LC Real Estate 10 2017

Page 1

BOULEVARD

MODERNIST

Ye olde violin shoppe notes 70 years on Larchmont Blvd.

‘Dangerous’ architect’s works survived McCarthy era.

Page 3

GARDEN Lush foliage, exotic fruit trees and established trees create an oasis.

Page 8

Real estate / enteRtainment Libraries, MuseuMs HoMe & Garden

Page 20

VIEW

Section 2

LARCHMONT CHRONICLE

OCTOBER 2017

hancock park • windsor square • fremont place • Greater wilshire • miracle mile • park la brea • larchmont

SEARCH FOR MORE LISTINGS AT

ColdwellBankerHomes.com

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

Elegant Mediterranean on prime block, 5 beds, 4.5 baths, 2 bed gst hse & pool. In escrow.

Magical Estate! 4+3.5+guest studio w/bath; gourmet kitch w/ fam rm. Nearly 18k lot w/pool!

Mediterranean on prime street with 4 bedrooms, 2 new baths up, kitchen & yard with pool.

Stately Mediterranean owned by the same family since built. 5 beds, 4.5 baths, large lot.

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

Larchmont close! 4+3 up. Fam Rm & Gourmet kitchen overlook pool + huge yard. Guest studio.

Impressive 4 beds + 4.5 baths + huge entertainment room + guest house. 4205west6th.com

Rare 8 bed, 7 bath duplex updated 10 years ago near Larchmont. 4 beds in each unit!

Perfectly located Spanish duplex delivered vacant. 3bd + 2ba per unit. 129SMansfield.com.

HANCOCK PARK

HANCOCK PARK

MIRACLE MILE

STUDIO CITY

Spanish remodeled with the highest of quality and attention to detail. 3BD/3BA.

N.Y. meets L.A. Chic 3 bd, 3.5 ba with fabulous private rooftop terrace. 656NGramercy.com

Updated 4+4.5, eat-in kosher kitch, yard & central air. Close to place of worship. Leased.

3 Bed + 3 bath condo in the heart of Studio City. Gym & roof top patio in complex.

$4,899,000

Rick Llanos (323) 460-7617

$3,199,000

Lisa Hutchins (323) 460-7626

$1,599,000

Betsy Malloy (323) 806-0203

$4,249,000

$3,995,000

Lisa Hutchins (323) 460-7626

$2,499,000

$2,100,000

Loveland Carr Properties (323) 460-7606

$1,030,000

Loveland Carr Properties (323) 460-7606

Rick Llanos (323) 460-7617

Lisa Hutchins (323) 460-7626

$7,250 / MO

Cecille Cohen (213) 810-9949

$3,899,000

Rick Llanos (323) 460-7617

$2,048,000

Loveland Carr Properties (323) 460-7606

$4,000 / MO

Loveland Carr Properties (323) 460-7606

SOPHISTICATED LIVING A look into sophisticated living plus industry voices, a curated collection of premier properties, and more. CBINSIDEOUT.COM

HANCOCK PARK NORTH (323) 464-9272 251 North Larchmont Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90004

COLDWELL BANKER® SELLS MORE HOMES THROUGHOUT LOS ANGELES THAN ANY OTHER REAL ESTATE BRAND

HANCOCK PARK SOUTH (323) 462-0867 119 North Larchmont Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90004

©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Global Luxury and the Coldwell Banker Global Luxury logo service marks are registered or pending registrations owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.


2

Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

Hurricanes, earthquakes, wildfires: Preparation is key As I write this, the news is full of catastrophe: Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, the anniversary of 9/11, huge wildfires, and an earthquake in Mexico. Natural and man-made disasters are always with us, and while the effects may differ, certain aspects of recovery remain sur-

prisingly constant. After people are safe, there remains the daunting business of getting the physical environment back to fulfilling the needs of shelter and the sense of place that appears to help humans begin to reestablish their lives. That sense of place that

many value is often irreparably harmed by disaster. Buildings and landscapes burn; there is nothing left to rebuild. Flooding is different: partially damaged buildings can often be repaired and new landscapes created. Earthquakes fall somewhere in between: structural damage can

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Two Special Properties Available! 722 S. Muirfield Road Redone house with 5+4.5 plus library/study, family room, large scale rooms and 3rd level with 2 bonus rooms.

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1015 S. Gramercy Drive Co-Listed with Anna Lee Keller-Williams Larchmont Redone house 3+2 with bonus room. Bolted, copper plumbing, tankless water heater, new floors and central AC.

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often be repaired and a build- for needed upgrades in life safeing brought back to life. Other ty and rehabilitation. They are times, when the damage is too useful for fundraising purposes great, whole neighborhoods as well. What donor doesn’t want to know that he or she is can be destroyed. giving to a well-planned project Preparedness What to do? There is no with identifiable results? Greystone thwarting natural disaster, but Greystone Mansion is one expreparedness can mitigate its impacts. Just as we prepare ample of a facility that has such emergency evacuation plans a plan. Every room has been and keep earthquake prepared- carefully documented, with ness kits handy, we can do some the conditions of the materithings to protect our historic re- als assessed. The maintenance and repair of each is then prisources in case disaster strikes. The National Trust for Historic oritized according to need. The Preservation began decades ago Friends of Greystone adopted to address this issue. Hurricanes this document as a fundraising in historic Charleston served to tool. Each project has a projected cost, focus the comand donors munity on the are asked to need for national McAvoy on adopt a projsupport of affect- Preservation ect, whether ed communities by it be restorbecause people Christy ing an entire realized that the McAvoy room or even need for informathe kitchen tion on what to do in the aftermath could help sink. Priorities are reevaluated others when their turns came, as warranted, and projects are accomplished as funds become as it inevitably would. Each new disaster has brought available. The model is simple refinement to the tools, but the and easy to understand. Historic preservation professionals basics remain the same. Successful recovery mini- created the model, and they are mizes permanent damage to involved in the rehabilitation historic structures. In the 1994 along with the staff and board Northridge earthquake, few which governs the facility. In historic structures had to be Greystone’s case, the City of demolished. Many more were Beverly Hills is a key steward as rehabilitated because preser- well. Lists of qualified contracvationists were quick to notify tors are part of the package, and officials of their significance skills are matched to the job (historic surveys played a criti- when requesting proposals. It is hard for stewards of cal role) and to develop financial programs for aid (FEMA churches, clubs, and communiand the State Office of Historic ty buildings to find time for such Preservation had protocols for an exercise when the planning damage assessment and reim- of events and fundraising take bursement). Homeowners and up so much energy, day to day. nonprofit institutions were But the quiet activity of planning able to access grants for repair. for repairs and upgrades can save dollars in the long run and Inventory If you are the owner or stew- lessen the anxiety of which area ard of an historic resource, to prioritize. Planning is a team there are some things you can effort, as is recovery. References do today to ensure that recovSome resources to help inery proceeds more smoothly. Call it a disaster preparedness clude National Park Services kit for the building. The most Preservation Briefs: basic step is an inventory of • “Architectural Character: what you have. This starts with Identifying the Visual Aspects a photographic inventory: all of Historic Buildings as an Aid exterior facades and a room-by- to Preserving Their Character:” room compilation. Keep this nps.gov/tps/how-to-preserve/ photographic record in a safe briefs/17-architectural-charplace, along with paperwork acter.htm. about the building’s history, its • “Understanding Old Buildings: The Process of Architechistoric designations, etc. If you have the resources tural Investigation:” and the time, do not stop with nps.gov/tps/how-to-preserve/ an inventory. Turn that photo- briefs/35-architectural-invesgraphic record into a “mainte- tigation.htm. nance and rehabilitation” plan. • “The Preparation and Use of These are sometimes part of Historic Structure Reports:” more formal Historic Struc- nps.gov/tps/how-to-preserve/ tures Reports. The plan turns briefs/43-historic-structurean inventory into a useable ac- reports.htm. tion plan. If disaster strikes, it Also from the National Center will have to be supplemented for Preservation Technology by a current condition assess- and Training: ment, but the bulk of the infor- • “Resilient Heritage: Protectmation will still be useful. In- ing Your Historic Home from stitutions use these documents Natural Disasters:” to budget ongoing repairs and ncptt.nps.gov/technical-remaintenance as well as to plan sources/resilient-heritage.


OCtOber 2017

Larchmont music shop enters its eighth decade

By Rachel Olivier For the last 70 years, anyone coming through our neighborhood has seen the landmark Hans Weisshaar sign at 627 N. Larchmont Blvd. But does anyone really know what goes on in this decadesold violin shop?

HANS WEISSHAAR sign is a hood landmark.

As a former violinist, it was a satisfying experience walking into the shop. Georg and Ann Eittinger, the proprietors, greeted me in a room filled with the pleasant smells of wood and rosin, plus the mellow tones of string instruments. Polishes, cleaners, and instruments lined the walls, accompanied by photographs of past clients, demonstrating the rich history of Hans Weisshaar. Included on my brief tour was a room for instruments to wait

for repair or pickup, workshops on both first and second floors, a small business office, and then the kitchen, where Ann and Georg said the Larchmont Chronicle is regularly read. How it works These days, visits are made by appointment only. Besides bringing in instruments or bows for repair, clients might also be looking for a violin made by Georg Eittinger, seeking an appraisal on an instrument, looking for a violin to rent for themselves or their chilneighbor- dren, or asking for the name of a string teacher. Eittinger said that there are parents who came to Hans Weisshaar as children who now bring their own children. It can take anywhere from three days to three years to repair or restore a violin. There was one instrument that Eittinger reconstructed from 147 pieces. Building a violin from scratch also takes time. It begins with wood that has been aged at least 60 years; the best (Please turn to page 7)

SeCtION tWO

631 s. arden Bl. • $5,599,000

Sleek remodel offers luxurious living on a grand scale! 7 bedrooms each with new bath + powder. House exceeds 7,400 sq ft per owner + a guest house over 3-car garage! Gorgeous gourmet eat-in kitchen overlooks pool/patio and fountain wall. Loads of offstreet parking. Gated.

Lisa HutcHins #1 agent in Hancock Park since 1994

DRE # 01018644

323-216-6938 251 n. Larchmont Blvd.

For a free evaluation of your property call or text me.

ŠLC1017

Larchmont Chronicle

3


4

Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

COUNCILMEMBER David Ryu is greeted by Judy Zeller and Jane Gilman.

CHECK-IN greeters included Kathy Saldana, Patricia Rye, Yvonne Cazier and Millie Schuber.

THE ST. ANDREWS SQUARE Neighborhood Association was represented by Tina Mata, Patti Carroll and Debbie Willis.

St. Andrews Place homes and a block party welcomed WSHPHS tour-goers By John Welborne For the first time in 41 years of doing local home tours, the Windsor Square-Hancock Park Historical Society (WSHPHS) combined tours with a block party. The 200 block of S. St. Andrews Pl. was closed to traffic, with “no parking” along the curbs, except for a few historic vehicles. In the street, children played and parents pushing strollers walked beneath the leafy boughs of the shady street trees. Step back in time The setting made one feel as if he or she was in a less hectic time, such as the first decades of the last century! And that is appropriate, because the homes on the tour were built in 1912, 1913 and 1914. Docents guided visitors through the insides of several homes. Other homes were on a self-guided tour of their exteriors. In a beautiful garden, there were two informative talks: “Restoration Diary” and “New Look for Old Houses.” Among the attendees were Councilmember David Ryu

FIRE STATION 29 equipment was of interest to adults and children alike.

and his chief planning deputy, Julia Duncan. Historical Society president Judy Zeller and tour co-chairman Jane Gilman (serving with chairman Richard Battaglia) greeted the Councilmember. Kathy Saldana, Patricia Rye, Yvonne Cazier and Millie Schuber were among the committee volunteers greeting guests at the

check-in tent. Local residents Tina Mata, Patti Carroll, and Debbie Willis staffed a tent offering information — and a new brochure — about the Saint Andrews Square Neighborhood Association. The attractive and informative WSHPHS commemorative tour book given to all participants was the work of Laura Cohen, Aerial Dupuis, Damona Hoffman and Ann Brook, with design by Matteo Marjoram. Suz Landay oversaw refreshments, with some back-up Salt & Straw ice cream and Pasquini coffee. Adults and children enjoyed performances by singers David Livingston, Tom Laskey, Alan Hanson and Bob Curran. Children were delighted to explore a fire engine from Fire Station 29 and to watch performances by the Bob Baker Marionettes. Wilshire Library Funds raised at the event will be applied to enhancing the courtyard of St. Andrews Square’s Wilshire Branch Li-

BOB BAKER MARIONETTES enraptured children.

brary at the corner of Council St. and St. Andrews Pl. A neighborhood fixture since it was built in 1927, the library building features a

carved doorway with an elaborate pattern of mythological animals fashioned after the doors of the Cathedral of Perugia, Italy.

Dine at Moonrise at Silvertop View architect John Lautner’s modernist masterpiece, Silvertop, after its recent restoration, at “Moonrise at Silvertop” to benefit the Los Angeles Conservancy on Thurs., Oct. 5. A cocktail reception is from 5:30 to 8 p.m., and an al fresco dinner will be served overlooking Silver Lake from 8 to 10 p.m. Commissioned by industrialist and engineer Kenneth Reiner, the home was completed in 1963. The iconic house recently was revitalized by architect Barbara Bestor. Visit laconservancy.org/ benefit.

HANCOCK HOMES REALTY JOHN DUERLER | 213.924.2208 | info@hancockhomes.com 501 N. Larchmont Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90004

BRE #01848596.All information presented herein including, but not limited to, measurements, room count, calculations of area, school district, and conditions or features of property, is obtained from public records or other sources. While these sources are deemed reliable, Hancock Homes Realty and its Agents/Brokers cannot guarantee the accuracy of the information provided. Hancock Homes Realty fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. If your property is currently listed with another Broker, this is not intended as a solicitation.


OCtOber 2017

Wine tasting, pies and fire truck were at Windsor Village party By Nathalie Rosen The Windsor Village Association, in partnership with “Title Sponsor” Tim Stivers Heating & Air Conditioning and several other generous sponsors, treated more than 300 residents Sept. 16 on Ninth St., between Windsor and Victoria, at the annual block party. Residents feasted on favorites such as Gus’s Fried Chicken, Tacos Coco’s and Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams. Kids had a blast getting their faces painted, bouncing in the bounce house and petting an iguana or a chinchilla from Mobile Zoo of Southern California. Perhaps most fun of all was a chance to sit in a big firetruck and pose with real firemen, thanks to our local

AT THE PARTY: Julie Stromberg with son Leo, Virginia Conkling, Councilman David Ryu and Nathalie Rosen.

Fire Station Number 29. Also, Los Angeles Police Department Senior Lead Officers Hebel Rodriguez CHILDREN enand Timothy joy festivities. Estevez were on hand and Councilman David Ryu spoke about disaster preparedness. Residents tested their mettle in the pie-baking competition, judged by pastry chef and co-owner of Cake Monkey, Elizabeth Belkind (winners Anthony DiMaggio and Danielle Missler made a miso-caramel apple pie), or by entering the wildly popular Blind Wine Tasting Competition. A half-dozen dogs competed for the title of Cutest (winner Lola: owner Sabine Demain), Most Obedient (winner Lilly: owner Holly Holyk) and Best Trick (winner Paco: owner Julie Grist). Everyone had a hoot participating in the Disco Line Dancing led by Loren Cross. Holly Holyk and John Schilling received awards for longstanding contributions to the community.

5

SeCtION tWO

248 S. Van Ness Ave. • $4,249,000

Grand Estate on nearly 18k lot! 4 bedrooms/3.5 baths + 1/1 studio over garage; pool/spa; tremendous gourmet eat-in kitchen & family room flow to patio/BBQ & magical gardens!

Lisa HutcHins #1 agent in Hancock Park since 1994

DRE # 01018644

323-216-6938 251 n. Larchmont Blvd.

For a free evaluation of your property call or text me.

©LC1017

Larchmont Chronicle

Elegant Windsor Square Home Sold in Ten Days! New Townhome Now Available in Valley Village.

Bob Day sold the single-story traditional Windsor Square home (at left) for more than its $3,550,000 asking price in 10 days.

Bob Day 323-821-4820 BobDay@coldwellbanker.com

4 Beds and 3.5 Baths in 2,006 sq. ft. with two-car garage.

$919,000

DRE # 0851770

Coldwell Banker HanCoCk Park • residential & CommerCial • 119 n. larCHmont Blvd.

©LC1017

A Trusted Name in Los Angeles since 1878

Now available is a new, modern townhouse single-family home at 12008 Milan Drive in Valley Village.


6

SECTION TWO

OCTObEr 2017

Larchmont Chronicle

Coming soon to Hancock Park. LA’s most coveted neighborhood. Tradition re-imagined. 12 high-end modern town homes. Designed locally by Venice Beach-based multidisciplinary design and architecture studio Electric Bowery. Construction commences this year. Information about reserving one of the 12 homes will be forthcoming. For further information, contact the developer:

Michael Winter; BBC Van Ness, LLC 312-305-3300


Hans Weisshaar (Continued from page 3)

material comes from Germany and Bosnia. Flamed maple is used for the back and ribs (sides) of a violin, while spruce makes up the front. Ebony is used for the fingerboard. According to Eittinger, it can take six to eight years to become a master violinmaker, or luthier. Eittinger spent three and a half years at the German State Violin Making School, which earned him a journeyman degree (Gesellenbrief in German). Apprenticing with a master is another way to earn a journeyman degree. After working another three to five years with an accredited master, a journeyman can return to school for the master course and final test. The master degree also allows a violinmaker to take on apprentices.

THE SCROLL is made of flamed maple.

OCtOber 2017

How it began Hans Weisshaar, the original founder of the violin shop, graduated from the state violin making school in Mittenwald, Germany and worked in Switzerland, the Netherlands and Germany. He immigrated to the U.S. in 1937, where he worked in Chicago and New York. He heard there was a need for a luthier and restorer in Los Angeles and landed on Larchmont Blvd. in 1947, where string instruments have been repaired, restored and crafted ever since. Tradition Over the decades, Hans Weisshaar became the destination for many professional string musicians, including Jack Benny, Jascha Heifetz and Isaac Stern. Weisshaar even “wrote the book” on violin restoration when he co-authored “The Manual of Violin Restoration” with Margaret Shipman, who took over the shop in 1991 when Weisshaar died. In 2004, Georg Eittinger, who had mentored at Hans Weisshaar in 1991 and 1992, bought the shop. In 2005 he opened a branch in Berlin, and more recently he opened a shop in San Marino. Eittinger also teaches a biannual restoration course for professional violinmakers and lectures and writes articles on (Please turn to page 22)

SeCtION tWO

311 S. Lucerne Bl. • $3,199,000

Move right in! 4 bedrooms/3.5 baths + pool house with bath; gourmet kitchen, breakfast area & a light-filled family room all overlooking huge yard, pool + entertainer’s patio. Annual block party!

Lisa HutcHins #1 agent in Hancock Park since 1994

DRE # 01018644

323-216-6938 251 n. Larchmont Blvd.

For a free evaluation of your property call or text me.

©LC1017

Larchmont Chronicle

7


8

Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

INSTALLATION VIEW of the exhibition, “Exhibition House by Gregory Ain,” on view at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, May 17, 1950 through October 29, 1950. (All illustrations are courtesy of The Museum of Modern Art Archives, New York.) Photo © Ezra Stoller/Esto

EXHIBITION HOUSE in the MoMA garden, with kitchen at right and open door into the living room from the patio; West 54th Street to the rear.

The missing house of America’s ‘most dangerous architect’ He was a proven and inveterate liar before he was elected to high office; Roy Cohn was his trusted advisor; and his fellow Republicans were loath to denounce him before he wreaked havoc on the country.

Home Ground by

Paula Panich

FLOOR PLAN of Gregory Ain Exhibition House at MoMA. Garden fence and West 54th Street are on the left side of the drawing.

Joseph McCarthy’s early 1950s reign of terror in the U.S. Senate zoomed straight to Los Angeles and swallowed Hollywood careers, destroyed families and friendships, and along the way subsumed a model house designed by the leftist Los Angeles architect, Gregory Ain, FAIA (1908-1988). Ain’s mid-century modernist model house was commissioned by the then-director of architecture and design at New York’s Museum of Modern Art

LIVING ROOM of the Gregory Ain Exhibition House at MoMA. Photo © Ezra Stoller/Esto

(MoMA), Philip Johnson. The house was constructed in 1950 in the museum’s garden. It was the second of three houses that would be built — in a sort of design-for-living program — and then dismantled. Two are accounted for and were reconstituted elsewhere — but Ain’s has gone missing.

(Ain designed many modernist Los Angeles houses and small apartment buildings, including the Larchmont Chronicle neighborhood’s 1938 house, restored in 2005 by Brooke Anderson. But more on that in a minute.) Ain was under surveil(Please turn to page 9)

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Larchmont Chronicle

Gregory Ain

(Continued from page 8) lance by the FBI. He reportedly was called “the most dangerous architect in America” by J. Edgar Hoover for the architect’s association with other “dangerous” types — left-leaning architects, writers, people of color, and homosexuals, all suspect then by definition. Frank Gehry, a student of Ain’s at USC after World War II, recalls (in an interview for the Getty Arts & Ideas podcast) that a group called the “Architectural Panel” met on Friday nights, with Ain and land-

OCtOber 2017

scape architect Garrett Eckbo. “All the lefties belonged,” says Gehry, including himself. Sam Hall Kaplan, in his “Los Angeles Times” obituary of Ain, called him “a rare, humanistic architect,” who looked at design as a way to improve the lives of people and the health of communities. Los Angeles projects Ain and Eckbo designed a cooperative community for Reseda in 1948-49, envisioned as a multi-racial living environment. The Federal Housing Administration declined to finance it. It was a red flag, so (Please turn to page 22)

SeCtION tWO

2115 Moreno Dr., silverlake • $2,125,000

Sought-after location overlooking the Lake! Super charming 3 bedrooms/2 fab original tiled baths up. Living room w/fireplace flows to paneled den; dining & breakfast rooms; country kitchen; laundry + powder rm. Lovely grassy yard and patio!

Lisa HutcHins

DRE # 01018644 ARCHITECTS Philip Johnson, left, and Gregory Ain, right, in the living room of the Exhibition House designed by Ain.

323-216-6938 251 n. Larchmont Blvd.

For a free evaluation of your property call or text me.

©LC1017

#1 agent in Hancock Park since 1994

Photo by Homer Page

Properties Represented by June Ahn

October 2017

132 S. Beachwood Dr. | $12,000 / Month cabana; both with pool view and 3/4 baths. Third Street School District.

640 S. Arden Blvd. | $2,650,000 Impressive Traditional Hancock Park home with 4 BR, 4.5BA and maids room. Every bedroom has a back or front 15,304 lot size in the 3rd Street School District. Oversize

421 S. Van Ness Ave #16 | $920,000

tops, laundry inside, professionally landscaped front and back yard. Detached garage. Central heating & air. Circular driveway with remote control gates.

June Ahn

International President’s Elite

cell: 323.855.5558 juneahn21@gmail.com CalBRE: 01188513 ©2017 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.

9


Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

Pass the popcorn — ‘Under the Stars’ screens at Uplift Hollygrove Sept. 30 Enjoy a barbecue dinner and a movie “Under the Stars” at the Hollygrove Campus on Sat., Sept. 30. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. and the movie “Despicable Me 3” starts at dusk at the community fundraiser for Uplift Family Services at Hollygrove, at the corner of Vine St. and Waring Ave. The third annual event features dinner served by “The Oinkster,” next door on Vine St., popcorn, soft drinks and pre-movie games and activi-

ties. Master of ceremonies is Colin Hanks. The Amazing Kid Co. will provide games and children’s activities before the film. The screening is courtesy of Illumination Entertainment and Universal Studios. Bring your own blanket, and help raise funds for the nonprofit social services agency that offers after-school and summer programs for kids in need. The event is spearheaded by The Hollies, a 60-member support arm of Hollygrove,

Real Estate Sales*

a former orphanage and the onetime home to a young Marilyn Monroe. Hollies chairman is Sheri Weller, Hancock Park. The event is a fundraiser for the programs at Uplift that serve more than 1,200 children in crisis and their families each year. Admission is $25. Raffle tickets are $5 each. Prizes include an Xbox 360, Beats Headphones and dinner packages to local restaurants. Purchase tickets, sponsorships at upliftfs.org/movienight2017/ SOLD: This home at 214 N. Rossmore Ave. in Hancock Park was sold in August for $4,150,000.

Published in Architectural Digest

Single-family homes

Hidden behind a walled and gated formal rose garden, this sun-filled 1924 California interpretation of the English Cotswold Cottage in the vibrant Wilshire-Hancock area once graced the cover of Architectural Digest. It has been meticulously restored and updated and is a complete, jewel-like oasis, centrally convenient to the best museums, schools and restaurants in the city. The residence displays a coved high-ceilinged living room with Arts and Crafts tiled fireplace, newly refinished hardwood floors, dining room opening through French doors to a bricked terrace, two bedrooms, study, a luxurious bath, powder room, re-envisioned chef’s kitchen, laundry area and a detached garage. $ 1,495,000.

Crosby Doe 310.482.6755 crosby@crosbydoe.com

Christopher Pomeroy 917.838.4692 chris@crosbydoe.com

214 N. Rossmore Ave. 640 S. Orange Dr. 175 N. June St. 526 N. Beachwood Dr. 123 S. Van Ness Ave. 736 S. Citrus Ave. 564 Lillian Way 465 S. Highland Ave. 170 N. Highland Ave. 580 N. Plymouth Blvd. 205 N. Beachwood Dr. 733 S. Citrus Ave. 516 N. Mansfield Ave. 971 S. Mullen Ave. 949 S. Highland Ave. 914 Westchester Pl. 385 N. Wilton Pl. 890 S. Bronson Ave. 891 S. Norton Ave. 4056 W. 7th St. 301 N. Windsor Blvd. 732 S. Wilton Pl. 686 N. Gramercy Pl.

$4,150,000 2,805,000 2,650,000 2,465,000 2,446,000 2,250,000 2,120,846 2,105,000 1,988,500 1,800,000 1,663,937 1,630,000 1,600,000 1,543,000 1,399,000 1,268,000 1,250,000 1,190,000 1,190,000 1,150,000 1,150,000 1,120,000 899,000

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JILL GALLOWAY Estates Director, Sunset Strip 323.842.1980 Jill@JillGalloway.com JillGalloway.com Not listed in the MLS. This is not intended as a solicitation if your property is currently listed with another broker. CalBRE 01357870

DUPLEX TENANTS OR OWNERS We are a law firm researching the trash collection fees charged by the City of LA to DUPLEX tenants or the building owners who pay them on their DWP bill as “sanitation.” If you are a concerned citizen paying these fees at a Duplex who seeks justice and wishes to participate, please call or email us with your phone number and we will contact you for a meeting. Thank you for your consideration.

©LC0917

10

Call Mr. Michael at: (310) 659-0143 or Email: lawdoctors@juno.com


Larchmont Chronicle

OCtOber 2017

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enTeRTAinMenT

Van Gogh’s death told in oil paintings; King-Riggs match still on Loving Vincent (10/10): Even though I avoid animated films like the plague, this film blew me away. It’s not your normal animation with hundreds or thousands of cartoonists sitting in a room drawing their panels or utilizing modern-day computerized animation. Rather, it is an amazing work consisting of 65,000 frames of film, each oil painted by hand by 125 painters who traveled from all across the world to the studios in Poland and Greece to participate in the production. The movie can only be described as one-of-a-kind. Telling the true story of Van Gogh’s death (almost certainly not suicide), every scene is drawn like a Van Gogh painting; it has to be seen to be appreciated. If it doesn’t win the Oscar for Best Animated Film, there’s something rotten in Denmark.

Heidi Duckler to perform at library The moveable Heidi Duckler Dance Theater is back in circulation, this time at the West Hollywood Library, 625 N. San Vicente Blvd., Sat. Oct. 7 at 7:30 p.m. The performance will take place in the building designed by DANCERS Zoe architec- Nelson and Lenin ture firm Fernandez. Photo: Andrew Johnson Wodford Favaro, and features music by jazz percussionist and multimedia artist, Andrea Centazzo. Costumes with an origami influence are by Mimi Haddon.

At the Movies with

Tony Medley Victoria & Abdul (8/10): Who knew? Apparently aging, obese Queen Victoria (Judi Dench) had the hots for a studly young Indian clerk, Abdul Karim (Ali Fazal), called “Munshi,” which means teacher. It was apparently love at first sight for the 68-year-old monarch when she first set eyes on the 24-year-old Muslim. For the next 14 years, they were fast friends despite the opposition of her family, staff and government officials. While this is a well-told, little known, eye-opening story, it is extraordinarily slow in parts. The acting is very good, as is the ambience created by the production design. Goodbye Christopher Robin (7/10): Based on the relationship between “Winnie the Pooh” author A.A. Milne, his wife (Domhnall Gleeson and Margot Robbie) and their son Christopher Robin (Will Tilston), from whom sprang most of Milne’s stories, this is a tear-jerking biopic with a smashing performance by Tilston. It shows how his parents exploited Christopher and robbed him of his childhood. The only negative is that it took me 45 minutes to really get into the story, as the first half of the film drags. American Assassin (7/10): Fans of Vince Flynn’s excellent Mitch Rapp series will be disappointed by this Hollywood pap that changes the story and is little different from your stan-

dard Jason Bourne thriller. While Dylan O’Brien is a pretty good Rapp, the same can’t be said for the rest of the players, who are mostly miscast. If they make a sequel(s), they better get another director, better writers, different players for the subcharacters, and stick with Flynn’s stories as he wrote them. Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House (7/10): Shot so darkly it might as well have been in black and white, this is a take on Watergate that is completely different than seen in “All the President’s Men.” This movie portrays Felt as a troubled, ambitious man with a distressed wife who acted out of patriotism to the FBI, even though what he did was contrary to FBI rules, if not the law. Battle of the Sexes (3/10): This title has a double meaning. It’s not just about the Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) — Billie Jean King (Emma Stone) tennis match; it’s equally about LGBTQ rights. In fact, the first half is a snorer that concentrates on the latter. Also unmentioned is the rumor that Riggs threw the match in return for forgiveness of a gambling debt to the mob. Oh well. The tennis part in the last half is pretty good. Kingsman: The Golden Circle (3/10): The first one was a pretty good, tongue-incheek takeoff on James Bond films. This one is ridiculous.

Colin Firth is too good an actor to waste his talent on stuff like this. mother! (0/10): This psychobabble is a desolate, dystopian view of society. The ending is as disgusting a stretch of film as you will ever see, unless you are a devotee of horror, as it slowly dissolves into phan-

tasmagoric mayhem. Regardless of the pseudo-intellectual “inspiration,” content, and meaning (which is opaque to say the least), anybody who ventures into the theater to sit through these two hours does so at his or her own peril and will see disturbing images that might be difficult to forget.

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12

Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

OUR HOME AS ART.

deasy/penner home as art.¨

deasy/penner proudly welcomes our new partners

Scott Lander, D.C., Restoration Specialist

scott.lander@deasypenner.com | 323.697.4909 | CalBRE#: 01320741

Barbara Lamprecht, M.Arch., Ph.D. Architectural Historian 626.264.7600 | blamprecht@deasypenner.com | Associate Partner

Matthew Berkley, M.A., Architectural Historian

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Our Core Beliefs and Mission It is sobering to realize that Realtors¨

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Documentation Preservation Representation

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Larchmont Chronicle

OCtOber 2017

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Properties Represented ELMER GREY, FAIA

BOYD GEORGI, AIA

BUFF & HENSMAN, FAIA

Pasadena

Upland

Camarillo

FRED MCDOWELL, AIA & RUFUS TURNER, AIA

JOHN J. SCHULTZ, AIA

JAMES DELONG, FAIA :: WILLIAM STACKO, BUILDER

RAPHAEL SORIANO, FAIA

Mount Washington

Eagle Rock

View Park

ARLOS SEDGLEY, AIA

MID-CENTURY VIEW RESIDENCE

ELMER GREY, FAIA

Sunset Strip

Avalon, Catalina Island

Claremont

CLAIR PHILIP EARL, AIA Glendale

Wilshire Center

ARTHUR & ALFRED HEINEMAN, ARCHITECTS

BUFF, STRAUB & HENSMAN, FAIA

EDWIN BICKMAN, ARCHITECT

THE ADAMS RESIDENCE, 1924

Pasadena

Pasadena

Lake Elsinore

Hancock Park

WILLIAM KESSLING, ARCHITECT

ALFRED PRIEST, AIA

RUDOLPH SCHINDLER, AIA

DAVIS STUDIO A + D ARCHITECTS

Silver Lake

Glendale

Silver Lake

Hollywood

D.M. RENTON BUILDER :: PETER TOLKIN, AIA

ECKEL & ALDRICH, AIA

L.C. BAUER DESIGNER & BUILDER

THE CRESCENT BATH HOUSE :: FRANK FERRIS, ARCHITECT

Pasadena

Arts District Los Angeles

Pasadena

Lake Elsinore

JOHN ANDRE GOUGEON, AIA

GREENE & GREENE, ARCHITECTS

GREGORY AIN, FAIA

1914 CRAFTSMAN

Glendora

Pasadena

Silver Lake

Los Angeles

A. PAGE BROWN, FAIA

HARWELL HAMILTON HARRIS, FAIA

ALFRED PRIEST, AIA

THE RUSKIN ART CLUB

Santa Barbara

Pasadena

Glendale

Hancock Park


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Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

TarFest celebrated 15th year, Operation School Bell kicks off The celebratory luncheon of the Greater Miracle Mile Chamber of Commerce took place early last month. It was hosted by Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director Michael Govan in the Museum’s BP Grand Entrance. For the 15th year, the event that brought over 100 members and guests together was the beloved TarFest held annually in Hancock Park. “Anybody can come here and be an individual; a balancing act between one’s self and the diversity that art brings,” said Mr. Govan, reminding everyone that LACMA’s exhibit “Pacific Standard Time LA/LA” continues through January. TarFest Founder and Launch Gallery owner James Panozzo pronounced what a great confluence of science, art and entertainment the

WENDY AND STEVEN KRAMER at TarFest lunch

TARFEST KUDOS were presented by Councilmember Ryu’s senior field deputy Catherine Landers to TarFest cofounder and director James Panozzo at the Greater Miracle Mile Chamber of Commerce luncheon held in September at LACMA.

day-long festival has become, a comment met with great applause from the attendees and a grateful nod to the event’s sponsors whose gener-

FIRST TARFEST POSTER, from 2002, was discovered and displayed by festival director James Panozzo at the LACMA luncheon.

osity has made the festival free to the public. Panozzo was presented a commendation on behalf of Councilman David Ryu, and he reciprocated by showing a recently-found poster from 2002’s first TarFest. Also there: Emily Lindsey, assistant curator and excava-

24/ 7 ARMED PATROL & RESPONSE

Setting the Standard in Residential Security

• Owned & operated by retired LAPD Supervisors • Manned by active off-duty licensed law enforcement officers

Please join us at The Good Samaritan Hospital Auxiliary • Liaison with local law enforcement agencies Fall Brunch • Responds to all alarm monitoring companies as we Tour and Dine at the facilities of • 2-3 minute average response to call for service

• 24-7 direct contact with patrol officer who never leaves the area

tion site director for the Page Museum, Merry Karnoski of MKG Projects, Liz Gordon of Liz’s Antique Hardware, Steve Rosenthal of Olympia Medical Center, Marcella Kerwin, Bailey Nakano, Terry and Wally August, Bianca Arnow, Suzanne Iskin, Joey Sacavitch, Pam Rudy, Jon Engel, D.D.S., Maria Glover, Nina Borin, Miracle Mile Chamber Board Executive Director Meg McComb and Board President Stephen Kramer with wife Wendy. • • •

Around the Town with

Patty Hill Later in the evening, Operation School Bell, the Auxiliary of the Assistance League of Los Angeles that provides homeless children with new clothing and school supplies, held its kick-off dinner at the Rossmore Ave. home of Juliet Brumlick. “We plan to serve over 6,000 kids this year with the help of our new ‘Wheels’ rig going to several

JULIET BRUMLICK and Karla Ahmanson of OSB.

KIEL FITZGERALD and Shelagh Callahan, OSB.

LAUSD sites!” exclaimed newly appointed OSB co-chairs Kiel FitzGerald and Shelagh Callahan. Some 80 Auxiliary members enjoyed a scrumptious buffet catered by guest Chef Lisa Ende of Food en Bord. • • • The evening of Sept. 12 marked the annual Gathering of the Block Captains of the Windsor Square Association hosted by June and Paul Bilgore in their Windsor Boulevard garden. Special guest Councilman David Ryu humbly stated, “I have the best staff in the world,” pointing to his senior deputy, Catherine Landers. Association President Larry Guzin thanked residents and members of the LAPD for their tireless efforts to keep the neighborhood safe and green. (Please turn to page 15)

Please join us at The Good Samaritan Hospital Auxiliary Fall Brunch as we Tour and Dine at the facilities of

PROTECTING LOS ANGELES NEIGHBORHOODS SINCE 1991

Call us today

whose mission is to serve any homebound person in need, regardless of age, ethnicity, religion, disability or ability to pay. In 40 years, they have (866) 357-1772 • www.ssa-securitygroup.com served over 27,000,000 meals – and still counting!

Monday, October 9th at 10:00am See where 2,500 meals a day are prepared and dispatched. • local lawyer • privately funded Meals On Wheels in the country, and how their auxiliary, business • personal injury • criminal “Cuisine à Roulettes,” helps make their mission happen.

Monday, October 9th at 10:00am See where 2,500 meals a day are prepared and dispatched.

Daryl Twerdahl, Executive Director, will tell us how they became the largest

Daryl Twerdahl, Executive Director, will tell us how they became the largest

Then enjoy a delicious brunch right from their kitchen.

privately funded Meals On Wheels in the country, and how their auxiliary, “Cuisine à Roulettes,” helps make their mission happen. Then enjoy a delicious brunch right from their kitchen.

2303 Miramar Street Los Angeles, CA 90057 (Behind Vincent Medical Center) attorneySt.at law $25 per person, guests welcome

larry guzin ©LC0117

whose mission is to serve any homebound person in need, regardless of age, ethnicity, religion, disability or ability to pay. In 40 years, they have served over 27,000,000 meals – and still counting!

RSVP to Christine Bourdeau by October 5th 606 N. LARCHMONT BOuLevARd 306 Bora Bora Way, #303, Marina Del Rey, CA 90292 SuiTe 204 Information: 213-977-2992

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There is metered street parking around MOW and a small parking lot next (323) 932-1600 door. Carpools are encouraged. guzin & steier Kitchen Dress Code: Closed toe shoes, no jewelry except rings. larry.guzin@gmail.com attorneys at law

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$25 per person, guests welcome RSVP to Christine Bourdeau by October 5th 306 Bora Bora Way, #303, Marina Del Rey, CA 90292 Information: 213-977-2992

There is metered street parking around MOW and a small parking lot next door. Carpools are encouraged. Kitchen Dress Code: Closed toe shoes, no jewelry except rings.


Larchmont Chronicle

OCtOber 2017

DINERS at the June and Paul Bilgore home in Windsor Square included board and “canopy committee” members Scott Goldstein and Helen Hartung.

Around the Town

(Continued from page 14) After hors d’oeuvre and a variety of wines, an Italian buffet was served, followed by dessert provided by Larchmont’s Salt and Straw. • • • Our own man about town, Rafael de Marchena-Huyke, returned from Columbia University, where he received honors from one of the three

Windsor Square author retells story of Jane Eyre Aline Brosh McKenna, Windsor Square, will be answering questions about her new graphic novel, “Jane,” at Chevalier’s Books, 126 N. Larchmont Blvd., Sun., Oct. 1 at 5:30 p.m. McKenna, the screenwriter who adapted “The Devil Wears Prada” for film and created the CW show “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” will be at Chevalier’s to read and answer questions regarding her new work, “Jane,” a modern interpretation of Jane Eyre, taking place in New York City instead of Northern England, featuring a Mr. Rochester more akin to Bruce Wayne than a country gentleman. Artwork for the graphic novel is by cartoonist Ramon K. Perez. For more information, visit chevaliersbooks.com.

Cathedral Chapel Church turns 90 Save the date and help Cathedral Chapel of St. Vibiana, 922 S. Detroit St., celebrate its 90th anniversary in style at a Christmas fundraiser Sat., Dec. 16 at 6 p.m. The parish’s 90th liturgical mass celebration will be Sun., Dec. 17 at noon. If you don’t want to wait that long, a food festival takes place Sun., Oct. 29. For more information, call 323-930-5976, or visit cathedralchapel.org.

Fashions, champagne

A fashion show and champagne reception will be at the Woman’s Club of Hollywood, 1749 La Brea Ave., on Sat., Oct. 7 from 3 to 5 p.m.

BLOCK CAPTAIN Jack Humphreville (at right) is shown with wife, Susan, and WSA board member Gary Duff and Councilmember David Ryu.

universities where he has been giving scholarships, to hold a party in honor of Erik Putzbach, who was visiting from Barcelona. So on a mid-September Saturday afternoon, 60 guests came to Rafael’s Mid-Century marbled Las Palmas Ave. home for fruits, cheeses and a

gourmet buffet while taking in the host’s prolific art collection. Pianist Dan Manuel played Noel Coward tunes as Marlene Parker, Pamela Clay and Jan Katz serenaded guests with their talents. There from the area were: Irina and Jim Gibbons, Este and Lars Roos, Marcela

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WINDSOR SQUARE ASSN. annual block captain gathering included board member Kristen Mandel, block captain Wendy Werris, board member Regina Chung and WSA president Larry Guzin.

Ruble, Carol Werheim, Suz and Peter Landay, Katia and Gil Seton, Mery Gray, Edward Lozzy, Maralou Gray, Juan Carlos Gonzalez, Joe Carter and Greg Julian. And so another fall season begins, and that’s the chat!

RAFAEL de Marchena-Huyke (left) with his guest of honor, Erik Putzbach from Barcelona, Spain.

Fa l l Festiva l

SATU RDAY & SUNDAY • OC TOBER 14 & 15, 2017 Saturday

Time

Petting Zoo All-Alaskan Racing Pigs

11am-7pm Gilmore Lane Showtimes: 12, Gilmore Lane 2, 4 & 5:45pm 1, 3 & 5pm Gilmore Lane

Pedal Puller Races by All-Alaskan San Fernando Valley Banjo Band Pumpkin Carver Joe Harvest Knot Workshop w/ American Straw Earthworm Ensemble The Deltaz Pie-Eating Contest Pete Anderson The Wrecking Crew’s Farewell to Glen Campbell Deke Dickerson & the Ecco-Fonics

Location

11am-1pm

East Patio

12-5pm 12-5pm

Plaza Plaza

12 & 1:30pm 2:30-4:30pm 3pm 3-5pm 4:30-6:30pm

Plaza East Patio Plaza West Patio Plaza

6-8pm

West Patio

Sunday

Location Gilmore Lane Gilmore Lane Gilmore Lane East Plaza Plaza Plaza East Patio Plaza West Patio Plaza West Patio

Look for Fid d lin’ Dan & His Ban jo Bud dy, & Our Strolling Scarecrow All Weekend Long!

FREE! Schedule is subject to change.

Time

Petting Zoo 11am-7pm All-Alaskan Racing Pigs Showtimes: 12, 2, 4 & 5:45pm Pedal Puller Races 1, 3 & 5pm by All-Alaskan Jazz N’ Banjos 11am-1pm Patio Pumpkin Carver Joe 12-5pm Harvest Knot Workshop 12-5pm w/ American Straw Cow Bop 12-2pm Silver Mountain 2:30-4:30pm String Band Pie-Eating Contest 3pm Merle Jagger 2-4pm Doo-Wah Riders 4:30-6:30pm The Lucky Stars 5-7pm

6333 W. THIRD STREET • LOS ANGELES • 323.933.9211 FARMERSMARKETLA.COM • #FARMERSMARKETLA Insta


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Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

eNTerTaiNmeNT

Skewering Oscars in powerful comedic play about family, fame

Patricia Foster Rye Macfarlane), Michael’s partner. When Austin finally does arrive, he’s shattered, having come from a tragic event at an LGBT center where he was attending a celebratory happening. As the time nears for the Oscar show, the question is will Michael acknowledge the plight of the transgender community in his acceptance speech, should he win the Oscar? Veteran director Walter Bobbie has kept the comedic pace at a perfect pitch. Ultimately this oneact is about family and fame.

Walking to Buchenwald by Tom Jacobson centers on Schiller and Arjay, who talk Mildred (Laura James) and Roger (Ben Martin), Schiller’s parents, into a trip to Europe. The roles of Schiller and Arjay are played alternately, per performance, by either two women or two men. The night I saw it, Mandy Schneider played Schiller and Amielynn Abellera played Arjay. On the journey to Buchenwald, there are visits to stone

Playing the role listed as Others, kudos to Will Bradley who plays waiters, bus drivers, a body world corpse and several more characters, delineating them with great style. Through Sat., Oct. 21, Open Fist Theatre Company at the Atwater Village Theatre, 3269 Casitas Ave., 323-882-6912, openfist.org. 3 Stars

‘Taste’ drew crowd, winning raffle Restaurants were full of patrons at Hope-Net’s “Taste of Larchmont” 25th anniversary Aug. 28. The neighborhood event brought the community together while supporting the Hope-Net food pantry mission. Photographer Yoram Kahana donated photos for the silent auction. Winner of the grand prize raffle — dinner for two at 12 restaurants — was Yoram Kahana’s daughter, Tal. “It was a wonderful event to show my children the superb artist their grandfather is and their heritage of giving and supporting social justice and to taste the wonderful food of Larchmont,” said Tal. “My favorite photos that I have seen him donate are Janis Joplin and her Porsche,

VOLUNTEERS Michele Werdin and Barbara MacDonald with Mario Lazaridis at Le Petit Greek at Taste of Larchmont.

The Who, Jimi Hendrix, and an iconic photo of Hitchcock in profile,” she added. Douglas Ferraro, Hope-Net now-retired executive director, said the event raised about $50,000 and helped Hope-Net provide supplemental food for more than 300,000 persons in our local area.

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circles, a taxidermy museum, body world where corpses are displayed as anatomy lessons, plus bus and train trips. Opinions are voiced, family health issues are revealed and experienced. By the time we reach the Buchenwald memorial wall and learn of the dire news from back home, this family is forever changed.

Lunch & Dinner Every Day of the Year

Restaurant Hours: Mon. - Tues. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Wed. - Sat. 11 a.m. to midnight Sun. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Bar Open till 1:00 a.m. Mon.-Thurs. ~ 1:30 a.m. Fri., & Sat.

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©LC 0406

Theater Review

It’s a powerful evening at the theater, not to mention that it’s falling-down funny. Through Sun., Oct. 8, Center Theatre Group’s Kirk Douglas Theatre, 9820 Washington Blvd,. 213-628-2772, centertheatregroup.org. 4 Stars

LC0905

It is the night of the Oscars, the titular night referred to in Paul Rudnick’s new play The Big Night. Michael (Brian Hutchison) has been nominated for best supporting actor and his life is about to change in many ways. Michael is attending the big event, and his friends and family gather in his deluxe Beverly Hills hotel suite (spot on scenic design by John Lee Beatty), where the laughs are fast and very funny, skewering a variety of show biz institutions. The outstanding cast includes new agent Cary (Max Jenkins), Mother Esther (a wonderful Wendie Malick), who has a surprise of her own, Esther’s friend Eleanor (Kecia Lewis) and transgender nephew Eddie (Tom Phelan). Everyone’s there but Austin (Luke


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SeCtION tWO

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EnTERTAinMEnT

Going rogue: an experience that foodies will not want to miss

CHEFS Jeff Mora and Alan Latourelle, head chef at Rogue, plate up a course for 10 diners while Hilary Henderson, Chef de Cuisine from CUT in Beverly Hills, tends the stove.

$175 for dinner, you may as well go all in for an extra $85 and let the sommelier select complementary beverages. For two and a half to three hours, eight guests mingle, interact with the chefs, and indulge in creative dishes. We were greeted with freshly muddled strawberry and basil caipirinhas, mini biscuits with green tomato jam, crème fraîche and caviar, and small bowls of chopped hamachi with coconut flan and lemongrass. After the hors d’oeuvre, we were led through the kitchen, past equipment employed to dry, smoke, foam and vapor-

On the Menu by

Helene Seifer ize ingredients, and into the dining room. A long counter bisects the space; guest stools on one side, stoves and grills on the other. We settle in, and chefs and sous chefs begin. Four main chefs rotate presenting their dishes. We watch them work, which is standard at openkitchen environments, but we can also ask them questions about ingredients, techniques and inspiration to uncover how we ended up with, for example, a plate of creamy grits, langoustines and corn dippin’ dots. This was delicious and beautiful: the pale puddle of grits, the vibrant pink-orange of the langoustines, the tumble of tiny liquid nitrogen-frozen ice cream balls — a magical balance of hot, cold, briny and sweet. Gazpacho is a pale yellow coconut-oil-shelled orb bedecked with daikon curls on a bed of razor-thin sliced Persian cucumbers. Tap the

DINERS at the counter of Wolfgang Puck’s test kitchen, “The Rogue Experience,” at the Pacific Design Center.

sphere and it breaks open to release tomato water soup. Playful, light and delicate — this was a crowd-pleaser. A succession of crazy-wonderful dishes was presented: ocean trout poached in smoked butter; uni and seaweed with the ancient grain Job’s tears; sous vide and grilled octopus tentacle flavor-jolted with ginger harissa aioli; a parmesan foam-topped basket of coiled pasta-encased pancetta and an egg yolk as a deconstructed ode to spaghetti carbonara; perfectly cooked rib cap (the most flavorful portion of ribeye steak) enhanced by adorable pickled cucumber melons, a grape-sized fruit hybrid. Desserts included a smoked plum sorbet with white chocolate, plum coulis and a showy fan of plum slices. We retired to the courtyard fire pit for a glass of sauterne, the PDC architectural angles framing our views of the winking lights of West Hollywood. Reservations are available for two or four; only eight guests total are booked for each available night; Saturday buy-outs can seat up to 10. The Rogue Experience, 8687 Melrose Ave., 800-2758273. Dinner at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday – Saturday. Contact Helene at onthemenu@larchmontchronicle.com

Larchmont Chronicle Great Dining Ideas

Enjoy film, food, opera at PST:LA/LA Pacific Standard Time: Latin American and Latino Art in Los Angeles (PST: LA/LA) kicked off its five-month long series of events in September at Grand Park and at The Getty. “Pancho Villa From a Safe Distance,” an opera, is performed at the theater at the Ace Hotel, 933 S. Broadway, Tues., Oct. 10 at 8:30 p.m. The group Chicano Batman performs a concert at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Wed., Oct.

18 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. “Flavors of Mexico” at the Skirball Cultural Center, 1201 N. Sepulveda Blvd., explores regional cuisines in three classes beginning Tues., Oct. 24 at 7:30 p.m. Watch “Pan’s Labyrinth” (2006), directed by Guillermo del Toro, at Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 8949 Wilshire Blvd., Mon., Oct. 30, 7:30 p.m. There is much more through January 2018. Visit pacificstandardtime.org.

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18

Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

MUSEUM ROw Relax with sound; Clay LA Sept. 30 weekend, festival of lights at Zimmer JAPAN FOUNDATION— “Meditation with Japanese Singing Lin Bowl” combines healing properties of its Tibetan counterpart in two lunchtime sessions Wed., Oct., 4 at 12:30 and 1 p.m. Free. • Explore the Home of Japanese Mythology: Shimane, Thurs., Oct. 5 at 7 p.m. Free, RSVP resquired. • “Deities in Japanese Art: Buddhas,” in collaboration with LACMA, with lecturer Michael VanHartingsveldt, is Tues., Oct. 10. Free, RSVP required. Japanema: films screen the second and fourth Wednesday of every month at 7 p.m. Free. 5700 Wilshire Blvd., 323761-7510; jflalc.org. CRAFT AND FOLK ART MUSEUM—“Clay LA 2017” is Sat., Sept. 30 and Sun., Oct. 1 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Annual fundraiser includes clay activities, sale, activities, music and drinks. • “The US-Mexico Border: Place, Imagination and Possibility” ends Jan. 7. 5814 Wilshire Blvd., 323-

TAKE A SOUND BATH at the Japan Foundation.

937-4230; cafam.org; free on Sundays. LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART—“Chagall: Fantasies for the Stage” ends Jan. 7 • “Atmosphere in Japanese Painting,” opens Sept. 14. Ends Feb. 4, 2018. • “Found in Translation: Design in California and Mexico, 1915-1985,” ends April 1. • “A Tale of Two (16th century) Persian Carpets (One by One): The Ardabil and Coronation Carpets” ends July 8,

2018. • “Playing with Fire: Paintings by Carlos Almaraz” ends Dec. 3. • “Creatures of the Earth, Sea, and Sky: Painting the Panamanian Cosmos” ends April 15, 2018. • Free music programs feature Jazz at LACMA in the BP Grand Entrance Fridays at 6 p.m. through November. Latin Sounds is Saturdays at 5 p.m. in Hancock Park, through November. Sundays Live weekly cham-

ber music at 6 is in the Bing Theater year-round. 5905 Wilshire Blvd., 323857-6000; lacma.org. ZIMMER CHILDREN'S MUSEUM—Celebrate Sukkot building Sukkahs, meaning “booths,” Sun., Oct. 1 from 1 to 4 p.m. Decorate clay lamps in honor of Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, Sun., Oct. 15, 2 to 4 p.m. Combine Robert Rauschenberg and Picasso’s styles for their birthdays Sun., Ocwt 22 from 2 to 4 p.m. Make Monster Masks! Sun., Oct. 29 from 2 to 4 p.m. $1 off when you come in costume! 6505 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 100; 323-761-8984; zimmermuseum.org. LOS ANGELES MUSEUM OF THE HOLOCAUST— “Filming the Camps: From Hollywood to Nuremberg — John Ford, Samuel Fuller, Geroge Stevens,” on exhibit. • Annual gala, “Preserve the Legacy, Shape the Future,” is Sun., Nov. 5. CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer honored. Melissa Rivers emcees.

Docent-led tours are Sundays at 2 p.m.,; Holocaust survivor speaks at 3 p.m. Pan Pacific Park, 100 S. Grove Dr., 323-651-3704; lamoth. org. Always free. PETERSEN AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM—Annual gala and fundraiser is Sat., Oct. 14, 6 p.m. James Corden hosts. • “The High Art of Riding Low: Ranflas, Corazón e Inspiración” ends July 15, 2018. • “Seeing Red: 70 Years of Ferrari” ends April 2018. 6060 Wilshire Blvd., 323903-2277; petersen.org. LA BREA TAR PITS & MUSEUM—“Titans of the Ice Age: The La Brea Story in 3D” screens daily. Encounters with a (life-size puppet) sabertoothed cat are featured Fridays through Sundays. 5801 Wilshire Blvd., 323934-PAGE; tarpits.org. KOREAN CULTURAL CENTER—Annual art exhibition ends Oct. 5 . • Korean Movie Night Thurs., Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. 5505 Wilshire Blvd., 323936-7141; kccla.org.

Negative Doubles, Part IV: What to do if opener has a long suit? cannot be distributional. hands: As to the last rule above, 1. ♠ J5 2. ♠ J75 if opener has a long suit, six ♥ AQT864 ♥ AKT864 cards or more, or is 5–5–2–1, ♦8 ♦8 she should either rebid her ♣ AQT8 ♣ AK9 six-card suit, in the former, or Bidding is as follows: bid her second suit in the lat- You LHO Partner RHO ter. Look at the following two 1 Heart 2 Dia Pass Pass ? How do you, as opening bidder, respond with each? Hand 1: Two Hearts. This is not a hand with which you should use a reopening double. True, you have a singleton in your LHO’s suit. And, true, your partner is almost certainly sitting behind your LHO with a lot of Diamonds. But your hand has two shortcomings that make it inappropriate for a reopening double: • You don’t have tolerance for all unbid suits. Your Spade doubleton is insufficient for support if your partner responds to your double with a bid of 2 Spades. Remember, your partner might be short in your suit. So if you double and your partner doesn’t want to sit for the penalty double at the two level, she has to either support your suit if she has two cards in it, or bid her longest suit. If she has five Diamonds but not enough to swap your lawn for sustainable landscaping and get sit for the double, her lon$2 back per sq. ft through december 31st gest suit might be Spades. She could be 4–1–4–4, so she would be forced to bid Spades, and you can’t support her. • Your hand isn’t strong enough. You really only have two fairly certain tricks, your two Aces. Remember, you

As stated last month, requirements for a reopening double are as follows: • A reopening double is generally made by opening bidder after left-hand opponent (LHO) has overcalled and there are two passes by your

partner and your right-hand opponent (RHO). • Opening bidder has two or fewer cards in overcalled suit. • Opening bidder must have tolerance (at least 3 cards) for all unbid suits. • Opening bidder’s hand

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have to take six tricks to set them. Otherwise they’re going to get a terrific score, making two or more, doubled! Hand 2: Double. This is a very good hand with which to make a reopening double for two reasons: • You have tolerance for both unbid suits, so if your partner can’t support your

Bridge Matters by

Grand Slam Heart bid you have at least three cards in the unbid suits. The worst that can happen is that your partner will be playing in a 4–3 fit at the two level, not a disaster. • You have a good hand, with two Ace–King combinations. In a defense you have good trick-taking capability. Remember this: Just because you have an opening hand and shortness in LHO’s suit, you don’t automatically make a reopening double. Your hand must fit the requirements in addition to shortness and the appropriate bidding after open. Grand Slam is the nom de plume for an author of a bestselling book on bridge, an ACBL accredited director and a Silver Life Master.


OCtOber 2017

SeCtION tWO

MEMORIAL LIBRARY 4625 W. Olympic Blvd. 323-938-2732 Teens Teen Program: Mondays, Oct. 2, 16, 23 and 30 at 4 p.m. Adults First Friday book club: Meets Fri., Oct. 6 at 1 p.m. Computer class: Mondays, Oct. 2, 16, 23 and 30 at 10 a.m. Book sale: Tuesdays, 12:30 to 5 p.m. and Saturdays, 4 to 5:15 p.m. Tuesday @ the movies: Free movie Tuesdays at 5 p.m. Fun & games for adults: Board and card games Wednesdays at noon. Chess club: Fridays at 3 p.m. Knitting circle: Spin a yarn Saturdays at 10 a.m. FAIRFAX LIBRARY 161 S. Gardner St. 323-936-6191 Teens Teen Council: Tues., Oct. 3 at 1:15 p.m. Teen crafternoon: Tues., Oct. 10 at 4 p.m. Adults Book club: Tues., Oct. 3 at 10:30 a.m. First Thursday Film: Thurs., Oct. 5 at 2:30 p.m. Quilting guild: Sat., Oct. 7, 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Art of meditation: Sat., Oct. 14, 2 to 3 p.m. Computer class: Mondays, Oct. 2, 16, 23 and 30 at 1:30 p.m. MS support group: Thurs., Oct. 19, 6 p.m. Book sale: Wednesdays from noon to 4 p.m. English conversation: Practice Wednesdays, 6 to 7:30 p.m. FREMONT LIBRARY 6121 Melrose Ave. 323-962-3521 Children Homework tutoring: Mondays, Oct. 2, 16, 23 and 30 at 3:30 p.m. BARK: Kids read to therapy dogs Thurs., Oct. 12 at 4 p.m. STAR: Volunteers read with kids Tuesdays, 3 to 5 p.m.; Saturdays noon to 2 p.m. Baby and toddler storytime: Wednesdays, 10:30 and 11 a.m. Teens Mexican paper flowers: Make flowers out of tissue paper Tues., Oct. 10, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. U.C. Insight Questions: Study sessions Mon., Oct. 30, 5:30 to 7 p.m. Adults Book sale: Fri., Oct. 6, 12 to 4 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 7, 12 to 5 p.m. Book club: Tues., Oct. 10 at 6:30 p.m. Crochet circle: All levels welcome, Fri., Oct. 13 from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Movie night: Tues., Oct. 17, 6 p.m.

Tamale making: Sat., Oct. 21, noon to 2 p.m. Spray tie-dye: Craft program Wed., Oct. 24 at 3 p.m. French conversation: Practice your skills Thurs., Oct. 26 at 5:30 p.m. Genealogy class: Sat., Oct. 28, 2 to 3:30 p.m. WILSHIRE LIBRARY 149 N. St. Andrews Pl. 323-957-4550 Children Baby sleepy storytime: Mondays, Oct. 2, 16, 23 and 30, 6 to 6:15 p.m. Papel picado: Mexican cut paper crafts, Tues., Oct. 2, from 4 to 5 p.m. Preschool storytime: For kids ages 3 to 5, Thursdays at 3 p.m. Teens Halloween and Day of the Dead: Crafts, Thurs., Oct. 26

at 4 p.m. Placement test workshop: Fridays, 12:30 to 3 p.m. Adults Cookies and comic books: For teens and adults, Tues., Oct. 17, 6:30 p.m. Screenprinting workshop: All ages can create silkscreened posters inspired by Oaxacan imagery Thurs., Oct. 19, 4 to 6 p.m. Mobile devices: Learn how to use mobile devices Wed., Oct. 25 at 4 p.m. Citizenship and financial literacy: Saturdays at 10 a.m.

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Larchmont Chronicle


20

Larchmont Chronicle

OCTObEr 2017

SECTION TWO

Home & Garden

Old trees, new plantings create an oasis on Lucerne Blvd. The front yard has taken on a life of its own since the grass died. “It didn’t survive the drought,” Peter explained last month in the heat of summer. He tilled the soil, turning the dirt with a shovel for two weeks, and then together they pulled lots and lots of weeds. By April, their front yard was ready for new plantings. A neighbor across the street contributed rose cuttings which were planted along with salvia, lion’s tail, arti-

choke and verbena. Purple orchid trees arrived via the city’s free Million Trees LA program. Stepping stones and a seating area were made from remnants of a neighbor’s back yard concrete slab. The plants have bloomed, and the garden has become a hummingbirds’ paradise, and is admired by passersby. Old olive and pine trees and volcanic rock here and there add character. “They make a difference,” notes Grace. A retired pharmacist (he

still works on call), Peter has tended to the garden since the couple moved here in 1984 and raised two daughters in the home. “I like getting my hands dirty,” says Peter. “It’s instant gratification,” adds Grace. And the colorful retreat is a welcome respite in the city, just a stone’s throw from busy Larchmont Blvd.

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GARDEN has bloomed since plantings in April, said Grace Wong.

A harvest moon festival and an evening with Edgar Allen Poe and Edward Gorey are some ways to enjoy autumn this month at Huntington Library, 1151 Oxford Rd., San Marino. Stroll around the Chinese garden tasting sweet moon cakes and listening to music Tues., Oct. 3, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. See tales by Edgar Allen Poe and Edward Gorey enacted under the stars Thurs., Oct. 28 from 6:30 to 10 p.m. For more information, visit huntington.org.

EXOTIC fruit trees include the bright red wax apple.

‘Forest of Light’ returns to Descanso Enjoy a Southern California winter evening under the stars in the midst of magical lights while walking through Descanso Gardens, 1418 Descanso Dr., La Cañada Flintridge, beginning Sun., Nov. 19. Tickets go on sale to members starting Mon., Oct. 2. Tickets go on sale to the general public Mon., Oct. 16. The exhibit runs through Sun., Jan. 7, 2018. Visit descansogardens.org.

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By Suzan Filipek When Grace Wong was a child in Malaysia, she and her friends would get together to eat fruit. “We had nothing else to do,” she said. “But, we ate healthy,” added Peter Wong. These days Grace tends to rows of orchids at the couple’s N. Lucerne Blvd. home. Peter tends to trees laden with exotic fruits: wax apple, persimmon, apple pear and star fruit among them.


Larchmont Chronicle

OCtOber 2017

SeCtION tWO

21

Home & Garden

Sowing wildflowers, plant sale A fall plant sale and sowing seeds for wildflowers are on the agenda at the Theodore Payne Foundation, 10459 Tuxford St., Sun Valley. Get tips on sowing autumn seeds for spring wildflowers, Sat., Oct. 7, 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. A variety of plants, seeds and bulbs will be on sale Thurs., Oct. 26 to Sat., Oct. 28, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Staff will be available for help and advice. Member discount is 15 percent; non-member discount is 10 percent after 11 a.m. For more information go to theodorepayne.org.

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MAJESTIC STONE, above, was inspired by Cameron Taylor-Brown’s travels to Machu Picchu.

Hi LarcHmont customers,

Cameron Taylor-Brown’s exhibit, “Fiber Trails,” opens Sat., Oct. 7, with a reception from 3 to 6 p.m. at Branch Gallery for the Fiber Arts, 1031 W. Manchester Blvd. in Inglewood. Works by the S. Mansfield

Ave. resident were inspired by her travels to Bhutan, the Peruvian Highlands, India and the Galapagos Islands. A presentation by the artist is Sat., Oct. 21 at 2 p.m. and will include images of landscapes, people and their tra-

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ditional textiles, and she will discuss how her travels influence her artwork. Taylor-Brown will also lead a workshop on Sat., Oct. 28 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Her work Majestic Stone is part of her Fiber Trails series, inspired by her visit to Machu Picchu. “Fiber Trails celebrates the rich heritage and internaitonal language of textiles. Where there are people there is cloth,” says the artist. The show ends Nov. 3. For more information visit thebranchgallery.com.

Bertha has some great new housewares products that she wants everyone to see here at Koontz. As the former manager of Larchmont Hardware and now current buyer for the Koontz Hardware, she has put together a few of her favorites just for you! Bright new enamel-coated colanders and strainers in your favorite fun colors. These whimsical and functional kitchen necessities are perfectly suited to display on your counter with your fresh fall vegetables. Stack-able, Nest-able Glass-Lock storage containers. Keeps your food sealed and fresh when in use, and keeps itself out of the way for storage. And, new this month, we have rolling shopping baskets that transform to standard carrying baskets with a retractable handle. Two convenient ways to help carry your goodies Be sure to say “Hello” next time you’re in.

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(Continued from page 9) to speak, for J. Edgar Hoover. More successful was the 1947 10-unit Avenel Cooperative Housing Project in Silver Lake. (Among its 10 original members, at least four were blacklisted or otherwise questioned by investigators.) It was placed in 2005 on the

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tial commissions in Hancock Park, Larchmont Village and other places nearby. Hancock Park resident, Brooke Anderson, found her much neglected single-family Ain-designed home in 2002. She had grown up in a mid-century house — minimalist to the maximum. “The house itself was the art,” she says. When she saw the Ain house, “the sense of proportion and space were oddly familiar. I knew I had come home again.” She hired architect Dennis Gibbons for the remodel, and Larchmont’s own garden designer Judy Horton to redesign three small gardens. They worked from Julius Schulman’s 1930s photographs of the gardens — a bit of astonishing good fortune. Whither the MoMA house? But good fortune seems to elude an answer to the question of what happened to the Ain house that stood in the MoMA garden. It is the question posed, but not answered, by a recent exhibit at New York City’s Center for Architecture (tinyurl. com/yaac5ojv) entitled “This Future Has a Past.” The exhibition was organized by Katherine Lambert, AIA, IIDA, and Christiane Robbins (a former Avenel Coop resident in Los Angeles). The two researchers

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followed leads that included Ain’s FBI file and the MoMA archives, neither of which gives any indication of what happened to the 1950 house once it was dismantled. According to the “New York Times,” Robbins is working on a documentary film about Ain, who left Los Angeles in 1963 to become dean of Penn State’s School of Architecture. But ill health and the aftermath of McCarthyism allegations plagued him, and he returned to Los Angeles in 1967, his career essentially over.

Hans Weisshaar (Continued from page 7)

the art of violin making, restoration, and the violin trade. Like many of its clients, music runs in the family. Georg plays the violin, cello and piano, while Ann is a flautist. Their twin sons, students at San Marino High and Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, play the violin and cello respectively. For more information, or to make an appointment, call 323-466-6293 or visit hansweisshaar.com.

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SECTION TWO

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Larchmont Chronicle

OCtOber 2017

SeCtION tWO

23

This strange bogeyman was used to keep women agreeable

Bill Bentley

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ProfessorKnowIt-All

lish editor of Victorian times who rewrote Shakespeare and other classical works, removing all profanity and sexual references so as not to offend the sensibilities of the audiences of the day. • • • Is there such a word as “interlard?” asks Toby March. Yes. It means to insert, or mingle; especially to introduce something foreign or irrelevant into a mix. It comes from the Middle French entrelarder, which referred to placing lard or bacon in a casserole, mixing fat with lean. • • • How come a leader of a movement or activity is a “bellwether?” ponders Tina

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For rent

Larchmont ExEcutivE SuitES

ServiceS

A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest 200 N. Larchmont Blvd. senior living Lovely 2nd flr. off. space. referral service. Avail. 6/1. Approx.250 sq ft. Pkg, garden patio, view, balcony, conference rm, kitchen,receptionist. $1200/mo. Contact Miranda

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For Sale

Canada Drug Center

Community

Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! Call our licensed Canadian & Int'l pharmacy, & get $25.00 OFF your 1st one!

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Happy Halloween!

©LC1017

Why is something unintelligible called “mumbo-jumbo?” queries Debbie Forward. The first mention of this oft-used term is in “Travels in the Interior of Africa” (179597) by the English explorer Mungo Park. He states that “Mumbo-Jumbo” is a strange bogeyman common to all native settlements, and much employed by the men in keeping their wives in subjection. When the ladies of the household become too quarrelsome, Mumbo-Jumbo is called in. He is usually a husband or other local man suitably disguised, who comes at nightfall making hideous noises. Once the offending lady is produced, Mumbo has her stripped naked, tied to a post,


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Larchmont Chronicle


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