Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality
Two ads from the Herald Examiner, December 6, 1921.
I don't believe we've visited these two places on NLA. The Sunset Inn and the Rainbow Tavern.

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I thought Noircitydame might have some further information up her sleeve.
I wonder what the Fotoplayer's Frolic was all about? (silent film stars singing & dancing perhaps....it would have been so great to see that!)
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If any of you men about noirish-town are going to the Fotoplayer's Frolic, better rent your tuxedos now before all the white waistcoats are snapped up. See Jack Bean, old bean. They say Norma Talmadge is still looking for one of her garters from last week.

lat dec 1921
Fotoplaer's Frolic: it was their weekly dance contest- stars attended, some as contestants and usually had a headliner celebrity "guest of honor."
I don't know Rainbow Tavern but Wade McFadden was the 1st manager (skipper?) of the Ship Cafe at Venice and took it back over again for a little while in 1925.
The Sunset Inn in your ad of 1921 E-R must be the one on the pier that had been Nat Goodwin's cafe, opened May 30, 1913. Lawyer Paul W. Schneck (partner of Baron Long) took it over, keeping the Goodwin name.

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reference to Santa Monica's new no-dancing-in-cafes-that-serve-alcohol ordinance, Mar 1917. lat
Baron Long had a cafe called Sunset Inn in Santa Monica at the same time; it lost it's liquor license in Apr 1917, then he went in with Schneck and Nat's was renamed Sunset Inn. It closed for good after the summer season 1923 and the Fotoplayer's Frolic frolicking was transfered to the
Plantation in Culver City. As a side note, Paul was the layer in the Madelynne Obenchin murder case, defended D.A. Asa Keyes in his bribery trial and represented Winnie Ruth Judd in her trunk murder trial. The old Nat Goodwin's/Sunset Inn was demolished in 1926.