agricultural rate and selling at a residential rate.

The trick was turning a bean field into a view lot.

By 1910 Burton Green, Max Whittier and their various partners controlled 4,439 acres of bean fields, they
had the water and they had the electricity and now they needed the people. But they had to be the right
kind of people, the kind who would pay premium prices, build expensive houses and bring other people of
the right kind. They needed a trump card. They needed hoopla. Burton found it over on Hollywood Boulevard.
Knowing of the bitter feud between Almira Hershey, the owner of the Hotel Hollywood and her
long-time manager, Margaret J. Anderson, Green and the boys from Rodeo Land & Water decided to make the
formidable Ms. Anderson an offer she couldn’t refuse. They grubstaked her to a spanking new hotel in their
neck of the woods and the capital to cover operating expenses for the foreseeable future. It was an easy decision.
She came, bringing her son, Stanley, an experienced hotelier in his own right and as an added bonus they brought
with them a hotel-full of guests, cleaning out, as it were, the entire guest list of the Hotel Hollywood as they locked
the door behind them, the right kind of people one-and-all. It’s worked for a century. So far, so good.



1024px-Beverly_Hills_Hotel,_1911_drawing

Los Angeles Times, May 14, 1911



Beverly_Hills_Hotel_1912

1912 looking north across an unpaved Sunset Blvd, the Beverly Hills Hotel under construction nearing completion.
image from paulrwilliamsproject.org



BHH, 1912

Dirt roads and grace abound. Open for business just barely. image from paradiseleased.wordpress.com



hbz-beverly-hills-hotel-Hotel-Panoramic-1912-0512-lgn

looking southwest across Lexington and Crescent Drives, Sunset Boulevard beyond the hotel.
image from "The Beverly Hills Hotel and Bungalows - The First 100 Years" by Robert S. Anderson, Official Historian for The Beverly Hills Hotel



BHH Polo Ponies?

Will Rogers and friends? No, likely too early for that. Besides some of the men appear to be wearing skimmers.
Joe Lefors? (But) Lefors never leaves Wyoming, never. You know that. myloveofoldhollywood.blogspot.com



Beverly Hills Hotel looking northwest, circa 1921

image from the empressofdress.blogspot.com



BeverlyHills-Hotel looking south 1921

In the early years the hotel set aside an acre for the guests to plant flowers and vegetables.
image from plushhomerealty.com



BeverlyHillsHotel_1935_DorothyJordan

image from the empressofdress.blogspot.com



Beverly Hills Hotel, entrance, 1940's

Beverly Hills Hotel, Exterior, 1940's: Photographer Maynard L. Parker, The Huntington Library, San Marino, California



Beverly Hills Hotel pool 1948

image from the empressofdress.blogspot.com



hbz-beverly-hills-hotel-Rita-Hayworth-0512-de

Rita Hayworth in a comfy outfit down by the pool, circa 1934. by Robert S. Anderson



Polo Lounge

image by Julius Shulman for the BHH



hbz-beverly-hills-hotel-Marlene-0512-lgn

Marlene Dietrich in The Polo Lounge, where she successfully challenged the dress code that
stated women could not wear pants in the restaurant. I love this picture. by Robert S. Anderson



Beverly-Hills-Hotel-room detail

image by Julius Shulman for the BHH



Beverly-Hills-Hotel-room detail II

image by Julius Shulman for the BHH


BHH paulrwilliams

In the late 1940’s architect Paul Revere Williams was retained to spruce up the existing hotel
and design and oversee the construction of a major add-on.
He brought a bucket of pink paint and some banana leaf wallpaper.
image from CthulhuWho1's Blog



Beverly-Hills-Hotel-Addition-circa 1950

image by Julius Shulman for the BHH



BHH-Exterior

Fairy tales can come true.

image from empressofdress.blogspot.com



Beverly Hills Hotel, Lanai Room, 1950

Beverly Hills Hotel, Lanai Room, 1950:
Photographer Maynard L. Parker, The Huntington Library, San Marino, California



Historical-BHH-Entrance

image from Hawkins International Public Relations



Beverly Hills Hotel lobby

image from hotelchatter.com



hinson martinique banana leaf wallpaper beverly hills palm beach chic room

theastate.com



Beverly-Hills-Hotel cabana boy

Yes, I know, a dirty job but someone has to do it.
image from the empressofdress.blogspot.com



2012-01-09-WomanbythePool_AnthonyFriedkin_BeverlyHillsHotel1975

The pool area at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Truly a land of opportunity.



hbz-beverly-hills-hotel-Faye-Dunaway-oscar-0512-lgn

Faye Dunaway and friend by the pool on the morning of March 29, 1977. by Robert S. Anderson



hbz-beverly-hills-hotel-Marilyn-0512-lgn

Marilyn stayed in the Bungalows while filming "Let's Make Love." circa 1959
by Robert S. Anderson



Beverly Hills Hotel bungalow exterior walkway

Howard Hughes, bungalow number 5 for nearly thirty years,
maintained a standing order with the hotel kitchen to hide a
roast beef sandwich in the tree near his walkway every evening at about 10 pm,
presumably so that he could avoid having to see or talk with anyone.
image from anapettusdairies.com



Beverly Hills Hotel bungalow pool

And yes, some of the bungalows include private pools.

image from the empressofdress.blogspot.com



Beverly Hills Hotel bungalow interior detail

image from anapettusdairies.com



Beverly Hills Hotel bungalow interior detail II

image from anapettusdairies.com



Beverly Hills Hotel bungalow interior detail III

image from anapettusdairies.com



BeverlyHillsHotel interior Marilyn's bungalow, circa 1959

Marilyn and husband Arthur Miller, right, enjoy dessert and
after-dinner drinks with Yves Montand, back to camera, and his wife Simone Signoret.

image from beneathmagentaskies.com



BeverlyHillsHotel interior Marilyn's bungalow II, circa 1959

image from kiwicollection.com



BHH nighttime panorama

Beverly Hills Hotel nighttime panorama. image from dailymail.co.uk

Last edited by MichaelRyerson; Jan 4, 2013 at 4:37 PM.
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