Where Los Angeles, July 2011

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JULY 2011 WHERELA.COM

Los Angeles

®

Celebrating 75 years of Where

LOCALS TO KNOW 10 INTERESTING ANGELENOS AND WHERE YOU MIGHT MEET THEM

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CIRQUE DU SOLEIL’S IRIS STREET FOOD FESTIVALS REID SCOTT OF THE BIG C WHAT’S HOT IN L.A. KITCHENS

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AWESOME ANGELENOS JULY

where Los Angeles 07.11 the guide 74 DINING Restaurants by cuisine and neighborhood

103 ENTERTAINMENT Special events, performing arts and sports

103 ATTRACTIONS + MUSEUMS Sights, parks, studio tours and exhibitions

110 SHOPPING The best in retail destinations

112 NIGHTLIFE Hottest clubs, lounges and bars

118 BEACHES Popular spots from Malibu to Long Beach

120 TOURS + TRANSPORT Getting out, getting around

123 MAPS Navigate the county

whereabouts

where now

features

12 Dining Coolhaus and Flying Pig Café

20 Angelenos to Know We profile 10 movers and shakers who help make L.A. the most exciting, dynamic and creative hub in America. Plus, where you might meet them.

14 Entertainment Street food festivals Natural History Museum’s Dinosaur Hall 16 Shopping Hip’tique in Santa Monica Rebecca Minkoff and Marimekko

BY KATIE MCCARTHY

70 Hot in the Kitchen Black garlic! Fregola! Stinging nettle! Learn about the exotic, innovative ingredients making their way onto finedining menus and where to sample these trendy morsels. BY ROGER GRODY

Beverly Hills Santa Monica West Hollywood Hollywood Downtown Pasadena The Valley South Bay

ALSO INSIDE 8 11 18 128

A NOTE FROM THE EDITOR HOT DATES Cirque du Soleil’s Iris Q+A Actor Reid Scott 75 THINGS WE LOVE

ON THE COVER Entrepreneur Mitchell Frank at his latest venture, downtown restaurant Más Malo. Photo by Amy K. Fellows. CONNECT WITH US ONLINE

wheretraveler.com Get the city buzz from Where editors worldwide online and on your smartphone.

DIANE CU

70

Hatfield’s on Melrose Avenue

34 38 42 48 52 56 62 66

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Getaway to The Grove This month, The Grove fans had a ball in sun-kissed colors and breezy looks styled by J.Crew. With music, food and wine, it was another fun-filled evening at The Grove. See more photos at ilovethegrovela.com and tell us why you love The Grove. We hope to capture your smile next month!

of Kids C

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of the trolley.

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thegrovela.com The Grove

@TheGroveLA

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where M AG A Z INE

On the Web: WhereLA.com

PUBLISHER Jeff Levy EDITOR IN CHIEF Benjamin Epstein ART DIRECTOR Bree Berri EDITOR

Katie McCarthy

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Nicole Bordges MARKETING DIRECTOR Audrey Nimura ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR PRODUCTION ARTIST

Heidi Schwindt

Ryan Furuya

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Leah Bigelow, Suzanne Ennis, E.C. Gladstone, Roger Grody, Anne-Marie Otey, Libby Slate CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

Idris Erba, Sarah Hadley, Amy K. Fellows, Bjarne G. Jensen, Vladimir Perlovich, Edwin Santiago, Ashok Sinha ACCOUNT MANAGERS

Sara Kemp, Mali Mochow, Laura Napolitano, Frank Horan, Heather Howard, Joanna McLean, Scott O’Hanlon SENIOR CIRCULATION & SPECIAL EVENTS MANAGER

Christine Noriega

PRODUCTION MANAGER Dawn Kiko Cheng WEB MANAGER Christina Xenos ADMINISTRATION

Jordan Fraser, Leanne Killian, Beth Moline VICE PRESIDENT OF NATIONAL SALES Rick Mollineaux 202.463.4550 WEST COAST NATIONAL SALES Tiffany Reinhold 714.813.6600 DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL DIGITAL SALES Bridget Cody 706.821.6663 HONORARY PRESIDENT

Ted Levy

where Los Angeles

3679 Motor Ave., Suite 300 Los Angeles, California 90034 Phone: 310.280.2880 Fax: 310.280.2890 EMAIL Advertising Nicole.Bordges@WhereLA.com Business JLevy@WhereLA.com Editorial Katie.McCarthy@WhereLA.com Art Art@WhereLA.com Production Ads@WhereLA.com Circulation Christine.Noriega@WhereLA.com Plan for your next visit to Los Angeles. Subscribe to where: single copy $4, 12 issues $36. Contact: Christine Noriega, Phone: 310.280.2880 Email: Christine.Noriega@WhereLA.com © 2011 Southern California Media Group. All rights reserved. Published by Southern California Media Group. where makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of the information it publishes, but cannot be held responsible for any consequences arising from errors or omissions. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part strictly prohibited. where is a registered trademark of Morris Visitor Publications.

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V I S I T O U R LO S A N G E L E S Q U I KS I LV E R STO R E S UNIVERSAL CITYWALK

3RD STREET PROMENADE

where Los Angeles magazine is pleased to be a member of: Greater Los Angeles Convention and Visitors Bureau, Santa Monica Area Chamber of Commerce, California Restaurant Association, CalTIA, Beverly Hills Chamber of Commerce, Los Angeles Concierge Association.

A MAGGIE AWARD-WINNING PUBLICATION BEST CONSUMER VISITOR’S GUIDE

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May 29-OCTOBER 31

Tim Burton Los Angeles County Museum of ART

^

Tim Burton, Untitled (Vincent), 1982, private collection, Š Disney Enterprises, Inc.

Reserve Your Tickets In Advance! Ensure prime viewing days and times by ordering your tickets today at lacma.org. 5905 Wilshire blvd (at fairfax ave)

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Welcome

A note from the editor

CLASSIC

AMERICAN FOOTWEAR

8493 Sunset Blvd (at La Cienega) West Hollywood, CA 323.650.0475 www.bootstaronline.com

I find occasion to make a dessert about as often as I change the oil in my car. And when I find this occasion, I do my best to lose it. But I couldn’t pass up a course in the art of baking from Richard Ruskell, executive pastry chef at the Montage Beverly Hills. Google “Richard Ruskell cakes” and you’ll understand: Ruskell, a cake maker extraordinaire who just won Last Cake Standing, is as much a chef as an artist. His once-a-month Yes You Can Desserts classes at the Montage, open to the public, are designed to guide less experienced cooks through approachable recipes such as blackout cake and chocolate mousse. “I hear from so many people that they can’t do desserts,” Ruskell says. After one of these classes, he explains, “You can walk away thinking, ‘I can do that.’ “ As we watched him whip up two kinds of icebox cookies in Scarpetta’s glorious exhibition kitchen, he dispensed informed and hilarious tips: “Always scrape the bowl!” “Don’t overwork the flour!” “Gluten is our enemy!” As valuable as a lesson in baking Belgian speculoos might be, Ruskell is the real reason to go. A charming personality with a love of all things sweet, he’s a shining example of an Angeleno: friendly, interesting, ambitious and, above all, creative and passionate. Not surprising given his composure in front of an audience, the chef actually studied acting as a young man. “When I got tired of sleeping on a foam rubber mattress in New York,” he says, “I thought I’d go to culinary school.” If a foiled acting career isn’t the story of half the successful people in this town, what is? Meet Ruskell and nine other interesting locals in Angelenos to Know, p. 20. And for an in-person introduction, get thee to the Montage on July 27 for “Buttercream—Be Not Afraid!” —KATIE McCARTHY

EDWIN SANTIAGO

HE TAKES THE CAKE

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hollywood on hollywood blvd. • +1-323-464-7625 at universal citywalk • +1-818-622-7625 hardrock.com ©2011 Hard Rock International (USA), Inc. All rights reserved. SeeTheShow™

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Hot Dates 07.11 Cirque du Soleil interprets the gangster film in Iris, playing at the Kodak Theatre

What’s sizzling in seconds flat

OPENING JULY 2 POSSIBLE WORLDS Alternate worlds are created out of unconventional materials at Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The installation by Mario Ybarra Jr. and Slanguage Studio features assemblage, folk art, vernacular graphics, images of the historic Watts Towers and art from the LACMA collection. p. 109 JULY 2–4 FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR Hall & Oates and fireworks—what could be more American? Daryl Hall and John Oates join the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra in Hollywood to perform their classic hits. Plus, an awe-inspiring fireworks display set to classic American tunes celebrates the USA’s 235th birthday. p. 103 THROUGH JULY 10 SUPERIOR DONUTS In Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tracy Letts’ new production, Gary Cole, Kathryn Joosten, Edi Gathegi and other L.A. theater veterans take on the eclectic personalities of a Chicago neighborhood. The provocative comedy about an unlikely friendship entertains at Geffen Playhouse in Westwood Village. p. 103 JULY 12 TASTE OF FARMERS MARKET The annual tasting tour returns to celebrate the founding of the Famers Market 77 years ago with tastes from 50 restaurants and grocers, cooking demonstrations and more. Cuisines offered include Cajun, Brazilian, Singaporean, Asian, Mexican, Spanish and Italian. p. 103

OPENING JULY 21

Mark Dulong © 2011 Cirque du Soleil

Reel Cool Watch out, Vegas! L.A. has finally earned its own Cirque du Soleil spectacle, fittingly themed around the history of film. The longanticipated Iris: A Journey Through the World of Cinema, written and directed by director-choreographer Philippe Decouflé, opens at Hollywood’s Kodak Theatre; home of the Academy Awards ceremony, it will be the exclusive host to this production. Described as a “lyrical, fanciful, kinetic foray into the seventh art,” Iris uses dance, acrobatics, live video, filmed sequences and animation to tell the history of cinema and its genres. More than 70 performers don 200 costumes for the show, which is scored by Grammy and Emmy Award winner and L.A. native Danny Elfman. p. 103 NEARBY Adjacent to the Kodak Theatre, the Hollywood & Highland Center (p. 111) has dozens of boutiques plus dining options such as Rolling Stone Restaurant & Lounge (p. 76). You can ogle wax figures of celebrities at Madame Tussauds Hollywood (p. 105), in walking distance. Hemingway’s (p. 114) makes a stylish after-show cocktail spot.

Y

JULY 25–27 DODGERS VS. ROCKIES The Boys in Blue play a three-game series against Western Division rivals the Colorado Rockies. Root, root, root for the home team at Dodger Stadium in Chavez Ravine—and don’t forget to pick up a Doyer Dog (that’s a nacho cheese-and-jalapeño Dodger Dog). p. 103 JULY 28–31 X GAMES 17 ESPN kicks off its annual sports competition downtown, with more than 200 athletes at competition and event venues including Staples Center and Nokia Theatre L.A. Live. New this year, Enduro X showcases riders’ talent on an all-terrain obstacle course, and a rally-car racing circuit runs through downtown. p. 103 JULY 30 L.A. RISING Rage Against the Machine and Muse are the headlining acts of this alt-rock music festival at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Exposition Park. The event also features performances by Rise Against, Lauryn Hill, Immortal Technique and El Gran Silencio. p. 103 Here for the weekend? Go to WhereLA.com for our Weekend Roundup, where you can get the lowdown on the coolest festivals, performing arts events, dining promotions and more.

Before the Kodak Theatre hosted the Academy Awards, the ceremony was held at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and Shrine Auditorium.

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where now Los Angeles

The best in dining, entertainment and shopping.

» DINING The food truck trend caused more than a few restaurants to start turning out meals on wheels, but a couple of popular trucks have established brick-and-mortar eateries. Coolhaus Ice Cream Sandwiches (8588 Washington Blvd., Culver City, 310.424.5559) sells its “architecturally themed” dessert sandwiches alongside Blue Bottle Coffee drinks. Ice cream flavors such as mango saffron or brown butter with candied bacon are smooshed between cookies including ginger molasses and red velvet. The Flying Pig Cafe (141 S. Central Ave., Little Tokyo, 213.621.0300), offshoot of the Flying Pig Truck, offers Asian-and Pacific Rim-inspired eats like peanut butter carnitas and duck confit fried rice. Check ‘em out— no Twitter consultation necessary.

JOLIE RUBEN/TIME OUT NYC

Truck Stop

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findindulgence indulgence All my obligAtions were A memory. i’d reAched my destinAtion And wAs free to luxuriAte in shopping, dining And relAxing – All in one plAce. i cAn’t imAgine A better rewArd for myself thAn the gift of pAmpering. Treat yourself to our exclusive collection of 250 prominent retailers including: Coach BOSS Hugo Boss Michael Kors Marc Ecko Cut & Sew Apple Godiva Lucky Brand Jeans The Disney Store LEGO L’Occitane Receive a FREE GIFT when you mention Where Magazine at Guest Services, adjacent to Apple.

FIND IT ALL HERE FIRST. Nordstrom, Macy’s, Target, JCPenney. 250 great stores & eateries. Located at the 5 Freeway, exit Colorado Blvd.

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WHERE NOW Los

Angeles ENTERTAINMENT

NHM News

Tyrannosaurus rex growth series at the Natural History Museum’s new Dinosaur Hall

In one of the first stages of a seven-year transformation at the Natural History Museum in Exposition Park, the 14,000-square-foot Dinosaur Hall opens July 16. The permanent exhibition, twice the size of the previous dinosaur displays, is presented in two two-story galleries. The hall’s biggest boast is its Tyrannosaurus rex growth series, the first in the world, which presents fossil specimens of the youngest known baby T. rex, a rare juvenile and a remarkably complete young adult. The exhibition also features some 300 fossils, 20 fully articulated skeletons, physical and digital interactive displays and video. Other standouts include a never-before-mounted triceratops, a 68-foot long-necked mamenchisaurus and giant reptiles that lived in the oceans covering what is today California. Two-thirds of the full-body specimens have never been displayed before. p. 109

Two festivals this month celebrate the street food of L.A. The Eat Real Festival, July 16–17, takes over Culver City’s Helms Bakery District with local street food vendors, placing an emphasis on sustainable ingredients. There are also a Craft Marketplace with artisan food products, a Beer Shed serving small-batch local beers and a Wine Barn featuring SoCal vineyards. Stages offer cooking demonstrations, live music and readings. Every dish costs $5 or less. The massive L.A. Street Food Fest, July 16, in Pasadena’s Brookside Park presents three sessions—two in the daytime, one in the evening—with 80 street food vendors offering treats from trucks, stands and carts. There are also demos by celebrity chefs, beer gardens and cocktail bars, and live music and DJs. p. 103

Food truck at the Eat Real Festival

EAT REAL, MICHAEL HALBERST

STREET EATS

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where now Los

Angeles

Hip’tique in Santa Monica

» SHOppiNG Hop to Hip’tique New to Main Street in Santa Monica’s row of hip boutiques is the aptly named Hip’tique. Curated by owner Christine Berardi, the inviting, light-filled shop offers a women’s clothing selection that includes Los Angeles brands such as LnA, Blu Democracy, C & C California and Habitual mixed with pieces from labels such as Halston Heritage, Poleci, Nanette Lepore, Twenty8Twelve and Black Halo. For non-garment goodies, Hip’tique also offers an array of accessories, furnishings and gifts—think costume jewelry from Dannijo and Deity Jewels, FEED Project bags, Booda Butter and Red Flower body products, Roost home décor items and Alexis Hudson handbags. 2727 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.399.6106

POPPING UP Two new pop-up shops offer a surprisingly deep selection of a duo of hip brands. Menswear boutique Confederacy (4661 Hollywood Blvd., Los Feliz, 323.913.3040), owned by actor Danny Masterson and celebrity stylist Iliaria Urbinati, has added a Rebecca Minkoff store-in-store. The array of merchandise includes the New York-based designer’s urban-chic handbags and wallets, footwear and women’s ready-to-wear

collections. At the Grove’s Crate & Barrel (189 The Grove Drive, L.A., 323.297.0370) boutique, there’s a wildly colorful pop-up shop from Marimekko. Known for its whimsical patterned fabrics and bright colors, the Finnish brand’s shop offers furniture, textiles, bedding, home décor items, kitchenware and tabletop accessories. There are also bags, travel cases and apparel and accessories for youth and babies.

Linen Spark satchel by Rebecca Minkoff

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Q+A

Last we saw “Dr. Todd,” Cathy (played by Linney) had rejected his romantic advances. Can you offer any hints of what’s to come this season? I can’t give anything away, but let’s just say their relationship takes a little turn. You’ll see.

GREAT SCOTT He may not be the TV physician to have inspired the “McDreamy” moniker, but Reid Scott, aka Dr. Todd Mauer on Showtime’s The Big C, can’t be lacking for admirers. The actor has returned for the series’ second season, airing all month, playing the alluring oncologist to Laura Linney’s terminal cancer patient, Cathy Jamison. Previously best known for his role on the TBS series My Boys and for portraying yet another doctor on ABC Family’s The Secret Life of the American Teenager, he stars alongside Julia Louis-Dreyfus in the forthcoming HBO series Veep as a scheming politician. In his free time, Scott enjoys skiing, surfing and playing music. Born and raised in New York, he now lives in Hollywood with his beloved pit bull, Bella.

Your new pilot for HBO, Veep, has gotten a lot of great buzz. Can you tell me about your role in it? I play this total snake-in-thegrass press secretary who sells out the senator he works with for a shot at the VP’s team. Complete [jerk]. Type-casting at its best. You’re a fashionable man—and a rare one who likes to shop. Where in L.A. can a guy go to get great clothes? Well, when I’m not “borrowing” things from shoots, I sort of just impulse buy. There’s a bunch of cool stuff up and down Abbot

Kinney in Venice. And Alternative Apparel. I’m all about comfort. As a musician, you must know some great spots to hear live music. I haven’t played out in a long time, but Hotel Cafe, The Troubadour, the El Rey—all great spots. L.A. is really an embarrassment of riches when it comes to live music. When you get a chance to go surfing, what are your favorite beaches? In L.A., I usually just hit Sunset or Malibu, but I live half the time in NYC, so when I can I get out to Montauk. When you hang in your neighborhood, what are some of your go-to spots? I live in Hollywood, so there’s a ton of places to go. Big fan of Harvard & Stone for a drink and some music, and Street for a good bite. And that Kogi truck is damn good, too, wherever it is. Details Alternative Apparel 1337 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.482.3316 El Rey Theatre 5515 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.936.6400 Harvard & Stone 5221 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.6063 The Hotel Cafe 16231/2 Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood, hotelcafe. com Kogi BBQ 323.315.0253, kogibbq.com Sunset Beach 17300 Sunset Blvd., Pacific Palisades Susan Feniger’s Street 742 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, 323.203.0500 The Troubadour 9081 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, troubadour.com

damian sandone

On The Big C, you’ve worked with other incredible actors including Laura Linney, Oliver Platt and Liam Neeson. Do you have any memorable stories from the set to share? Working with this cast has been amazing. Laura, Oliver, John Hickey—incredible. There was an episode in season one where Liam Neeson guest starred as a bee sting therapist. We had this jar full of literally hundreds of bees. Every once in a while the stunt guy would come in to give the jar a little shake, just to wake them up a bit. And I’m standing there kind of freaking out because I’m deathly allergic to bees. I whispered that to Laura and she just looked at me and said, “Good luck.”

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c t c la

M V


AT THE INTERSECTION OF PAST & PRESENT.

ince 1934, the Original Farmers Market has stood at the crossroads of Los Angeles history and culture. Today, it remains one of the last of the Hollywood legends, attracting people from all over the world to enjoy its eclectic mix of restaurants, grocers, shops and the best people watching the city has to offer. In a world ruled by change, the Original Farmers Market stands as an enduring landmark, steadfast at the junction of then and now, on the corner of Third and Fairfax.

Market events and activities throughout the year. Visit www.farmersmarketla.com for calendars and updates.

®

“MEET ME AT THIRD

&

FAIRFAX”

6333 W. THIRD ST., LOS ANGELES, CA 90036 • 323.933.9211 OR 866.993.9211 MONDAY–FRIDAY 9AM–9PM • SATURDAY 9AM–8PM • SUNDAY 10AM–7PM 010-19_WhereNow_WLA.indd 19

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MITCHELL FRANK | REsTAuRATEuR + ENTREpRENEuR

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ANGELENOS TO KNOW It would be impossible for L.A. to be the most exciting, dynamic and creative hub in America without an ambitious crop of innovators setting the scene. In the most diverse city in the country, there’s certainly no single image of the exceptional Angeleno. But such stars exist in professional categories of all kinds, making the L.A. galaxy a little brighter. Here are 10 individuals who, in their own unique way, make this city a more inspiring place. Learn who they are, what they do and where you might meet them. BY k atie m c carthy Photography by Amy k. Fellows

Mitchell Frank jokes that his job entails his “Nespresso machine, emails, office, meetings, music, tequila tastings and lots of Mexican food.” It’s actually a pretty accurate survey of a typical day in his life as a music, nightlife and dining entrepreneur. Among myriad career pursuits, the soft-spoken, bespectacled dynamo who founded the legendary Spaceland rock club in Silver Lake is a managing member of Echo LLC, which manages the Echo and Echoplex music clubs. Frank’s restaurant empire with partner Jeff Ellermeyer includes the stylish Mexican restaurant/lounge Malo, a neighborhood standby in Silver Lake since 2003. You might see the downtown resident hanging at his latest project with Ellermeyer, an even grander version of Malo recently opened downtown called—what else?—Más Malo. EARLY DAYS / “Food, drink and music have always been essential to me. When I first started out, I would host monthly parties and they became way too crowded to be fun. It was really a natural progression of things. I fell in love with live music, mostly indie rock, which was just on the brink at the time, and then it morphed into starting/booking a live music venue.”

HIGH NOTES / “For me, working with the best indie rock bands and singer-songwriters. Witnessing the evolution of a band starting out in my venue and then selling out the Hollywood Bowl never ceases to amaze me. Giving an artist a platform to perform is my inspiration, and something I’m very thankful for. Opening up Más Malo was my partner’s and my pièce de résistance. I’m extremely proud of it—the food, drinks and architecture are all phenomenal.” WHY L.A.? / “I would say east of Western Avenue has been dreamy for my lifestyle. It’s way too glossy in West L.A. I love the big melting pot on this side of town. Early on, I learned to have a sense of community and to take ownership of my neighborhood. I’m very proud to have contributed to the development of Silver Lake, Echo Park and now downtown.” LOCAL FAVES / “Café Stella for the Benjamin, Rivera for the pork chop, Colori Kitchen for the cioppino, Lazy Ox Canteen and Gorbals for everything, Trails for the chocolate milk. The Varnish has great cocktails. La Descarga for the fantastic rum and the revue.”

OFF-TIME HOBBY / “Racquetball—very competitively. I also do like to play piano when I get the chance.” DREAM DINNER GUEST / “I’d love to have a dinner party with any of the following: [Jean-Luc] Godard, Brian Eno, Henry Rollins, Chris Burden, Robbie Canal, Barbara Kruger. I’m sure there are more, but all have made an impact on how I work and think.” L.A. MOMENT / “Meeting Arthur Lee as a kid at a bus stop. Then, years later, having him perform several times at my venues.” Café Stella 3932 W. Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake, 323.666.0265 Colori Kitchen 429 W. 8th St., downtown, 213.622.5950 The Echo/ Echoplex 1822 W. Sunset Blvd., Echo Park; 1154 Glendale Blvd., Echo Park. 213.413.8200 The Gorbals 501 S. Spring St., downtown, 213.488.3408 La Descarga 1159 N. Western Ave., Hollywood, 323.466.1324 Lazy Ox Canteen 241 S. San Pedro St., Little Tokyo, 213.626.5299 Malo 4326 W. Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake, 323.664.1011 Más Malo 515 W. 7th St., downtown, 213.985.4332 Trails Cafe 2333 N. Fern Dell Drive, Griffith Park, 323.871.2102 The Varnish 118 E. 6th St., downtown, 213.622.9999

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to, creatively speaking, and there’s a community here who supports that. Also, the music scene in Los Angeles is humming right now. There is more interesting music coming out of this town than I can even keep up with. Take that, Brooklyn!” LOCAL FAVES / “Trina Turk boutique— I’ve been wearing her clothes for years and actually got to know her personally when she donated money to KCRW during my radio show. I love Ammo because the menu is local and amazing. They also have great music. Farmers Market at 3rd and Fairfax, especially Lotería Grill—and, for my son, Sticker Planet and Kip’s Toyland. Hungry Cat—I go there for cucumber martinis and oysters on the half shell.” OFF-TIME HOBBY / “Two summers ago, I started gardening. Little by little, I’m taking over more and more of the hillside behind my house, terracing it out and planting an orchard. The zucchini, squash and beans are coming in and we are about to be overrun with tomatoes!”

ANNE LITT | DJ + MUSIC SUPERVISOR Even if you’ve never seen Anne Litt’s face, you’ve almost undoubtedly heard her work. Radio lovers tune in to tastemaking L.A. public radio station and NPR affiliate KCRW (89.9 FM, kcrw.com) to hear Litt host her weekend afternoon show, which she also produces and programs. She’s also a noted music supervisor, having crafted the soundtracks to films such as Little Miss Sunshine, the TV show Without a Trace and advertising campaigns such as the eminently memorable Apple iPod commercials. You can see Litt when she emerges from behind the mike to host one of six shows at the annual KCRW World Music Festival, which runs from June to September at the Hollywood Bowl. She lives in the Hollywood Hills. EARLY DAYS / “I started DJing at my college radio station, WXYC at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I was

always a giant music fan as well as a radio geek, and I could think of nothing more fun than combining the two.” HIGH NOTES / “Seeing the soundtrack to Little Miss Sunshine, which I music supervised, get nominated for a Grammy was a pretty exciting day. Also, working in public radio, although frustrating sometimes because we don’t have the funding to do all we want, is a career highlight. Free-form independent radio is a dying breed and to have the opportunity to support independent music in a way that can really help the artist is a thrill every day.” WHY L.A.? / “There is a pioneering spirit of adventure out here. I’m originally from the South, which is a little more rigid when it comes to playing by the ‘rules.‘ Out here, I feel like I can do anything I set my mind

L.A. MOMENT / “I moved here in—gulp!— 1991. In the first three days that I was here in town, through some acquaintances, I was invited to a political fundraiser.... When I got to the table, I was seated next to actress Kim Basinger.... We got to talking at dinner about being new in town and how, being that both of us are from the South, our moms would bring casseroles and pies to the new families on the block. I mentioned to her that my Hollywood neighbors hadn’t been quite so friendly. The very next day I come home and there are two Du-par’s pie boxes at my front door with a note, ‘The pie watch is over. Welcome to Los Angeles. Kim Basinger.’ “ Ammo 1155 N. Highland Ave., L.A., 323.871.2666 Farmers Market 6333 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.933.9211 Hollywood Bowl 2301 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, 323.850.2000 The Hungry Cat 1535 Vine St., Hollywood, 323.462.2155 Trina Turk 8008 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.651.1382

OPPOSITE: CLAYTONS, JONAS MAYABB

DREAM DINNER GUEST / “Michelle Obama is my current pick. I have an idea for her about curating music at the White House!”

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down the road from me here in Pasadena. It’s the Duarte Skatepark.... I like MOCA and I like LACMA. Those are the big, major museums here in Southern California and stuff. There’s also the Museum of Jurassic Technology, which I don’t get to very often, but it’s an interesting little place to go.” Christian: “I go down to the galleries quite a bit. I love Blum & Poe. I like Roberts & Tilton.” OFF-TIME HOBBY / Rob: “Woodworking is a hobby that I really enjoy. I have a wood shop at home.” Christian: “I enjoy skateboarding with my kids a lot.”

ROB + CHRISTIAN CLAYTON | ARTISTS The artist brothers Rob and Christian Clayton call themselves a “collaborative duo,” and anyone who speaks to them can understand why their creative alliance is so natural. Their responses, philosophies, even verbal tics match up like two people who spend all day with each another. And they do, in a La Crescenta studio where they produce riotously colorful paintings and installations inspired by pop culture, street art, skateboarding and punk rock. When they’re not toiling away, perhaps you’ll see this pair at the Pasadena Museum of California Art, which features the new exhibit Clayton Brothers: Inside Out, or at Santa Monica’s Patrick Painter Gallery, which represents them. EARLY DAYS / Rob: “Our father was a photographer and painter, and he pretty much kind of allowed us to do our thing growing up, art-wise.” Christian: “We both had solo careers for a while, and we shared so many influences growing up, and we’ve been, I think more than anything, really close friends.... We

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started to share a studio space and then just started working on each other’s work.” HIGH NOTES / Rob: “The Madison Museum of Contemporary Art was our first museum show that we just did. The Pasadena show was a nice highlight, too. And also being in the Saatchi collection.” WHY L.A.? / Rob: “Oh, we were always drawn to L.A. as kids. We grew up in Colorado, so L.A. was just the most appealing place. I mean, we were really into skateboarding and punk rock and, you know, this was the mecca for all that stuff.... We felt like this was the place where everything was happening.” Christian: “L.A. just seems like a very open, creative space. I love the weather here. I love just that you sort of can be off in your own space for a while, but still enjoy the experiences of what a big city offers.” LOCAL FAVES / Rob: “I like a little skate park that’s in Duarte, California, which is

DREAM DINNER GUEST / Christian: “My favorite musician of all time would probably be Tom Waits, so I would think sitting down and having a dinner with him would be very entertaining.” Rob: “Tom Waits and Jim Jarmusch, I think, are two really interesting, kind of individual people.... Tom Waits has always been kind of a huge inspiration to me and Christian, and we play his music all the time when we’re in the studio painting.” L.A. MOMENT / Rob: “In the old punk days and stuff there was always something going on.... Going to the Whisky to see X play or something was always a huge highlight, and these bands were all the bands that I really loved growing up—me and Christian both. It was the stuff that really fueled our creativity.” Blum & Poe 2727 S. La Cienega Blvd., Culver City, 310.836.2062 Duarte Skatepark 1401 Central Ave., Duarte, 626.357.7931 Los Angeles County Museum of Art 5905 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.857.6000 Museum of Contemporary Art 250 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.626.6222 Museum of Jurassic Technology 9341 Venice Blvd., Culver City, 310.836.6131 Pasadena Museum of California Art 490 E. Union St., Pasadena, 626.568.3665 Patrick Painter Gallery Bergamot Station, 2525 Michigan Ave., Santa Monica, 310.264.5988 Roberts & Tilton 5801 Washington Blvd., Culver City, 323.549.0223 Whisky a Go-Go 8901 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.652.4202

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HIGH NOTES / “Each step of the growing process has been a highlight for me: a very popular trunk show at the beautiful and exclusive Soho House here in Los Angeles last fall, then getting into Theory stores, getting into the coveted Steven Alan showroom, moving out of my house and opening our own studio and shop recently in Silver Lake. It has all been a highlight.” WHY L.A.? / “People are creative and open to new things in Los Angeles. Especially for new designers, it’s a great place to start out.” LOCAL FAVES / “Although I’m not a member because it is so far from my house, I love the Soho House. I think it is a real gem in this town. I’ve got great friends [who are members] who I meet there and it really is a special place—the view, the ambience, the people, everything. 5 to 6 pm is our favorite time to go. We call it the magic hour because of the sunlight in there. I also love hiking the canyons, all of them! But I’m a regular at the Ridge at Runyon Canyon—it’s what we call the hardest of the three paths.” OFF-TIME HOBBY / “My son, Oscar. He’s what I do when I’m not working—my hobby and my life. If that sounds weird, I also love tennis.”

With the era of overly logo-ed designer handbags phasing out, the increasing popularity of Clare Vivier bags, from owner and creative director Clare Vivier, appears to be a sign of the less-decadent, still-stylish times. Fashion editors and chic women alike rave about Vivier’s simple leather bags, clutches and gadget cases, which the designer has made since 2006 when she fashioned her own laptop case. She continues to manage the label with the help of a small team from L.A.’s east side; showing a commitment to ecofriendliness, many of the pieces are made with salvaged or naturally dyed leathers, and all are

manufactured locally. You can spot Echo Park resident Vivier working and selling her wares out of her new studio-cum-retail boutique, Vivier and Bentley, in Silver Lake, which she shares with friend and jewelry designer Kathryn Bentley. EARLY DAYS / “I’ve always been interested in fashion and design, and I knew how to sew so I could make things for myself. I started making bags when I saw a necessity for a chic work bag for women—stylish working girls who travel with their laptops, etc. There was a hole in the market.”

L.A. MOMENT / “Well, celebrity moments come to mind when I think of L.A. moments. A funny one was when I met Reese Witherspoon for the first time at a party. Of course I knew who she was, but when we were introduced she said, ‘We’ve met before, haven’t we?’ I was taken aback and I responded, ‘Um, you look familiar.’ Duh.” Runyon Canyon Park 2000 N. Fuller Ave., Hollywood, 323.666.5046 Soho House 9200 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.432.9200 Theory 8424 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.782.0163 Vivier and Bentley 1404 Micheltorena St., Silver Lake, 323.665.2476

OPPOSITE: RUSKELL, BALDEMAR FIERRO

CLARE VIVIER | CREATIVE DIRECTOR + OWNER

DREAM DINNER GUEST / “I always thought I’d like to have dinner with Frank Rich for the political conversation, but now I think I’d be thrilled to dine with Vogue Paris editor Emmanuelle Alt, for obvious reasons.”

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HIGH NOTES / “Being named twice as one of the top 10 Best Pastry Chefs in America by Dessert Professional magazine; you can only be named twice. Winning the most challenges on Food Network Challenge, my team placing first in sugar artistry at the National Pastry Team Championship, and winning Last Cake Standing on Food Network, thus being named Best Cake Artist in America. The $100,000 prize money didn’t hurt, either.” WHY L.A.? / “Because all I’ve ever really wanted to do was act. Ha, ha. Being from Minnesota, I never want to put on a winter coat again.” LOCAL FAVES / “We tend to eat pretty regularly at Delancey on Sunset. I love their beer selections. Wood & Vine has the best chicken and waffles and it just happens to be owned by some good friends. Also, Tinga on La Brea for their Mexican food. I’m an ArcLight movie fan as well as [a fan of] hiking with my Dalmatian, Bubba, in Runyon Canyon. I do the opening-night celebration cakes at the Geffen Playhouse— great theater.” OFF-TIME HOBBY / “I build model wooden ships.” DREAM DINNER GUEST / “My mother. She died before I reached my full potential. I would like to be able to say thank you to her for making me the person I am today.”

RICHARD RUSKELL | EXECUTIVE PASTRY CHEF As executive pastry chef for the Montage Beverly Hills, the charismatic Ruskell is in charge of the hotel’s bakery operations, including those of its three restaurants: the Lobby Lounge, Conservatory Grill and superbuzzy Scarpetta. Although Ruskell creates simpler trifles for the Montage’s menus, the chef is a renowned cake maker; Food Network fans should remember him from his recent win on the reality show Last Cake Standing. (Spot him next season when he returns to judge a competition.) If you don’t see Ruskell milling around the Montage’s opulent dining rooms, you can take join the chef for

a group class on the art of pastries, held once a month in Scarpetta’s display kitchen. Ruskell lives on the border of Hollywood and West Hollywood. EARLY DAYS / “Prior to entering the culinary world I was an actor. When I was in culinary school I asked the pastry instructor if I’d be good at pastry, figuring it was probably the most artistic of all the disciplines. He touched my hands and said, ‘You have cold hands, you’ll be great in pastry.’ I guess that’s because I wouldn’t melt the chocolate. But he was right, I always have cold hands.”

L.A. MOMENT / “I was at the self-checkout counter at a grocery store and the woman next to me was having a rough time. She couldn’t figure out how to do any of the functions. I went over to help her, and when she turned to thank me I was shocked to see it was Faye Dunaway. Only at Ralphs, only in Hollywood!” ArcLight Cinemas 6360 W. Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.464.1478 Delancey 5936 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.469.2100 Geffen Playhouse 10886 Le Conte Ave., Westwood, 310.208.5454 Runyon Canyon 2000 N. Fuller Ave., Hollywood, 323.666.5046 Tinga 142 S. La Brea Ave., L.A., 323.954.9566 Wood & Vine 6280 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.334.3360

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dance company in Montreal for seven years when I discovered Cirque.” WHY L.A.? / “I have not been in L.A. for very long, but I can already tell that L.A. contains everything I am looking for in a place to live and to grow professionally. It is the capital of entertainment as well as offers amazing cultural events, and then, of course, the best that nature has to offer is right at our doorstep: ocean, beaches, parks.” LOCAL FAVES / “I was raised in Europe and have seen a lot of our most famous European museums, and I have to say I have loved my visits at the Getty Center. The combination of the site, the architecture and the works of art make it a very unique place that touched me deeply. I indulge once in a while in going to a French restaurant; it reminds me of the home country. It is astounding the quality of the French restaurants in this city. The Little Door has a romantic setting, great patio, and the food—to die for.” OFF-TIME HOBBY / “Two favorite hobbies of mine are windsurfing and scuba diving; therefore you can imagine how much I enjoy L.A. and its seashore. Cabrillo Beach is a paradise for windsurfing, and Zuma Beach for far niente.”

DENISE BIGGI | ARTISTIC DIRECTOR For Denise Biggi, settling in Hollywood a year ago allowed the elegant former ballet dancer and choreographer to soak up the storied Tinseltown lifestyle. But the France native—like any forward-thinking, longcommute-loathing Angeleno—also picked the neighborhood for its proximity to work. That’s because Biggi, an artistic director for Cirque du Soleil, can be found on most days at the Kodak Theatre, the glamorous home of the Academy Awards as well as that of Cirque’s newest resident production, Iris (p. 103). After Iris opens to eager audiences this month, the accomplished Biggi will be toiling behind the curtains to execute 300 shows a year, overseeing the show’s content and team of artists. EARLY DAYS / “I never worked in anything else but performing arts, as a performing artist, a creator or a director. I believe

that being an artist is more a calling than a choice; I was destined to be an artist. I have always worked in show business, and for nonprofit artistic companies, before Cirque du Soleil. I started working for Cirque du Soleil about four years ago. I went on a trip to Vegas and saw some of Cirque’s shows there. I immediately fell in love and started pursuing a career within the company.” HIGH NOTES / “I started my career as a ballet dancer, for companies in France first, then in Montreal, Canada, with Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montreal. Once the performing years were over, I turned to teaching and choreographing. My interest for directing an artistic organization slowly grew stronger, so I then decided to go back to university to do an MBA in order to add the management knowledge to my artistic background. After successfully completing it, I directed a small

DREAM DINNER GUEST / “So many people I would want to have dinner with. It is too hard to choose. Charlie Chaplin, Walt Disney, Mozart, Balanchine, my grandfather.” L.A. MOMENT / “About a year and a half ago, as I was working for another Cirque du Soleil show, I came here to tape a TV show. I remember at the time how comfortable I felt in L.A., I then told everyone in my party how much I could see myself living here and making L.A. my home. Six months later Cirque offered me to take on the artistic direction of their new show at the Kodak Theater. The rest is history.” Cabrillo Beach 40th Street and Stephen M. White Drive, San Pedro Getty Center 1200 Getty Center Drive, Brentwood, 310.440.7300 Kodak Theatre 6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.308.6300 The Little Door 8164 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.951.1210 Zuma Beach 30050 block of Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu

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play all night and hit the beach the next day.” Bolthouse: “L.A. is an ideal city for my career because this is where my career started, and it has only grown from there.” LOCAL FAVES / Dzienciol: “When I’m not working, I love going to Malibu and hiking out there. Riding my chopper is always relaxing. For shopping, I go to Maxfield. For lunch I love Joan’s on Third, and MOCA is always inspiring.” Rosero: “I love to dine on fine cuisine and to discover food dives in and out of L.A. with my boyfriend, chef Jared Simons.” OFF-TIME HOBBY / Bolthouse: “I focus on photography and riding motorcycles. One of my passions is to discover new bands.” Rosero: “One hobby that I enjoy that is completely unrelated to my job is sleeping, because I get so little of it!”

JEN ROSERO, BRENT BOLTHOUSE + DARREN DZIENCIOL | NIGHTLIFE ENTREPRENEURS When asked to describe his job, Brent Bolthouse, owner of Bolthouse Productions, says, “I make impossible things happen.” The same could be said for his partners Jen Rosero and Darren Dzienciol and partner/owner Guy Starkman, who have collaborated on buzzy nightlife destinations Trousdale, opened in 2010, and new entry the Beverly. You may remember the boyishlooking Bolthouse from his stint on MTV’s The Hills, but these days, you’re more likely to see the trio of Rosero, Bolthouse and Dzienciol mixing with the crowds or managing the doors at their ever-hot nightspots. Bolthouse and Dzienciol live in the Hollywood Hills, Rosero in West Hollywood.

after helping him with a charity event for Rock the Vote in 1990. I was drawn to him because he was already promoting the best clubs in L.A.” Dzienciol: “[I liked nightlife because of] my vampire blood and insomnia. Kidding. But that’s my lifestyle. That’s the nightlife world.”

EARLY DAYS / “Bolthouse: I was drawn to this line of work by accident. When I first moved to L.A., I started working with an artist who got me involved in the nightlife scene.” Rosero: “I partnered with Brent Bolthouse

WHY L.A.? / Rosero: “There are so many opportunities here. If you put yourself at the right place and have the right mindset, you can accomplish anything! ” Dzienciol: “Laid-back atmosphere and the amazing weather. Being able to work all day,

HIGH NOTES / Rosero: “One of the highlights of my career thus far is working at Saturday Night Fever.... It brought me great joy to let in Don Cornelius, Chaka Khan and so many others. Cher even came a few times and danced on the stage.” Dzienciol: “Partnering with Bravo’s Top Chef [star] Marcel Vigneron to open a restaurant.”

DREAM DINNER GUEST / Bolthouse: “I would love to have dinner with Edgar Tilley because he is one of the greatest mystics of all time.” Dzienciol: “Tom Ford. I love fashion and film, and would love to hear his take on it and pick his brain.” L.A. MOMENT / Rosero: “One moment happened at my club called A.D. I had a hostess named Sophia Rossi who was struggling to try and walk Jay-Z through the crowd. He finally picked her up above the crowd to get to his table and it was amazing!” Bolthouse: “An interesting L.A. memory of mine is when I had an indie radio show on 101.3 with Danny Masterson. Another one of my favorite memories is seeing Chevy Chase (aka The Griswold) eating dinner at my restaurant, Il Sole.” Dzienciol: “Sneaking into a Bolthouse party when I was 16 with a fake ID.” The Beverly 8713 Beverly Blvd., L.A., thebeverlylounge.com Il Sole 8741 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.657.1182 Joan’s on Third 8350 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.655.2285 Maxfield 8825 Melrose Ave., L.A., 310.274.8800 Museum of Contemporary Art 250 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.626.6222 Trousdale 9229 W. Sunset Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.274.7500

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exploring

Beverly Hills

From left: The Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City; diners at Father’s Office 2 in Culver City; Two Rodeo.

The most famous small city in the world is a shopper’s delight. Century City, Westwood and Culver City are destinations in their own right.

Although it’s only five square miles, Beverly Hills looms large in pop culture as a posh and picturesque locale that boasts more mansions than any other area of L.A. County, not to mention the world’s most notorious ZIP code. Rodeo Drive, perhaps the world’s most famous shopping street, offers virtually every label worth its logo. Celebrities such as Jack Nicholson and power couple Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes retreat to their tuckedaway gated manses here. Bel-Air is known for its sprawling estates, and Century City for business and shopping. Westwood, populated mostly by UCLA students, has a youthful vibe. Quaint Culver City is experiencing a cultural and culinary renaissance.

Rodeo Drive

Valentino, Chanel, Dior, to name a few: With its all-star roster of high-fashion designers, it’s no wonder that this retail mecca makes so many well-heeled shoppers swoon. King of red-carpet baubles Harry Winston holds court in a three-story flagship location; Cartier and De Beers are among the other high-end jewelers that have set up shop on this swanky street. Miuccia Prada’s Miu Miu and an impressive Rem Koolhaas-designed Prada boutique are steps from each other; Michael Kors is across the street. Missoni’s flagship, an architectural standout with its textural exterior, is new, as are Badgley Mischka and Lanvin. Marked by an Italianate cobblestone rode, Two Rodeo features shops such as Versace and Tiffany & Co.; the patio at 208 Rodeo makes for prime people watching, and Urasawa turns out exquisite sushi, hailed as the best in town. To the north is the Rodeo Collection; retailers include Italian lingerie label La Perla and Herve Leger. Rodeo Drive Walk of Style inductees include Salvatore Ferragamo, Manolo Blahnik, Giorgio Armani and fashion photographer Mario Testino and his colleague Herb Ritts.

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ashok sinha. annenberg space, julius shulman/juergen nogai; father’s office 2, edwin santiago; Two rodeo, bjarne g. jensen

Missoni on Rodeo Drive

new in town City Tavern

Gastropub features “Table Taps,” booths outfitted with computerized draft beer systems for pour-your-own brews. 9379 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.838.9739

Karen Millen

British-based apparel and accessories boutique. Westfield Century City, 10250 Santa Monica Blvd., Century City, 310.282.9004

Stephen Webster

Fine and silver jewelry line for men and women in a glamorous, rock ‘n’ roll salon. 202 N. Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.246.9500

Tom Ford

An opulent boutique proffers Ford’s menswear and recently relaunched womenswear collections. 346 N. Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.270.9440

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Golden Triangle

Rodeo Drive is but one street in a retail area known as the Golden Triangle, bordered by Crescent Drive and Wilshire and Little Santa Monica boulevards. The city offers nine designated parking areas with an hour of free parking ($3 flat fee after 6 pm). An assortment of cafes, salons, spas, shops and galleries abound in this threesided district. Wolfgang Puck’s star-studded flagship Spago is here. Sprinkles Cupcakes (9635 S. Santa Monica Blvd.), the place for designer morsels, has a perpetual line of sweet-toothed customers out the door. The Richard Meier–designed Paley Center for Media (formerly Museum of Television & Radio) lures aficionados of architecture as well as media.

Wilshire Boulevard

Here reign retail’s grande dames: Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus and Barneys New York. Wilshire Boulevard is home to Escada, Mikimoto and Southern California–based St. John Knits. Pretty Woman was filmed at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel, built in 1928 at Wilshire Boulevard and Rodeo Drive. The Beverly Hilton, at Wilshire and Santa Monica boulevards, hosts the Golden Globe Awards. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences features changing exhibits in two galleries.

The Mansions

Beyond the Golden Triangle, north of Santa Monica Boulevard, are the stunning mansions and manicured grounds of the treelined residential neighborhoods. The largest homes are north of Sunset Boulevard; adjacent Bel-Air and Holmby Hills feature some of the most magnificent estates in the world. The Beverly Hills Trolley Tour offers tours of public art and significant architecture on Saturdays. The sprawling 1927 Greystone

Mansion and Park has been the setting for scenes of more than 20 films, including The Big Lebowski and The Witches of Eastwick. The hillside grounds boast sweeping city views.

Century City

A playground for the finance and entertainment execs who work in its high-rise towers, Century City is home to Westfield Century City, an elegant, open-air retail center anchored by Bloomingdale’s with upscale shops, a 15-screen cinema and first-rate food court. Across the street, deal making and hobnobbing happen at X Bar at the Century Plaza Hotel. 20th Century Fox Studios is based in Century City, as are fine-dining draws including Tom Colicchio’s Craft. The Annenberg Space for Photography is an impressive gallery with digital and print exhibit areas. The Museum of Tolerance, just east of Century City, pays particular attention to the Jewish massacre in the Holocaust, but promotes tolerance for all in exhibits such as Finding Our Families, Finding Ourselves.

Culver City

Motor Avenue runs from 20th Century Fox south to Sony Pictures Studios. Downtown Culver City, though it encompasses only a handful of blocks, has become a destination for the arts, food and culture. Theaters include the Actors’ Gang at the Ivy Substation and Kirk Douglas Theatre. Restaurant highlights include the organically minded Akasha, French cafes Saint Amour and L’Epicerie Market and Fraîche with its CalMed fare. Rush Street bar draws the most revelers when the sun goes down. The quirky Museum of Jurassic Technology is nearby. At Helms Avenue and Venice Boulevard, the historic Helms Bakery complex houses design stores including H.D. Buttercup and

Room & Board, Asian eatery Lukshon and gastropub Father’s Office 2. The contemporary art galleries at Washington and La Cienega boulevards make up the Culver City Art District and are among the most cutting-edge in L.A. Downtown Culver City has wireless Internet access in its public spaces.

Westwood Village

Bordered by the UCLA campus, Westwood Village is rife with historic buildings and cultural offerings—and it very well may be the movie premiere capital of the world. The Hammer Museum houses works by Degas, Rembrandt and van Gogh; changing exhibits feature contemporary works and installations. Marilyn Monroe and other stars are buried at the nearby Westwood Village Memorial Park. The Geffen Playhouse, where the stars go to headline plays between film projects, is in a renovated 1929 landmark theater. On campus, UCLA Live hosts performing arts; famous authors pop in to preview new works, too. Access UCLA’s Mildred E. Mathias Botanical Garden at Hilgard and Le Conte avenues; the Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden showcases Rodin’s The Walking Man and 80 other works. The UCLA Fowler Museum offers exhibits about peoples and religions. South of Westwood Village, straddling Westwood Boulevard, is Westside Pavilion, a trilevel retail center anchored by Nordstrom and with several kid-friendly shops such as Build-a-Bear Workshop and Scribble Press. The mall features a top-notch Landmark cinema, dedicated to indie films and with a chic wine-and-beer bar. Westside Tavern restaurant is below the movie theater, ideal for a pre- or post-film repaste or cocktail. For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of these neighborhoods, see pages 124–125.

great find

LOVE NOTES At unique stationery boutique Sugar Paper, nearly every piece is designed and printed in-house by artisans on an antique letterpress printer, then exquisitely packaged for discriminating customers who are still passionate about the power of the written word. Boxed stationery sets of all kinds are offered here, from the formal to the whimsical, all reflecting owners Chelsea Shukov and Jamie Grobecker’s prevailing theme of elegant simplicity. And if you want your wedding invitations to be worthy of a royal affair, look no further. Sugar Paper will take care of every custom-designed detail, right down to calligraphy services. Hint: This quaint Century City shop is located right next door to Clementine, a charming bakery/cafe. 1749 Ensley Ave., Century City, 310.277.7804, sugarpaper.com

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exploring

Santa Monica

From left: Santa Monica Pier; fountain at the Getty Center; Montana Avenue in Santa Monica.

Creativity and prime shopping and dining abound on the coast. Venice, Marina del Rey and Malibu are some of the coastal highlights nearby.

Santa Monica is a happy collision of the natural and the urban: clean air, beautiful beaches, scenic mountains, plus a pedestrian-friendly downtown, hundreds of fine-dining options and several pleasant shopping streets. Denizens make the best of the beach breezes, as evidenced by the many pedestrians, bicyclists, in-line skaters and skateboarders. Nearby neighborhoods that line Pacific Coast Highway— Venice, Marina del Rey, Playa del Rey, Malibu and Topanga among them—have distinctive personalities.

Montana Avenue

Montana Avenue is one of L.A.’s hottest destinations for chic shopping. Boutiques between 6th and 17th streets include upscale designer clothing boutique Aura plus the Blues Jean Bar for denim, Roseark for fine and contemporary jewelry and Anat B. for wellpriced designer knockoffs. See film classics and cult favorites at historic Aero Theater. Among hip destinations is Father’s Office, a pub serving what may be L.A.’s best burger, and American eatery R+D Kitchen. The Spielbergs, Beattys and Hankses treat the cozy, tree-lined avenue as their main street.

Main Street

Main Street is the site of the Santa Monica Convention and Visitors Bureau Information Center (1920 Main St., 310.393.7593) and is a quieter, lower-key destination than the lively Third Street Promenade. Between Pico Boulevard and Rose Avenue are galleries, yoga studios and boutiques such as Monkie, Planet Blue and Green Life, a green-goods store befitting the ecoconscious ‘hood. See plays at the Frank Gehry-designed Edgemar Center for the Arts. Sip aperitifs at Saluté Wine Bar and dine at Chinois on Main, among Wolfgang Puck’s best. The Library Alehouse and O’Brien’s Irish Pub make for a lively bar scene. The hopping Sunday farmers market is adjacent to the California Heritage Museum.

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ASHOK SINHA. PIER AND GETTY, EDWIN SANTIAGO; MONTANA AVENUE, BJARNE G. JENSEN

Several canals flow through Venice, originally conceived to resemble its Italian namesake.

new in town Arm Candy

at this boutique, it’s all about luxury bags, sourced from independent designers who produce their wares in america. 2717 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.392.7492

Bar Toscana

adjacent to toscana restaurant, this intimate bar turns out stuzzichini (small plates) and italian-inspired cocktails. 11633 San vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310.820.2448

The Market

gourmet marketplace featuring artisanal and organic food purveyors at Santa Monica place. 395 Santa Monica place, Santa Monica, 310.260.8333

Unionmade

preppy menswear shop offers staples by a.p.c. and levi’s, alternative apparel tees, giles & Brother jewelry and more. Brentwood country Mart, 225 26th St., Santa Monica, 310.656.3373

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Third Street

Shops and cafes are open late at pedestrianonly Third Street Promenade (from Broadway to Wilshire Boulevard). The street entertainers are always captivating, as are the street vendors. The newly reopened Santa Monica Place at Broadway and Third is a trilevel, open-air mall featuring department stores Nordstrom and Bloomingdale’s, more than 50 boutiques and a top-level Dining Deck with six restaurants, a food court and gourmet market. Adjacent 2nd and 4th streets, and cross streets Broadway and Wilshire Boulevard, have draws, too. Find fine-dining options along 4th Street as well as Fred Segal on Broadway and vintage shop Wasteland. Unwind at Tikkun Holistic Spa at 4th Street and Broadway; hang at bars Chloe and Copa d’Oro. At the end of Colorado Avenue is Santa Monica Pier, built in 1909; its Pacific Park has a roller coaster, a solar-powered Ferris wheel and bumper cars. Sun worshipers can head north on Pacific Coast Highway to Annenberg Community Beach House.

BERGAMOT STATION

Art destination Bergamot Station (2525 Michigan Ave.) is an industrial, campuslike complex named for the trolley stop there in the late 1800s. It’s home to the Santa Monica Museum of Art, 33 galleries and shops and a cafe.

Venice

The eclectic spirit of Venice founder Abbot Kinney lives on. Abbot’s Habit coffee shop, exquisite Jin Patisserie and boutiques such as A. Kinney Court are the draws on Abbot Kinney Boulevard, as are hip restaurants and bars including Gjelina and the Otheroom. Ocean Front Walk is awash with colorful humanity: artisans, T-shirt vendors and the

renowned drum circle. Mr. Universe wannabes hang at Muscle Beach near 18th Street.

Marina del Rey

Marina del Rey boasts the largest manmade, small-craft harbor in the world and activities such as bicycling and sailing. The Waterside at Marina del Rey shopping center has sushi spot Sugarfish and boutiques such as M. Fredric and Theodore; there’s live music on Sunday afternoons. The beach community of Playa del Rey, with its quiet cafes and kitschy dive bars, is the last destination before southern neighbors El Segundo and Manhattan Beach.

BRENTWOOD

The affluent but laid-back neighborhood of Brentwood is home to numerous stars, like Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck, who blend in with the other neighborhood folk, strolling San Vicente Boulevard with its indie boutiques and salons, coffee shops and many Japanese and Italian restaurants. Brentwood Country Mart, at San Vicente Boulevard and 26th Street, offers casual dining and boutiques including James Perse, Broken English and Toy Crazy. But the biggest draw is nearby Getty Center, a spectacular travertineclad hilltop museum featuring European art from the Middle Ages to the present.

PACIFIC PALISADES

An upscale, slightly sleepy enclave, Pacific Palisades is the site of Will Rogers State Historic Park, a popular place for hiking and horseback riding. It also has pleasant boutique shopping; wander the streets between Via de la Paz and Monument Street near Sunset Boulevard to find a number of specialty stores, including designer clothing store Elyse Walker, stationery shop Black Ink and Intemperantia Chocolates.

Malibu

The fabled spot where Gidget once hung out is a 27-mile stretch of coastal vistas and cliffs boasting some of the most expensive real estate in the L.A. area; celebrity residents include Bob Dylan, David Geffen and Matthew McConaughey. The Getty Villa is the Getty Center’s coastal counterpart. The spectacular villa has been a magnet for splendor seekers since Getty, inspired by a Julius Caesar–era retreat, built it in the 1970s and filled it with Greco-Roman antiquities. Advance timed tickets are required. Find views at restaurants along Pacific Coast Highway, such as Gladstone’s and Duke’s. Adjacent to the Malibu Lagoon and Bird Sanctuary, the Adamson House is filled with historic tile. Malibu Country Mart offers fashionforward boutiques such as Vince, Diesel and Canvas, plus restaurants such as sushi destination Nobu Malibu. There’s a children’s play area near Tra Di Noi and excellent celeb spotting. Adjacent to the mart, Malibu Lumber Yard has high-end boutiques such as Alice + Olivia, Maxfield and James Perse. Santa Monica Mountains National Rec­reation Area offers activities such as hiking, horseback riding and bird-watching.

TOPANGA

Just north on Pacific Coast Highway, follow scenic Topanga Canyon Boulevard to the hippie enclave of Topanga for hiking trails, gift shops and earth-conscious dining such as Inn of the Seventh Ray. Also creekside is the lively Abuelitas Mexican restaurant and bar. Pine Tree Circle center offers independent boutiques, galleries and cafes. Will Geer’s Theatricum Botanicum offers Shakespeare plays in the summer. For bold items, see listings in the where guide.­­For a detailed map of these neighborhoods, see page 124.

great find

WE GO FOR WEEGO Billing itself as the “antidote to the uber-chic, modern minimalist furniture stores,” Weego Home in Santa Monica loosens the mood with bold colors (chartreuse! coral!), graphic prints and whimsical accessories. But make no mistake—from hand-tufted New Zealand wool rugs to stunning white lacquer and walnut credenzas, the designs are seriously stylish, with a strong dose of grown-up glamour (think Jonathan Adler or Kelly Wearstler). The shop’s offspring, Weego Baby (2447 Main St), carries on the tradition with playfully chic DwellStudio crib linens and clean-lined Weego Signature Collection bunk beds in mix-and-match colors and woods. After all, why should Mom have all the fun? 2939 Main St., Santa Monica, 800.659.3346, weegohome.com

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MAVE_


Explore over 150 shops, restaurants and services from 6th to 17th streets in Santa Monica.

MoNtANA EyEs 709 Montana Ave, 310.917.4474

loNDoN solE 1331 Montana Ave, 310.255.0937 londonsole.com

tAlA JEWElry 1302 Montana Ave, 310.319.0407 talajewelry.com

London Sole offers the world’s largest collection of ballet flats, ballerina pumps, classic driving loafers and other exquisite traditional flat footwear from designer Jane Winkworth. The Montana and San Francisco boutiques are hot spots for celebrities who have fallen in love with the simple, sophisticated and sometimes bold designs.

Tala is Montana Avenue’s newest sparkling addition. Tala is focused on quality and craftsmanship as well as showcasing today’s hottest and most original designers. Italian designers Fope and Piero Milano along with Turkish designs from Gurhan are in-store, in addition to an eclectic and fresh mix of American designers including Aaron Basha,Pandora, Bochic and Chad Allison. If you love jewelry, you’ll love Tala.

Mon-Sat 10am-6pm

Mon-Sat 10am-6:30pm; Sun 11am-6pm

Mon-Fri 10am-6pm; Sat-Sun 11am-6pm

stEP sHoEs 1004 Montana Ave, 310.899.4409

tHrEE BAGs Full the sweater store

EvEry PicturE tElls A story 1333 Montana Ave, 310.451.2700 everypicture.com

Featuring the very best in American and European knitwear. Style, service and versatility–we make travel easy and elegant–xmall to 2x. From the simplest cotton cardigan to luxurious handknits, Three Bags Full has got you covered.

Every Picture Tells A Story is Los Angeles’ premiere gallery of the Art of Illustration, featuring original artwork and limited edition prints from Disney Studios, Dr. Seuss, Charles Schulz, Maurice Sendak, Marvel Comics and classics like Curious George, Stuart Little and Eloise—plus a unique selection of illustrated books and toys.

Do you accessorize with eyewear? Or, are you in the market for that perfect new pair of prescription glasses? Montana Eyes has showcased high-end eyewear for twenty years. This special boutique has any style to suit your needs: from the hottest trends to custom-frames and vintage specs. Come see for yourself why Hollywood stars shop at Montana Eyes.

Step Shoes offers the finest European quality footwear with brands such as Thierry Rabotin, Aguatalia, Cordani, Cydwoq, Mephisto MBT, Isabella Fiore and many more. In addition to its selection of comfortable and classy shoes, Step Shoes has a variety of distinctive handbags and fun accessories to choose from. Step Shoes is where style and comfort come together in total harmony. Mon-Sat 10am-6pm; Sun 12pm-5pm

716 Montana Ave, 310.395.5559 threebagsfull.com

Mon 10am-5pm; Tue-Sat 10am-6pm; Open most Sundays 11am-5pm. Call first.

Mon-Sat 10am-7pm; Sun 10am-6pm

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exploring

West Hollywood

From left: the Farmers Market; light installation at Broad Contemporary Art Museum; Pacific Design Center.

Innovative, individual West Hollywood is the birthplace of L.A.’s trends.

West Hollywood measures less than two square miles wedged between Hollywood and Beverly Hills, yet it’s packed to the gills with boutiques, galleries, restaurants, bars and theaters. The population celebrates ethnic and lifestyle diversity, combining hipsters, immigrants and senior citizens; it’s accepting of virtually everyone. The city, often referred to as WeHo, includes the legendary stretch of Sunset Boulevard called the Sunset Strip, chic Sun­set Plaza, trendy Melrose Avenue and stylish Robertson Boulevard. Santa Monica Boulevard is one of the liveliest stretches of historic Route 66, thanks to its thriving gay community and proliferation of trendy nightclubs.

Sunset Plaza

Upscale boutiques line Sunset Boulevard between La Cienega and San Vicente boulevards; you’ll find free parking behind the storefronts. Consider this the city’s Euro hang; check out the collections at Catherine Malandrino, Chez Bop and the two H. Lorenzo shops. A lively outdoor cafe scene includes Le Petit Four, Chin Chin and Café Med, and Buttercake Bakery dishes out cupcakes. You’ll find platinum pampering at Ole Henriksen Face/Body Spa and Jessica Nail Clinic.

Sunset Strip

When the sun goes down, the action is on Sunset Boulevard be­tween Doheny Drive and Crescent Heights Avenue. The Strip is historically the city’s entertainment focus, with clubs such as The Roxy, Whisky a Go-Go and Rainbow Bar having boasted performances by the Doors and Jimi

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Bar Marmont on the Sunset Strip

new in town Civilianaire

Men’s streetwear from the founders of lucky brand. 8312 W. 3rd St., l.a., 323.782.1707

NIKOLAS KOENIG. OPPOSITE: EDWIN SANTIAGO

Flight 001

the ingenious travel accessory boutique returns, offering colorful luggage and bags and nifty in-flight accessories. 8321 W. 3rd St., l.a., 323.966.0001

Ray’s & Stark Bar

Petite but sleek Mediterranean restaurant and upscale cocktail bar at los angeles County Museum of art. 5905 Wilshire blvd., l.a., 323.857.6180

Vivienne Westwood

the designer’s first u.S. flagship store offers the couture collections and affordable anglomania line. 8320 Melrose ave., l.a., 323.951.0711

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Hendrix. The remodeled Andaz West Hollywood hotel was formerly known as Continental Hyatt House, aka the Riot House; Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones and Guns N’ Roses bunked there. Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable lived at the art deco landmark Sunset Tower Hotel, built in 1931. The mood at elegant Tower Bar fits right in at the historic hotel. Rock stars hole up in villas at the renovated Sunset Marquis hotel and record albums in its below-ground studio. The party goes on. There are the dimly lit Viper Room and the Key Club’s weekly tribute to ‘80s rock, Metal Skool. The faux ramshackle House of Blues books name acts and hosts a rafter-raising Sunday Gospel Brunch. Comedians including David Letterman and Robin Williams got their start at the Comedy Store. Swanky Skybar at the Mondrian admits hotel guests automatically; also at the hotel is the restaurant Asia de Cuba. Bar Marmont, adjacent to Chateau Marmont, is dreamily chic and a perennial celeb hangout. Don’t forget to look up: The Sunset Strip is known for its billboards.

THE AVENUES

The Pacific Design Center, at San Vicente Boulevard and Melrose Avenue, is at the center of the Avenues, the art, fashion and design district that includes some 300 galleries and showrooms along Melrose Avenue and Beverly and Robertson boulevards. The center—itself distinctively designed—offers mainly upscale furnishings. It’s also home to the MOCA Pacific Design Center, satellite of downtown’s Museum of Contemporary Art and Wolfgang Puck’s Design Cafe. The CityLine (25 cents, 800.447.2189) runs Monday through Saturday along Santa Monica and San Vicente boulevards.

Melrose Avenue

If Europeans influence L.A. on Sunset Plaza, L.A. influences the world on Melrose Avenue. It’s home base for the hip, where the trends begin. Choices include supercool consortium Fred Segal, upscale Maxfield and Wasteland for vintage wear, Vivienne Westwood and Vera Wang; farther east are Wasteland for vintage wear and indie boutiques with knockoffs and fast-fashion finds. Just off Melrose Avenue is Melrose Place, L.A.’s chicest shopping street, where you’ll find the Monique Lhuillier, Zero + Maria Cornejo and Chloé boutiques. Foodies head to Mario Batali’s Osteria Mozza and Pizzeria Mozza, brasserie Comme Ça, Rick Bayless’ new Red O and Suzanne Goin’s Lucques. Find some of L.A.’s best live comedy at the Improv and the Groundlings theaters. There’s more hip shopping around the corner on La Brea Avenue.

Robertson Boulevard

The sensibilities of Melrose Avenue and Rodeo Drive meet on Robertson Boulevard, where boutiques Intermix, Curve and Madison are as hip as they get; the celebutante set goes to Kitson for posh bags and minidresses. Designers such as Chanel and Anya Hindmarch have outposts. Unwind at a number of eateries including Petrossian and Ivy Restaurant, whose patio is paparazzi central for celebs seeking photo ops.

3rd and Beverly

West 3rd Street and Beverly Boulevard are first-rate destinations for boutique shopping and upscale dining between Robertson Boulevard and the Grove. The two streets bracket the multistory Beverly Center, which is anchored by Bloomingdale’s and Macy’s. H&M and Henri Bendel are big draws.

A hip restaurant row on Beverly Boulevard includes Eva Restaurant from ever-hospitable chef/owner Mark Gold. Upscale boutiques include Beige and Calleen Cordero. Fashion-forward boutiques on West 3rd Street east of the Beverly Center include Satine, Lotta Stensson, Eggy for high-end children’s clothing and Pyrrha for jewelry. Kitschy El Carmen bar adds to the street’s colorful character. Foodies head to Joan’s on 3rd, The Little Door and A.O.C. to dine and Magnolia Bakery for cupcakes.

FAIRFAX DISTRICT

Historic Farmers Market offers some 100 open-air produce stalls, shops and restaurants at Fairfax Avenue and 3rd Street. There are plenty of nooks in which to while away an afternoon, including a crêperie, a wine bar and a shop specializing in hot sauces. It’s hugely popular among locals. Adjacent to the Farmers Market, The Grove, a retail-dining-entertain­ment center inspired by a grand old downtown, features stained-glass street lamps, a trolley, a multiplex movie theater and retailers such as Nordstrom, Michael Kors, Kiehl’s and Fresh. Rising stars and starlets are often spotted on weekends. Annually, the Grove tallies more visitors than Disneyland! One mile south of the Grove is the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), which boasts an exceptional collection of more than 150,000 works from around the world. The Broad Contemporary Art Museum showcases nearly 180 works by contemporary artists; the Lynda and Stewart Resnick Exhibition Pavilion is the latest addition to the campus. Adjacent to LACMA, you’ll find the Page Museum at the La Brea Tar Pits, where the Ice Age comes alive. For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of West Hollywood, see pages 124–125.

great find

HANDY CRAFTS Crafts haven Hands-On 3rd opened two years ago, fostering individual creativity while encouraging personal interaction among budding crafters. A cheerful energy fills the space, where an artist in residence often works in the front window and students are welcome to observe the three artists’ studios in back. Classes include tutorials on jewelry making, mosaics, silkscreen printing, decoupage, terrarium design and lamp making (the latter accomplished with recycled coffee stirrers, no less). For kids, there’s a sewing Project Funway and a weekly summer camp. The shop also sells patterns and will soon begin offering DIY jewelry, doll and terrarium kits, as well as colorful Japanese fabrics and ribbons. 8377 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.655.0515, hands-on3rd.com.

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WEST 3RD S SHOP. EAT. EXPERIENCE.

WELCOME TO THIRD STREET! Nestled between West Hollywood, Beverly Hills and the Farmers Market, WEST 3RD STREET is a shopping and dining experience unlike any other in Los Angeles. Each store and restaurant offers an exciting and unique vision, making West 3rd one of the most high-quality and well-edited collections of merchandise and fine food anywhere in the city. Whether you are looking for fashion, furniture, gifts or food, chances are you will be inspired by what you find on West 3rd Street.

M. COHen

8362 West 3rd Street (323) 782-0600 mcohendesigns.com

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Ave Ave Sweetzer

MaGnOlIa BaKerY 8389 West 3rd Street (323) 951-0636 magnoliabakery.com

Ave Sweetzer

At Magnolia Bakery, everything is made fresh from scratch on premises, all day, every day, using the finest ingredients.

Sweetzer

Edgy, yet high-end and delicate, this one-of-a-kind jewelry and accessories line is designed and handmade in L.A.

LA CienegA BLvd

LA CienegA BLvd LA CienegA

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The Orlando on Third, a fashionable, boutique hotel in a vibrant, urban neighborhood. Enjoy a taste of living L.A.!

OrlandO HOtel 8384 West 3rd Street (800) 624-6835 theorlando.com

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KnIt CUltUre StUdIO 8118 West 3rd Street (323) 655-6487 knitculture.com

Handmade sterling silver and 14k gold jewelry cast from 19th-century wax seals rich in inspirational imagery.

PYrrHa

8315 West 3rd Street (323) 424-4807 pyrrha.com

FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave FAirFAx Ave

An inspired shop featuring knit and crochet supplies and a wide selection of unique and luxurious yarns.

CreSCent HeigHtS BLvd CreSCent HeigHtS BLvd CreSCent HeigHtS BLvd CreSCent HeigHtS BLvd

D STREET Couture loungewear designed and made in Los Angeles, along with fine bedding and bath products.

BedHead PaJaMaS 8336 West 3rd Street (323) 653-8336 bedheadpjs.com

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Contemporary children’s clothing, toys and accessories.

eGGY

8365 West 3rd Street (323) 658-8882 shopeggy.com

The redesigned and relaunched L.A. favorite offers globally inspired Japanese fare.

SUSHI rOKU

8445 West 3rd Street (323) 655-6767 sushiroku.com

Designer Trina Turk’s collection of women’s apparel, accessories and swimwear inspired by the California lifestyle.

trIna tUrK

8008 West 3rd Street (323) 651-1382 trinaturk.com

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exploring

Hollywood

From left: Hollywood Palladium; Vermont Avenue in Los Feliz; Bardot nightclub on Vine Street.

Hollywood is reclaiming its legendary glamour, and once-bohemian Los Feliz and Silver Lake are sharing in Tinseltown’s new Golden Age.

“Hollywood is a state of mind” was a popular refrain when this part of Los Angeles was in the midst of its decline, not long ago. But with hot new boutiques, restaurants, hotels and condos sprouting up, it has re-emerged as a bona fide destination. Amid a spirit of transformation, the neon lights on Hollywood Boulevard’s landmark movie palaces are fired up again, as waves of international visitors mingle with colorful locals. This new Golden Age of Hollywood marks the best time to visit in decades.

Hollywood + Highland

The Hollywood & Highland Center has been a catalyst for the rebirth of Hollywood Boulevard. Its Kodak Theatre is the home of the Academy Awards and new Cirque du Soleil show Iris, which premieres in July. The center’s shops are varied, ranging from Lucky Brand to Louis Vuitton, and it boasts two nightclubs, the Highlands and Level 3. The central Babylon Court frames views of the iconic Hollywood sign. Built in 1923 to advertise a housing development, the 50-foot-high letters originally read “Hollywoodland.” Next door to Hollywood & Highland is Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, famous for its celebrity handprints embedded in the cement out front. The theater remains a favorite venue for Hollywood premieres.

SHOWTIME

Just across the street from Hollywood & Highland is the ornate, lavishly illuminated El Capitan Theatre. Masterfully restored by Disney, it offers special presentations of the studio’s animated releases combined with performances on an antique Wurlitzer pipe organ and kid-pleasing stage shows. Jimmy Kimmel Live! tapes in an ABC studio next door. The Egyptian Theatre— built in 1922 around the time King Tut’s tomb was discovered—screens eclectic artsy fare. The landmark Pantages Theatre has staged megahit musicals including Wicked, while the Hollywood Palladium has a rich history of showcasing headlining musicians.

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EDWIN SANTIAGO. PALLADIUM AND LOS FELIZ, AMY K. FELLOWS; BARDOT, DAMIAN TSUTSUMIDA

Hollywood Boulevard

new in town Harvard & Stone

industrial bar and lounge emphasizing cocktails handmade with craft spirits. 5221 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.6063

Painted Bird

San francisco import boutique with new and vintage clothing for men and women. 4208 Santa Monica Blvd., Silver lake, 323.522.3368

Paul & Andre

a novel concept—a pop-up nightclub open for just six months. 6356 Hollywood Blvd. (entrance on Cosmo Street), Hollywood, 323.860.9795

Vivier and Bentley

Joint boutique from handbag designer Clare Vivier and kathryn Bentley of dream Collective jewelry. 1404 Micheltorena St., Silver lake, 323.665.2476

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11-ADV

Walk of Fame

The sidewalks along 15 blocks of Hollywood Boulevard (La Brea Avenue to Gower Street) and three blocks of Vine Street (Yucca Street to Sunset Boulevard) are inlaid with the legendary brass-and-terrazzo stars honoring celebrities from the entertainment industry. More than 2,400 stars are enshrined beneath the feet of tourists, but the roster is not without its quirks—Pee-wee Herman has one but Clint Eastwood doesn’t. Marilyn Monroe’s star is steps from Hollywood & Highland, while John Lennon’s is appropriately located in front of the Capitol Records Building, the structure designed to resemble a stack of records.

Museums, HOLLYWOOD-STYLE

Hollywood has its museums, but don’t expect to encounter Picasso or Monet, or even a T. rex skeleton. Next to Grauman’s Chinese Theatre is Madame Tussauds Hollywood, filled with more than 100 wax figures ranging from Clark Gable and Audrey Hepburn to contemporary icons such as Justin Timberlake and Lady Gaga. You can ponder some zany accomplishments at the Guinness World Records Museum, while the Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Museum offers bizarre exhibitions on double-headed animals and shrunken human heads. Serious movie buffs, however, head to the Hollywood Museum, which occupies four floors of the historic Max Factor Building. Among the 10,000 costumes and artifacts on display are the whip of Indiana Jones, Rocky Balboa’s boxing gloves and W.C. Fields’ top hat.

AROUND VINE

The storied intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street, the epicenter of the Hollywood Walk of Fame, boasted a large concentration of entertainment industry companies in the 1920s. It’s a different Hol-

lywood today, but the magic of this location endures in the soaring W Hollywood Hotel & Residences, which boasts Delphine brasserie and Drai’s rooftop club. A Metro station is integrated into the hotel; Hollywood is particularly well served by mass transit. Across the street is boutique hotel the Redbury and its stylish Middle Eastern restaurant, Cleo. Sunset Boulevard and Vine is in transition, but dance clubs and eateries give this corner plenty of character. Serious cinephiles catch their flicks at ArcLight Cinemas, where it’s easy to spot a celeb. Close by is Amoeba Music, where serious music fans and collectors browse the aisles through 31,000 square feet of space packed with rare vinyl records, CDs and memorabilia. A couple of blocks west is the stylish mini-complex Space 15 Twenty, catering to shoppers well into the evening. The center is anchored by a supersize Urban Outfitters and complemented by other hip boutiques.

NIGHTCRAWLING

The revival of Hollywood has only enhanced its endless nightlife opportunities, and a lively bar and club scene permeates the district. On Hollywood Boulevard, you can party under the guise of literary advancement at library-themed Hemingway’s, or attempt to get past the velvet ropes at MyHouse and Supperclub. Cahuenga Boulevard also hosts dozens of clubs. Quintessentially L.A. but a galaxy removed from Hollywood Boulevard is the Hollywood Bowl, the largest outdoor amphitheater in the U.S. where the Los Angeles Philharmonic takes up residence from June to October. Picnicking under the stars here is among the most memorable experiences in L.A. Nearby is the Ford Amphitheatre, featuring a more intimate environment for international music, dance and family fare.

LOS FELIZ + SILVER LAKE

These neighborhoods are among the bestkept secrets in the county. Vermont Avenue, the main drag in Los Feliz, presents a collection of shops and restaurants that range from bohemian to chic. Skylight Books and 24/7 diner Fred 62 are popular hangouts. Newer lounges like Rockwell represent the neighborhood’s increasing sophistication. A once-forgotten stretch of Hollywood Boulevard in Los Feliz now hosts trendy boutiques such as Confederacy and restaurants like cult fave Umami Burger. Fully transformed is Silver Lake Boulevard, now crowded with eateries and upscale retailers. At Sunset Junction, where Sunset and Santa Monica Boulevards intersect and the eponymous music festival takes place every summer, is where Los Feliz transitions into Silver Lake. Foodies hang at casual Forage or the Cheese Store of Silverlake, while aspiring screenwriters hammer at their laptops and sip lattes at Intelligentsia Coffee & Tea.

GRIFFITH PARK

The largest urban park in America, this sprawling swath is an ideal place to hike, picnic, golf, ride horses and more. The Charlie Turner Trailhead begins at the Griffith Observatory, one of the great planetariums in the world and a frequent filming location. The hike up Mount Hollywood (three miles round trip) provides views of the Hollywood sign, and the nearby Greek Theatre, a 5,700-seat amphitheater, is a legendary music venue. Also located in Griffith Park is the underrated Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens and the Western heritage-oriented Autry National Center, both accessible from the Ventura (SR 134) or Golden State (I-5) freeways. For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of these neighborhoods, see pages 125–126.

great find

BARE ESSENTIAL Feeling less than bikini-ready in a certain, uh, special area? Stark Waxing Studio has got you covered—or, rather, uncovered. (Wink.) The Silver Lake studio offers a full menu of facial and body waxing for women and men, specializing in eyebrow shaping and the delicate Brazilian wax. Although the latter can be a harrowing experience in less skilled hands, Stark is known for its lightning-fast method and gentle products, which have helped them garner a loyal clientele. Stark’s clean, simple storefront and airy reception area, along with a friendly and professional staff, make for a comfortable stay. Bring the pampering experience home with you: Stark also sells body scrubs and oils, exfoliating mitts and fragrant candles. 3335 W. Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake, 323.666.3335, starkwaxingstudio.com

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exploring

Downtown

From left: James Irvine Gardens in Little Tokyo; Walt Disney Concert Hall; Olvera Street.

L.A.’s urban center Beverly Hills and Venice Beach may be favorite tourist attracreflects the cultural tions, but downtown should not be overlooked. Historic Art diversity, world-class Deco structures share the streetscape with glass- or titaniumclad masterpieces, and even movie stars are snapping up hip architecture and dynamic commerce lofts carved out of turn-of-the-century structures. The city’s scene roars to life in downtown, a place where the usual that makes the city arts image of L.A. as “laid-back” hardly applies. a superstar on the international stage. Union Station

The ornate Union Station was the last of the grand railroad terminals built in the U.S. Its importance faded as the automobile began to dominate life in L.A., but Union Station has staged a comeback, thanks to a renovation and downtown’s new energy. From Union Station, the hub of the Metro system, you can board the Red Line to Hollywood and the San Fernando Valley or the light rail Gold Line to Pasadena and Blue Line to Long Beach. From here, nonstop bus service to LAX is available 24/7, Metrolink commuter trains connect distant suburbs and you can jump on an Amtrak train for a scenic journey along the coast.

Grand Avenue + MUSIC CENTER

The heart of L.A.’s performing arts scene and the site of its most dramatic architecture, Grand Avenue is beginning to live up to its name. On Bunker Hill, once filled with Victorian mansions, four venues comprise a formidable collection of stages at The Music Center. The 3,200-seat Dorothy Chandler Pavilion is home to the Los Angeles Opera, and the Ahmanson Theatre and Mark Taper Forum host theatrical productions. The flashiest Music Center venue is architect Frank Gehry’s curvaceous, jaw-dropping Walt Disney Concert Hall, home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Its young music director, Gustavo Dudamel, exudes an energy that rivals the building’s audacious design. Also housed at Disney Hall, with a separate entrance around the corner, is REDCAT, which offers performance and visual arts productions. Patina offers elegant feasts inside Disney Hall.

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LIBRARY AND OLVERA STREET, C.I. SMITH PHOTOGRAPHY. GARDENS, AMY K. FELLOWS; DISNEY HALL, IDRIS ERBA

The Los Angeles Public Library’s Richard J. Riordan Central Library

new in town Aburiya Toranoko

Cool Japanese gastropub with graffitiscribbled walls and a sushi bar. 243 S. San pedro St., downtown, 213.621.9500

Angel City Brewing

Massive microbrewery and bar that also serves small-producer wines. 216 S. alameda St., downtown, 213.622.1261

MartinMartin

darkly minimalist clothing by a los angeles-based husband-and-wife design team. 713 S. los angeles St., downtown, 213.624.6244

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DESCENDING BUNKER HILL

Steps from the Music Center is the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, designed by Spanish architect José Rafael Moneo. A short walk south on Grand is the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Southern California’s premier contemporary art museum. The Omni Hotel and California Plaza are adjacent. Nearby Angels Knoll is a welcome patch of greenery amid the concrete jungle. Angels Flight, a vintage funicular that climbs to California Plaza from Hill Street below, is billed as “The Shortest Railway in the World” (just 298 feet!); a ride costs 25 cents. At the foot of the hill, the Bunker Hill Steps rise five stories at the U.S. Bank Tower, the tallest building west of the Mississippi. Across the street is the Los Angeles Public Library, an Art Deco masterpiece.

OLVERA STREET

The origin of the city of Los Angeles, dating back to 1781, is El Pueblo de Los Angeles, a collection of 27 buildings along festive pedestrian concourse Olvera Street. The city’s oldest building, Avila Adobe (circa 1818), is located here, along with Mexican restaurants, mariachi bands and merchants offering art and crafts. A few blocks away is the city’s oldest restaurant, Philippe the Original (1908), where a cup of joe is still just 9 cents.

HISTORIC DISTRICTS

Often overlooked by tourists is the Broadway Theatre District, home to once-opulent movie palaces ablaze in neon. A few, like the Orpheum Theatre, have been restored to their original grandeur. Historic structures are being converted into lofts; Johnny Depp owns a condo in Broadway’s Eastern Columbia Building. The Bradbury Building (304 S. Broadway), built in 1893 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was featured in the film Blade Runner.

Spring Street, from 4th to 7th Streets, is a rapidly awakening area once referred to as the “Wall Street of the West.” Steps from this historic district is a row of hip bars on 6th Street (between Main and Los Angeles streets) that includes Las Perlas and Mignon.

SHOPPING DISTRICTS

Downtown’s heritage as a mercantile center can still be experienced in its historic shopping districts, popular with bargain hunters. The Jewelry District draws shoppers to markets like St. Vincent Jewelry Center (650 S. Hill St.), where 500 merchants offer gold, diamonds and baubles. In the neighboring Fashion District, 115 blocks centered around the California Market Center, you can find designer clothing items. At Santee Alley, an open-air bargain bazaar, designer trends breed low-priced knockoffs. The Flower District offers blooms at wholesale prices. And for an awesome array of produce and international foods, Grand Central Market, near the foot of Angels Flight, is the place to go. Many vendors here deal in cash only.

CHINATOWN

Chinatown remains a great destination for sampling dim sum or browsing for authentic clothing, tea or home furnishings. Cultural highlights include the ornate Thien Hau Temple (750 Yale St.) and the Chinese American Museum. Pedestrian-oriented Chung King Road and Gin Ling Way are now home to galleries and Mountain Bar, while Broadway boasts cool boutiques. Dodger Stadium is a short drive away, as is San Antonio Winery, which offers tours and tastings.

LITTLE TOKYO

Little Tokyo is still a proud ethnic enclave, but it, too, is emerging as an up-and-coming hipster ’hood. The dining scene is popping, led by newer restaurants such as Aburiya

Toranoko, and you can still nibble on traditional sushi prepared by veteran chefs at Japanese Village Plaza. Just a few steps down 1st Street is the sleek, glass-ensconced Japanese American National Museum. The Geffen Contemporary, a Frank Gehryrenovated branch of MOCA, is located next door. At 2nd and Main streets is the historic Cathedral of Saint Vibiana, formerly home of the Los Angeles Archdiocese.

L.A. LIVE

The $2.5 billion L.A. Live project has been called the epicenter of the downtown renaissance. Staples Center, home to the Los Angeles Lakers, Clippers and Kings, hosts top pop acts. As does Nokia Theatre L.A. Live, which boasts state-of-the-art acoustics. The adjoining Grammy Museum honors myriad music genres with videos, artifacts and interactive exhibits. A dozen restaurants and clubs— Katsuya, WP24 and The Conga Room, to name a few—face a massive urban plaza lined with towering LED screens. The Los Angeles Convention Center, encompassing 16-plus acres of exhibition space, is also here.

EXPOSITION PARK

Just south of downtown is Exposition Park, whose grounds hold major museums and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The sevenacre Exposition Park Rose Garden is legendary, and the Beaux-Arts-style Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County offers insight into prehistoric giants. Other attractions include the California African American Museum and California Science Center with its 3-D IMAX theater. The science center is also the future home of space shuttle Endeavour. Farther west of Exposition Park is the jazz and blues capital of Leimert Park; south is Watts, home of the Watts Towers. For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of downtown, see page 125.

great find

SLEEPER HIT You’ll spend one-third of your life in bed—you might as well sleep in style. Since 1996, L.A.based Matteo has been turning out sumptuous, ethically produced, impeccably tailored bedding that blends European elegance with California cool. In the company’s downtown Arts District workshop, three bedding collections, plus bath and table linens and apparel, are constructed of the finest materials from around the world, then dyed locally to achieve a perfect vintage look and soft feel. Whether your home’s style is downtown loft, ‘20s cottage or Tuscan villa, visit the workshop-adjacent showroom/retail space to find your match among the earth-toned, ticking-striped, ruffled and plaid offerings. Don’t miss the back room, which has dreamy deals. 912 E. 3rd St., downtown, 213.617.2813, matteohome.com

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H&H-W


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exploring

Pasadena

From left: Colorado Street Bridge; shoppers in Old Pasadena; The Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden in Arcadia.

Pasadena, aka the Crown City, brings a blend of smalltown charm and cosmopolitan energy. Eagle Rock, Glendale and the San Gabriel Valley are also worth discovering.

Just minutes from downtown via the historic Arroyo Seco Parkway or the Metro Gold Line train, Pasadena is no ordinary bedroom community. The Craftsman-style bungalows in its leafy neighborhoods hint of a world-renowned architectural heritage, and institutions such as the Tournament of Roses, Caltech and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory give the community a gravitas far beyond its size. In neighboring San Gabriel Valley communities, additional treasures await.

Old Pasadena

A tribute to foresighted urban planning is the 22-square block shopping district known as Old Pasadena, roughly bounded by Walnut Street and Del Mar Boulevard, Arroyo Parkway and Pasadena Avenue. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the once-neglected district contains restored buildings and the city’s trendiest boutiques, bistros and nightclubs. Pedestrian-only alleys meander through One Colorado, where an eclectic collection of restaurants have alfresco dining overlooking a sculpture-strewn square. A few steps east of Old Pasadena lies Paseo Colorado, an inviting shopping center with ArcLight Cinemas and upscale shops such as Brighton Collectibles, Coach and BCBG Max Azria lining garden promenades. A wide variety of dining options is offered at this mixed-use development, whose open-air design frames views of historic structures like soaring Pasadena City Hall (100 N. Garfield Ave.), restored to its original Beaux-Arts grandeur.

Playhouse District

Anchored by the Mission-style Pasadena Playhouse, this district is filled with upscale antique shops, boutiques and dining rooms with ornate façades. Also present is the Le Cordon Bleu-affiliated College of Culinary Arts, with a restaurant open to the public, and the famed Ice House comedy club. The neighboring Boston Court Performing Arts Center presents dramas and musicals. The pagoda-crowned Pacific Asia Museum features exotic deco-

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EDWIN SANTIAGO. BRIDGE, BJARNE G. JENSEN; OLD PASADENA AND ARBORETUM, AMY K. FELLOWS

Pasadena City Hall

new in town AKA an American Bistro

Owner of Bistro 45 opens organically minded eatery inspired by california wine country cuisine. One colorado, 41 hugus alley, Old Pasadena, 626.564.8111

Fluff Ice

like the Pinkberry of shaved ice, this cheery spot doles out flavors like matcha green tea and mango topped with fresh fruit. 500 n. atlantic Blvd., Monterey Park, 626.872.2123

Papeterie

Feminine shop selling letter-press cards, stationery and other paper accessories. Westfield santa anita, 400 s. Baldwin ave., santa anita, 626.294.1971

Station

clothing store for the young and hip that stocks local emerging labels in denim, streetwear and accessories. 167 caruso ave., glendale, 818.246.3200

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rative arts from every corner of Asia, while the Pasadena Museum of California Art celebrates Golden State painters and sculptors from 1850 to the present. Dining ranges from Pie ’n Burger, a favorite Caltech dive, to Playhouse-adjacent Elements Kitchen. Just east of the Playhouse District, South Lake Avenue provides a vibrant shopping environment. At the Commons and Burlington Arcade, charming boutiques are set around European-style courtyards. A drive farther south on Lake Avenue reveals the opulent, historic Langham, Huntington Hotel.

Orange grOVe BOuleVard

This wide boulevard, once called Millionaire’s Row, is still lined with splendid estates, including the former Wrigley Mansion that now houses the Tournament of Roses Association, open for tours. The immediate neighborhood features the legacy of architects Frank Lloyd Wright, Wallace Neff and Paul Williams. The genius of Greene & Greene, pioneers of the Arts & Crafts movement, is evident at the Gamble House, also open to the public. Just around the corner on Colorado Boulevard is the Norton Simon Museum, home to one of the finest art collections in America. The galleries at this small museum are filled with masterpieces from the Renaissance to the 20th century, and its repertory of Impressionist masters (Monet, Cézanne, van Gogh) is impressive. It also features extensive art from India, and a tribute to Degas in a lovely sculpture garden.

san MarinO + sOuth Pasadena

In the exclusive residential community of San Marino is the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, one of the most remarkable pieces of real estate in Southern California. Here the beauti-

fully restored Italianate mansion of railroad magnate Henry Huntington is packed with 18th- and 19th-century art including Thomas Gainsborough’s Blue Boy and Sir Thomas Lawrence’s Pinkie. A library with 600,000 rare books and manuscripts occupies another structure. Throughout the 200-acre property are more than one dozen distinct botanical environments, re-creating native habitats from England to China. Tea service is offered in a cottage amid a formal rose garden. Directly south of Old Pasadena is the independent municipality of South Pasadena, a shady, tranquil community whose Mission West historic district is packed with antique shops, art galleries and cafes. The town is particularly kid-friendly, thanks to adorable shops such as the Dinosaur Farm and eateries like Fair Oaks Pharmacy, a 1915 restored drugstore with a soda fountain.

eagle rOcK + glendale

Just west of Pasadena is Eagle Rock, a quiet college town that is reinventing itself as a hip neighborhood with an understated boho-chic vibe. Its main drag of Colorado Boulevard is suddenly lined with one trendy cafe after another, from Vietnamese to French to vegetarian—plus Casa Bianca, a venerable old-school pizza joint. Students from Occidental College, where a young Barack Obama studied, mingle with young couples who have snapped up the hillside real estate. On the other side of Eagle Rock is Glendale. In this, the third-largest city in Los Angeles County, office workers pour out of high-rises for happy hour at The Americana at Brand, a buzzing open-air shopping, residential and entertainment development. Here style-savvy shoppers can find value at H&M or splurge at exclusive boutiques like Kate Spade. It’s a great place for a movie followed by an alfresco snack from Crumbs

Bake Shop or sushi and cocktails at the Philippe Starck-designed Katsuya. The Glendale Galleria shopping center is adjacent. Glendale’s diverse population—it’s home to one of the largest Armenian communities in America—provides plenty of flavor, including elaborate restaurants. Marked by a towering neon obelisk is the Alex Theatre (216 N. Brand Blvd.), an Art Deco masterpiece that hosts concerts and musicals. Just north of downtown Glendale is the delightful community of Montrose, with its homespun shops and all-American diners. Nearby is sprawling Descanso Gardens, home to North America’s largest camellia collection—an awesome sight when fully in bloom during January and February.

san gaBriel Valley

Kissing Pasadena’s eastern border is Sierra Madre, a quaint community that refuses to be paved over. Arcadia is home to Santa Anita Park, one of the most storied thoroughbred horse racing venues in the world. Adjacent to the racetrack is Westfield Santa Anita, an ever-expanding shopping center. Arcadia is also home to the 127-acre Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanical Garden, whose natural Southern California habitat is famous for its wild peafowl; you might see a flock crossing nearby streets. The 1771 San Gabriel Mission is a notable landmark in the neighboring city of San Gabriel. The San Gabriel Valley cities of San Gabriel, Temple City, Alhambra and Monterey Park have drawn large numbers of Chinese and Vietnamese immigrants in recent decades, and some of the best Chinese restaurants in America are found here, including Hong Kong-style seafood houses that are great fun for dim sum brunches. For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of these neighborhoods, see page 126.

great find

ICE CREAM OF THE CROP Putting a new spin on the classic ice cream parlor, L.A. Creamery, new to the Americana at Brand in Glendale, offers fun, imaginative and alluringly unusual ice cream flavors. Sixteen to 18 house-made flavors made with seasonal ingredients are offered on a rotating basis; they range from such tried-and-true varieties as cookies-and-sweet-cream and chocolate chip to the more imaginative, including milk chocolate-Guinness, saffron-vanilla and goat cheeseand-currant. Led by chef/partner Jessica Goryl, who has worked in the kitchens of Cafe del Rey and BLT Steak, L.A. Creamery also offers sorbets, sundaes, cookie sandwiches, bonbons and fruit popsicles, as well as baked goods, coffee and tea. There are also shops in Canoga Park and Sherman Oaks. 777 Americana Way, Glendale, 818.552.2663, lacreamery.com

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AAB_Where_May2011_v6.pdf

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J

ust 15 minutes from downtown Los Angeles, and conveniently

situated along the Metro Gold Line, Old Pasadena is a vibrant hub of world-class shopping, dining, arts, and entertainment. Comprised of 22 blocks of nationally-registered historic architecture, Old Pasadena is widely recognized as a premier destination and one of the few truly walkable urban districts in California.

Vo

w

Come explore more than 300 specialty boutiques, exclusive retailers, sidewalk cafĂŠs, and fine restaurants in this authentic main street experience.

A contemporary cabinet of curiosities with a museum perspective on current artists, jewelers, and designers.

Voted best Indian restaurant in the San Gabriel Valley 14 years running.

American Bistro cuisine to be paired with over 650 wines and specialty cocktails.

Gold Bug

Akbar Cuisine of India

Vertical Wine Bistro

22 E. Union St. 626.744.9963 goldbugpasadena.com

44 N. Fair Oaks Ave. 626.577.9916 akbarcuisineofindia.com

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70 N. Raymond Ave. 626.795.3999 verticalwinebistro.com

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h

Voted ‘Best in Pasadena’ by local residents, the boutique offers gifts of style, wit and whimsy with a hint of all things nostalgic.

Dine or drink in Old Pasadena’s only gastropub, a brick-clad historic landmark with patio bar and beer garden.

Shopping fun at this high-end designer resale store, that offers the best of recent and vintage Chanel, LV, Prada and more!

Lula Mae

Kings Row Gastropub

Clothes Heaven

100 N. Fair Oaks Ave. 626.304.9996 lulamae.com

20 E. Colorado Blvd. 626.793.3010 kingsrowpub.com

111 E. Union St. 626.440.0929 clothesheaven.com

This local Pasadena favorite offers a globally inspired Japanese menu along with signature cocktails, sake and beers.

kate spade new york Fashion and accessories with utility, wit and playful sophistication.

First and only restaurant serving authentic Ukrainian cuisine in Pasadena.

Sushi Roku

kate spade new york

Roxolana Restaurant & Wine Bar

33 Miller Alley at One Colorado 626.683.3000 sushiroku.com

39 W. Colorado Blvd. 626.356.9460 katespade.com

34 S. Raymond Ave. 626.792.0440

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EXPLORING

The Valley

The San Fernando Valley is home to the studio giants in “The Industry.” In Burbank’s Magnolia Park, antique shops, independent boutiques and cafes are clustered around Magnolia Boulevard and Hollywood Way. Porto’s Bakery is renowned for its Cuban confections and sandwiches. Burbank’s dual-terminal Bob Hope Airport is convenient for visitors heading to the Valley as well as nearby Pasadena and Hollywood. North Hollywood, due east of the airport, is the final stop of the Metro Red Line subway, which runs through Hollywood to downtown. The popular Metro Orange Line busway starts here and runs west across the Valley.

VENTURA BOULEVARD

Universal Studios Hollywood and Universal CityWalk are perched on a hillside adjacent to the 101 Freeway, at the gateway to the Valley. Mission San Fernando Rey de España, the historic mission from which the basin derives its name, is at the Valley’s northernmost border. Vibrant downtown Burbank and Studio City cater to Hollywood types. Welcome to “the other side” of the hill.

UNIVERSAL CITY

North from Hollywood sits Universal CityWalk, a colorful minicity next to Universal Studios Hollywood with “65 cool things to do.” They include iFLY Hollywood—where a wind tunnel simulates sky diving—an Imax theater, Saddle Ranch Chop House with its mechanical bulls and the Rumba Room nightclub. Stores such as Abercrombie & Fitch, Fossil and GUESS? Accessories draw late-night shoppers; Gibson Amphitheatre is adjacent.

THE STUDIOS

Headquarters for Warner Bros., NBC and Disney are in Burbank, business center of the San Fernando Valley. Warner Bros. Studios and NBC Studios offer back-lot tours; all of the studios recruit audience members for tapings of sitcoms and talk shows. Ticketing agencies such as Audiences Unlimited are the best means to secure free tickets to tapings; contact NBC directly for tickets to The Tonight Show With Jay Leno.

DOWNTOWN BURBANK

A vibrant downtown, offering an “urban zen” experience ideal for strolling, is off Interstate 5 at Burbank Boulevard. Urban Outfitters and Granville are typical of hip retailers in the area. The Burbank Town Center (201 E. Magnolia Blvd.) features a Macy’s, more than 300 boutiques and restaurants and the AMC Theatres.

OUTPOSTS

A bevy of restaurants including Roy’s Hawaiian Fusion are at Warner Center in Woodland Hills, the end of the Metro Orange Line. Shop at Westfield Topanga nearby, which boasts Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom and Macy’s; it also offers a host of high-end stores such as Tiffany & Co. and Burberry. Westbound on the 101 Freeway is Calabasas, which offers upscale shopping and casual eateries at the Commons (4799 Commons Way). Stylish stores include L’Occitane and Theodore. Several restaurants overlook the lake at Westlake Village, among them Dockside Terrace (32131 Lindero Canyon Road). Air Force One is permanently grounded in the Air Force One Pavilion at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley. Find Six Flags Magic Mountain, roller coaster capital of the world, in Valencia, north of the Valley off Interstate 5. For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of these neighborhoods, see page 126.

RICK MEYER

AMC Walkway in Burbank

Cahuenga Boulevard becomes Ventura Boulevard in Studio City, just west of the 101 Freeway near Universal Studios. Immortalized by Tom Petty in the song “Free Fallin’ ” and the setting for countless films, the iconic, palm-lined boulevard runs through the San Fernando Valley for 20 miles. Between the 101 and 405 freeways, Ventura Boulevard offers an eclectic mix of boutiques, beauty stops and restaurants. Celeb haunts in the area include ROB/B OPI Concept Salon, Belle Visage Spa and boutiques Belle Gray and Dari. Abundance boutique carries plus-size designer fashions. When it’s time to nosh, upscale Bistro Garden at Coldwater, hip La Loggia and a sushi row—where standouts include Katsuya, Teru Sushi and Sushi Nozawa—comfortably commingle along the boulevard. It’s rumored that chef Nozawa inspired Seinfeld’s “Soup Nazi.” Hip restaurants and bars have helped to launch a nightlife scene: Firefly offers bistro and Mediterranean dishes; Clear is a contemporary cocktail lounge. Bloomingdale’s anchors Westfield Fashion Square in Sherman Oaks; there are also Betsey Johnson and Max Studio boutiques and Sephora. Sherman Oaks Galleria is near the junction of the 405 and 101 freeways; draws include ArcLight Cinemas.

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exploring

South Bay

From left: Shop in Redondo Beach; Manhattan Beach Pier; Korean Bell of Friendship in San Pedro.

The South Bay’s beaches and harbors are actionpacked, but the living is easy. Look for ocean-view dining, mom-andpop shops and seaside attractions.

In the South Bay, the cities of Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach and Redondo Beach occupy an idyllic coastal stretch renowned for surfing, volleyball and expensive real estate. Farther south beckon the rugged bluffs of the Palos Verdes peninsula, and beyond them, the bustling waterfronts of San Pedro and Long Beach. Longing for a laid-back vibe? Scenic beaches? Premier shopping and dining? Outdoor adventure? You’ll find all of them and more.

Manhattan Beach

Nineteen miles southwest of downtown, Manhattan Beach boasts two miles of beaches with sand so fine that developers from Waikiki Beach in Honolulu imported it in the 1920s. One of the more affluent cities in the county, Manhattan Beach is home to many professional athletes: You may spot an L.A. Kings player as you walk along the Strand, the pedestrian promenade sandwiched between multimillion-dollar homes and the beachfront bike trail. At the end of the 928-foot-long Manhattan Beach Pier, the Roundhouse Aquarium delights with touch tanks and terrifies with a lifesize great white shark replica. The pier features bronze plaques commemorating winners of the Manhattan Beach Open—the South Bay is die-hard beach volleyball country. It’s also a playground for water-sport enthusiasts, including boogie-boarders and surfers who congregate near the pier and at El Porto Beach. East of the pier, casual cafes, laid-back bars and upscale boutiques radiate from the intersection of Manhattan Beach Boulevard and Manhattan Avenue. Metlox Plaza is a popular gathering spot, with such shops as Wright’s Baby and the Beehive and hot spots such as Zinc at the Shade Hotel.

Hermosa Beach

Heading south on Manhattan Avenue brings you to Pier Avenue, the heart of Hermosa Beach. Hermosa shares many characteristics of Manhattan Beach, including a scenic twomile stretch of beachfront punctuated by volleyball nets, fitness buffs weaving along the

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THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE, BJARNE G. JENSEN. PIER, EDWIN SANTIAGO

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ecofriendly, sustainable goods and clothing for stylish babes. 1300 highland ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.802.8000

Cami popular clothing boutique cami gets a sister store emphasizing shoes, handbags, jewelry and other accessories. 1146 highland ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.545.2264

M.B. Post Water grill’s david leFevre moves to the beach, opening a casual yet sophisticated american small-plates eatery. 1142 Manhattan ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.545.5405

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Strand (here merged with the bike path), and a pier studded with bronze plaques, this one commemorating surfing legends. Come late afternoon, the pedestrian plaza at Pier Avenue west of Hermosa Avenue becomes a different kind of South Bay scene, thanks to spillover from hopping bars and restaurants. Beyond Pier Plaza to the south, on Hermosa Avenue, Jay Leno draws crowds to the Comedy & Magic Club with Sunday night shows. To the plaza’s east, the ecofriendly cafe/boutique Gum Tree is a standout among the specialty shops and bistros that line Pier Avenue. Across the street, Becker’s carries surfboards and beachwear apropos for the town’s reigning pastimes.

Redondo Beach

The largest of L.A. County’s beach cities, Redondo Beach is home to the 1,457-seat Redondo Beach Performing Arts Center and a recreational waterfront featuring two miles of sandy beaches, the popular Redondo Beach Pier and King Harbor. Sepulveda Boulevard becomes Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) as it enters town; signs point west to King Harbor’s Redondo Beach Marina, one of four marinas in the harbor. Here, you’ll find businesses like Redondo Sportfishing offering recreational fishing excursions and whale-watching tours, while other local outfitters rent kayaks, paddle boats, bicycles and wave runners. South of the harbor, the historic Redondo Beach Pier has had its ups and downs, but it keeps rising from the ashes to attract locals and visitors to quick eats, amusements and souvenir shops. South of the pier, the gentle waves and somewhat narrow beach of Redondo State Beach draw crowds during the summer, while the bike path meanders by on its way to its terminus at Torrance State Beach . One block east of the beach, the Riviera Village shopping district has a small-town feel, with restaurants

and specialty boutiques like Lisa Z. covering a six-block radius.

PALOS VERDES PENINSULA

Beyond Redondo Beach rises the Palos Verdes Peninsula, a rugged 26-square-mile area known for majestic bluffs that afford sweeping views of the Pacific and Santa Catalina Island. Hugging the coast on Palos Verdes Drive West brings you to Rancho Palos Verdes’ Point Vicente Interpretive Center, a marine museum and popular gray whale watching site during the annual northbound migration. Eight miles inland on Crenshaw Boulevard sprawls the 87-acre South Coast Botanic Garden in tony Palos Verdes Estates. Just beyond the interpretive center on Palos Verdes Drive West is the Wayfarers Chapel, designed by Lloyd Wright, son of Frank. The impressive Swedenborgian “glass church” is a popular wedding venue. Golfers, take note: The Mediterraneanstyle Terranea Resort, just south of the chapel, has a public nine-hole course. A couple of miles south, the 18-hole public golf course at Trump National Golf Club is top-ranked.

SAN PEDRO

The multicultural city of San Pedro, on the southeastern side of the Palos Verdes Peninsula, was once the largest commercial fishing port in the nation. Today, it’s home to the Port of Los Angeles, a major container port that also serves travelers on the Catalina Express and more than 1 million cruise passengers annually. From the port’s World Cruise Center, a vintage trolley takes visitors downtown to the waterfront restaurants and shops of the New England-style Ports O’ Call Village, and then to the marina, part of the Cabrillo Beach Recreational Complex. The complex includes a historic bathhouse and the Frank Gehry-designed Cabrillo Marine Aquarium,

located next to Cabrillo Beach. Windsurfers of all abilities congregate here, with outfitters including Captain Kirk’s (525 N. Harbor Blvd.) offering rentals and lessons.

LONG BEACH

Covering 50 square miles in the southwest corner of L.A. County, Long Beach boasts a busy commercial port, an attraction-packed waterfront and more than five miles of beaches. Among its most popular draws is the 1,020-foot-long Queen Mary, an historic, supposedly haunted ship-turned-hotel, dining and shopping attraction permanently moored in Long Beach Harbor. Alongside it is the Cold War-era Russian Foxtrot Submarine. The Long Beach Convention & Entertainment Center and the Pike at Rainbow Harbor entertainment complex are nearby, as is the Aquarium of the Pacific and the familyfriendly Shoreline Village. From the village, you can rent bicycles and follow the Shoreline Pedestrian bike path 3.1 miles along the water, passing the Long Beach Museum of Art. The path ends at the tony Belmont Shore neighborhood. Here you’ll find restaurants and shops along 2nd street, Bay Shore Beach, the Belmont Pier, windsurfing and kite-surfing lessons, and even gondola rides through the canals of Naples, a neighborhood situated on islands in Alamitos Bay. Downtown, along 4th Street between Junipero and Cherry avenues, vintage furniture and clothing shops like the Vintage Collective make up funky “Retro Row.” In the emergent East Village Arts District, hip galleries and boutiques are sprouting where Linden Avenue meets Broadway, while farther east, an impressive collection of modern and contemporary works decks the walls of the Museum of Latin American Art (MoLAA). For bold items, see listings in the where guide. For a detailed map of these neighborhoods, see page 125.

great find

LOVE THE OLIVE A new environmentally and socially minded Hermosa Beach shop enthusiastically promotes oil consumption. Contradictory? Not when the oil comes from sustainable California olive groves, is packaged in refillable bottles and confers benefits like heart health and supple skin. Oliovera certified extra virgin olive oils include a delicate Mission, a buttery Arbequina and a robust, throat-tickling Tuscan, plus naturally flavored oils (including an exquisite fresh lemon) and select varietals from small growers. Pair one with a syrupy 18-year aged balsamic vinegar, toss in a rich olive-oil hand cream and you have the perfect souvenir or hostess gift. With each bottle purchased, Oliovera will donate five meals to a hungry child through a national charity. 200 Pier Ave., #206, Hermosa Beach, 424.261.4496, oliovera.com

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THE SEA IS CALLING

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5/17/11 3:28 PM


HOT IN THE KITCHEN Leading L.A. chefs preview the latest trendsetting ingredients.

Fettuccini with violet artichokes, spring onion, and au courant bottarga and stinging nettles, offered at La Seine on Restaurant Row

ALEXANDRA MARLIN

BY ROGER GRODY

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In a culinary community that has gone global, an exotic prawn from the Tasmanian coast or rare berry from the Amazon can be delivered to any kitchen in 24 hours. In L.A., success often hinges on showcasing ingredients that have yet to appear on any menus down the street, but in an age of instant connectivity, staying a step ahead of the competition is considerably tougher than it used to be. Here, we examine some hot ingredients that are about to go viral. Although it has been imported to America since late 2007, jamón ibérico remains an exclusive superhot ingredient. Italians may believe their beloved prosciutto di Parma— cured in open barns in the scenic hills of Emilia-Romagna—is as good as ham gets, but Spaniards beg to differ. Although their jamón serrano, trendy a decade ago, is outstanding in its own right, jamón ibérico is the Penélope Cruz (that is to say, the finest) of Spanish hams. Derived from a special breed of pigs that feed almost exclusively on acorns, it offers a melt-in-your-mouth texture and unique, earthy flavor profile. Fig & Olive, the sleek celebration of Mediterranean cuisines that just arrived on Melrose Place from New York, offers two degustation plates of jamón ibérico. Despite his passion for the ingredient, owner Laurent Halasz remains diplomatic. “Comparing it to prosciutto di Parma is like comparing apples and oranges…. Each have their own unique amazing taste and texture.” He reports that the traditional way to serve this treasured ham in Spain is with pan con tomate (toasted bread and crushed tomatoes) or with Manchego cheese. Nobody in L.A. can speak more authoritatively on Spanish ingredients than celebrity chef José Andrés, who, unlike the Frenchborn Halasz, doesn’t even pretend to be impartial. “Jamón ibérico is the best ham in the world,” he states. “I’m not being nationalistic … it’s just a fact.” He insists the nutty, sweet and rich aromas of this ham are simply without comparison, declaring, “You are ruined for other hams!” At The Bazaar by José Andrés at the SLS Hotel, it is offered alongside a wide variety of Spanish hams and sausages, served Catalan-style with bread and tomatoes. Domestic jamón ibérico-style products, generally much less expensive, are gradually making their way into respected restau-

rant kitchens. Chef Joseph Gillard of Napa Valley Grille swears by highly acclaimed La Quercia prosciutto from Iowa, an artisanal product that influential food writer Jeffrey Steingarten called the best he’s ever tasted, domestic or imported. The company’s so-called Acorn Edition is produced from free-range acorn-fed pigs, a la ibérico. “We believe this is as good, if not better, than ibérico, and it gives us the opportunity to keep our products as sustainable as possible,” says the ecoconscious Gillard. Last year, The Washington Post declared black garlic the next “it” ingredient in American kitchens after it caused a stir at Charlie Trotter’s in Chicago and at Manhattan’s renowned Le Bernardin. The fermented garlic product was developed in South Korea and is distributed domestically by a single supplier in northern California. Although the essence of fresh garlic is present, its taste is complex, with a pungency replaced by sweetness and a hint of licorice. At the Bazaar, Andrés uses black garlic to provide an extra dimension to barramundi, or adds it to a sherry vinaigrette he applies to soft shell crab. “It’s so sweet and rich … so simple, but it adds so much,” he says. “I use it in all my restaurants, especially with seafood.” At Chaya in Venice, black garlic enhances a dish of seared scallops and marinated shimeji mushrooms. “I enjoy cooking with black garlic,” says longtime executive chef Shigefumi Tachibe, who admires its soft texture. “It does not have the intense flavor that traditional garlic has, yet there is still a very mild hint of garlic flavor and richness,” he says. Another bit of exotica popping up on menus these days is zaatar, a Middle Eastern blend of spices. An aromatic signature of the Arab culinary world, zaatar is blended differently by every spice monger,

but usually includes oregano, thyme, salt, sesame seeds and sumac. Andrés creates a refreshing salad of Japanese baby peaches on a bed of Greek yogurt, drizzled with olive oil and finished with zaatar, saffron and citrus. “Zaatar is like a plane ticket to the Middle East.... When you smell it, it transports you there!” he insists. At Cleo, the contemporary Middle Eastern bistro at the Redbury boutique hotel in Hollywood, the menu reflects the nuanced fragrances of a Casablanca bazaar while making its cuisine relevant to a hip L.A. crowd. In addition to house-made flatbreads dusted with the spice mix, a dish of zaatar-seasoned grilled tuna is plated with olive tapenade, tahini and Calabrian chilies. Across the street, at the reinvented Delphine at the W Hollywood, chef Sascha Lyon offers a crispy flatbread with braised lamb, piquillo peppers, garlic confit, feta cheese, yogurt and zaatar. And at Mezze, taking over the rarefied space previously occupied by Sona, chef Micah Wexler applies the spice blend to woodoven-roasted chicken. Chef David Myers’ culinary curiosity never rests, and his three establishments in Tokyo provide endless opportunities to experiment with Japanese ingredients such as sudachi, a green Japanese citrus fruit, or mozuku, superthin ribbons of seaweed. Unfortunately, with duck confit and entrecôte ruling the menu at his Melrose Avenue French brasserie, Comme Ça, Myers has few opportunities to show off such exotic ingredients. But that doesn’t stop him from gently nudging customers beyond their comfort zones. Myers serves beef bone marrow with oxtail jam, a pairing of two unexpectedly trendy ingredients. Bone marrow, previously considered a minor distraction on a plate of osso buco, is rapidly heading mainstream. At Pizzeria Mozza, slathering it on crostini

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reveals its indulgent value, and at West 3rd Street’s Animal it’s dressed up with chimichurri sauce and caramelized onions. Oxtail, meanwhile, is a staple on every continent but until now was not particularly popular in America. “Oxtail and pasta is another great way to showcase the ingredient,” says Myers, who also favors braised oxtail with seared tuna. “The meat-and-fish pairing is quite interesting, and we finish it with fingerling potato gnocchi,” he says. You might say that fregola is the new Israeli couscous, the latest in a string of heretofore uncommon pastas expanding American diners’ horizons. A specialty of Sardinia, fregola consists of handmade balls or shards of semolina dough whose typical lack of uniformity reinforces its rustic origins. Beverly Hills’ stylish Scarpetta, part of chef/ restaurateur Scott Conant’s growing empire, serves fregola with pink snapper in a saffron brodetto (broth). At Angelini Osteria, where there is still a line at the door after more than a decade in business, chef/owner Gino Angelini might toss the little balls with peas and cherry tomatoes for a simple yet colorful presentation. And at Osteria Mozza, it arrives with grilled leg of lamb. Grains are also hot, with quinoa, barley and bulgur popping up on menus across

L.A. “Grains are very versatile. They can be used in place of most starches, but offer more nutrients and texture,” says chef Quinn Hatfield, who operates highly acclaimed Hatfield’s with his wife, Karen. He uses toasted bulgur in a chilled scallop appetizer with horseradish crème fraîche and muddled citrus, a dish inspired by tabbouleh, the Middle Eastern salad that features bulgur. Other grains intrigue the chef, who has also begun working with giant Japanese pearl barley. Karen, the restaurant’s pastry chef, constantly experiments with nontraditional ingredients as well. “I love the aroma of caraway seeds.… I’ve always been a sucker for a good rye bread!” Karen says. “I find they go really well with green apples, so I incorporate them into a caraway-scented brioche pudding with apple confit.” She plates the dessert with almond-milk sorbet. Pumpkin seeds, or pepitas as they are often referred to on menus to suggest something exotic, are suddenly ubiquitous in both savory and sweet dishes. John Sedlar, an introspective chef who has been driving trends in L.A. for decades, orchestrates a wealth of hard-to-find ingredients at his downtown restaurant, Rivera, and his recently debuted Playa on Beverly Boulevard. Playa

continues Rivera’s innovative Latin theme and offers slices of twice-seared duck fanned over garbanzo puree, finished with pepitas, white and black sesame seeds and blood orange-infused olive oil. La Seine is an upscale kosher restaurant on Beverly Hills’ Restaurant Row, a feat that in general involves some tricky manipulation of ingredients. For some diners, La Seine is about the only place in L.A. where they can enjoy a spicy tuna roll, rib eye with béarnaise sauce and a coconut crème brûlée—all washed down with a good Bordeaux—without violating kosher laws. Not only does chef Alex Reznik, a Top Chef alum, manage to keep his kitchen strictly kosher while appealing to mainstream diners, he also introduces some funky, trendsetting ingredients. In fact, he incorporates a handful of them in a single dish: spinach fettuccine with violet artichokes, spring onion, bottarga and stinging nettles. Bottarga, the dried, salt-cured pouch of roe from tuna or gray mullet, is sometimes referred to as a poor man’s caviar and is popular in seaside villages throughout the Mediterranean. “Bottarga has a sweet and smoky, yet briny flavor that gives any dish another level of umami,” declares Reznik. “I like to add a little to my gnocchi mix, shave some on my English pea

chaya, joseph moretti; the bazaar, darko zagar

Seared scallops are topped with the mellower black garlic at Chaya Venice

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soup or use it in lieu of anchovies on a Caesar salad—even to rim a glass for a dirty martini.” The first place in L.A. to make bottarga a culinary fashion statement was Piero Selvaggio’s Valentino in Santa Monica, where it is shaved over spaghetti. The mischievous Reznik sneaks another emerging ingredient, stinging nettles, into that same fettuccine. Mario Batali creates pastas from this ingredient with a cautionary name at his New York restaurant Babbo. (The nettles lose their toxins—and, thus, their sting—when cooked.) Reznik likes it for soups, teas, muddled in cocktails or simply sauteed like spinach. At Red Medicine in Beverly Hills, any number of interesting herbs and flowers are incorporated into its progressive CalVietnamese cuisine. A green called lovage is paired with pickled rose petals to create a nest for a poached egg, while the earthy, tealike flavor of the Asian goji berry complements the caramelized black vinegar and almonds in a pork dish. With pandan (a Southeast Asian green), verbena, elderflower and chrysanthemums punctuating the menu, Red Medicine’s service staff fields plenty of questions from guests. Chef Jordan Kahn says his use of unfamiliar ingredients is a combination of his desire to tease diners’ palates and the rapidly expanding repertory of local producers. “Farmers nowadays are bringing more esoteric ingredients to markets, introducing us to new things we’re excited about,” he says. “We try to pass that same feeling to our diners.” Ethnic authenticity is not the highest priority at Red Medicine—the partners acknowledge they’ve never even been to Vietnam—but Kahn provides a fun, aesthetically presented cuisine reflected in items like chicken dumplings, green papaya salad and lamb belly with hoisin sauce. Another ingredient morphing from peasant favorite to chic showstopper is tripe, offered at Culina at the Four Seasons Hotel at Beverly Hills. Chef Victor Casanova, who hails from the Bronx but possesses the sensibilities of a Tuscan grandmother,

loves ethnic eateries serving honest, humble cuisines. He therefore sees tripe, which has been enjoyed in many cultures for thousands of years, as anything but a fad. “It just requires a little love in terms of technique, and the payoff is huge.” For Casanova’s Roman-style tripe, he uses honeycomb tripe braised in a spicy, garlicky tomato sauce with pecorino cheese and a little fresh mint to liven it up. “We’ve received very positive feedback thus far and our guests really

seem to enjoy the dish,” reports the chef, adding that it has earned a recurring place on the menu. That’s quite an achievement at the entertainment industry’s favorite hotel, where starlets are usually found picking at salads. But Casanova’s appreciation of rustic, traditional ingredients transcends tripe. He muses, “The sky is the limit when chefs take chances by utilizing ingredients that have true ethnic roots, a story and meaning, rather than just considering sales potential.”

Spain’s exalted jamón ibérico, which is served with traditional pan con tomate at the Bazaar by José Andrés

TREASURE HUNTING Angelini Osteria 7313 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.297.0070 Animal 435 N. Fairfax Ave., L.A., 323.782.9225 The Bazaar by José Andrés SLS Hotel at Beverly Hills, 465 S. La Cienega Blvd., L.A., 310.246.5555 Chaya Venice 110 Navy St., Venice, 310.396.1179 Cleo The Redbury, 1717 Vine St., Hollywood, 323.962.1711 Comme Ça 8479 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.782.1104 Culina Four Seasons Hotel, 300 S. Doheny Drive, L.A., 310.860.4000 Delphine W Hollywood, 6250 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.798.1355 Fig & Olive 8490 Melrose Place, L.A., 310.360.9100 Hatfield’s 6703 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.935.2977 La Seine 14 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.358.0922 Mezze 401 N. La Cienega Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.657.4103 Napa Valley Grille 1100 Glendon Ave., Westwood, 310.824.3322 Osteria Mozza 6602 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.297.0100 Pizzeria Mozza 641 N. Highland Ave., L.A., 323.297.0101 Playa 7360 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.933.5300 Red Medicine 8400 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, 323.651.5500 Rivera 1050 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.749.1460 Scarpetta Montage Beverly Hills, 225 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.860.7970 Valentino 3115 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.829.4313 WHERE LOS ANGELES  73

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Dining SPOTLIGHT

American

Guidelines

ANIMAL  Bare-bones eatery, from the guys known as the “Two Dudes” to Food Network fans, is a carnivore’s dream. Think delectable takes on offal (like crispy pig’s ear) and a bacon-chocolate crunch bar for dessert. D (nightly).  435 N. Fairfax Ave., L.A., 323.782.9225 $$$  Map I13

Index

bar + Kitchen  Collaborators from celebrated New York cocktail joint Death & Co. revamped the O Hotel’s restaurant and bar with small plates and signature drinks. L, D (M–Sa).  819 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.623.9904 $$  Map I16 Beechwood  Sleek bistro and bar. Top Chef’s Jamie Lauren is the latest exec chef to helm the contemporary American menu. D (Tu–Sa).  822 W. Washington Blvd., Venice, 310.448.8884 $$  Map N9

A New Office

In a sleek space a few doors down from Sang Yoon’s perennially popular gastropub, Father’s Office, new Lukshon affords the chef/owner an opportunity to display his culinary prowess beyond burgers. Inspired by the flavors of Southeast Asia, the Culver City eatery’s seasonal menu might feature a creamy foie gras ganache accented by a tamarind gastrique and topped with puffed rice and powdered carob, whole steamed sea bream with Taiwan spinach, black bean ghee and sambal ijo, or chiang mai noodles plated with thick slices of pork belly. Complementing the food’s powerful flavors is a beverage list of Asian-influenced cocktails, light Belgian ales and Central European white wines. p. 84

The Belvedere  Classic Beverly Hills glamour at posh Penin­sula. Menu ranges from lighter, elegant fare (raspberry-and-gorgonzola salad, chilled cucumber consomme) to the more decadent (a succulent grilled dry-aged strip steak). B, L, D (daily), Br (Su).  9882 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.788.2306 $$$$  Map J11 BLD  Neal Fraser, Iron Chef champion, offers innovative comfort food. (The name stands for “breakfast, lunch, dinner.”) B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su).  7450 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.930.9744 $$  Map H13 Blvd  Beverly Wilshire Hotel combines contemporary design, chandelier elegance and sumptuous menu. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su).  9500 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.275.5200 $$$  Map J11 the castaway  Seafood and steaks in a hilltop venue overlooking De Bell Golf Course. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  1250 Harvard Road, Burbank, 818.848.6691 $$$  Map north of T22 charlie’s  Chophouse fare, upscale pizzas, seafood and pastas in a dining room/lounge with leopard-print décor. L (M–F), D (nightly).  22821 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, 310.456.3132 $$$$  Map east of A1 CRAFT  Tom Colicchio, a star of Bravo’s Top Chef, brings his wildly popular New American restaurants to Century City. More affordable small plates Craftbar. L (M–F), D (M–Sa).  10100 Constellation Blvd., L.A., 310.279.4180 $$$$  Map K11 Engine Co. No. 28  Comfort fare in 1912 fire station with pressed-tin ceiling and fire poles. L, D (daily).  644 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.624.6996 $$  Map H16 THE FOUNDRY ON MELROSE  Open kitchen and deco-inspired dining room with frequent live music. Gregarious Eric Greenspan touts his glorious stuffed grilled cheese, and burger sandwiched between sweet Hawaiian bread. D (M–Su).  7465 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.651.0915 $$$  Map I13 Hard Rock Cafe  Pulled-pork sandwich; twisted mac, chicken & cheese; apple cobbler amid rock memorabilia. L, D (daily).  Universal CityWalk, 1000 Universal Studios Blvd., Universal City, 818.622.7625; Hollywood & Highland Center, 6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.464.7625 $$  Map U19, H13 IVY RESTAURANT  Entertainment industry hang heavy on pastas and seafood. Robertson Boulevard restaurant is paparazzi central. L.A.: L, D (daily); Ivy at the Shore: B, L, D (daily), Br (Su).  113 N. Robertson Blvd., L.A., 310.274.8303; Ivy at the Shore, 1535 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.393.3113 $$$  Map I11, L8

Restaurants are listed by city on page 88. Map locators at the end of each listing (Map A3; Map H10, etc.) refer to maps on pages 123–126. Compendium includes editors’ recommendations and advertisers.

American................................74 Breweries/Gastropubs......76 California.................................76 Chinese....................................78 Clubs/Supper Clubs..........78 Eclectic/Fusion.....................78 French.......................................79 Indian.......................................80 Italian.......................................80 Japanese.................................82

Korean......................................83 Mediterranean......................83 Mexican/Latin.....................84 Pan-Asian..............................84 Seafood...................................84 Spanish....................................85 Steak.........................................85 Thai............................................87 Wine Bars...............................87

Jar  Chef Suzanne Tracht offers nouvelle American comfort food in updated chophouse setting; known for steaks and pot roast. Br (Su), D (nightly).  8225 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.655.6566 $$$  Map I12 Joan’s on Third  Celebrity-frequented cafe on busy West 3rd Street offers omelets, sandwiches, salads, soups, sweets plus picnic baskets, gourmet items. B, L, D (daily).  8350 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.655.2285 $  Map I12 Josie  Chef Josie LeBalch’s cozy, elegant and acclaimed spot offers sophisticated American-French cuisine (try her game dishes) and fireside tables. D (nightly).  2424 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.581.9888 $$$  Map L9 KATE MANTILINI  Designer comfort cuisine reigns at this slick, clubby standby. Late-night menu. Beverly Hills: B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa-Su); Woodland Hills: L (M–F), D (nightly).  9101 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.278.3699; 5921 Owensmouth Ave., Woodland Hills, 818.348.1095 $$  Map J12, west of A1 L.A. market  New. Exec chef Kerry Simon revisits his comfort-food signatures—the Junk Food Platter, meatloaf with mashed potatoes. B, L, D (daily).  JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. Live, 900 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.765.8600 $$  Map I15 LAMILL COFFEE BOUTIQUe  Coffee aficionados come for whimsical bites from chef Michael Cimarusti paired with namesake artisanal brews in a petite swanky space in designer living room–style setting. B, L, D (daily).  1636 Silverlake Blvd., Silver Lake, 323.663.4441 $$  Map W23 Luna Park  Fun bistro fare and cocktails, plus interactive items (make-your-own s’mores, goat cheese fondue). Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  672 S. La Brea Ave., L.A. 323.934.2110 $$  Map J13 Magnolia  Stylish, unpretentious bistro with good food and good vibe. Open late. Br (Su), L, D (daily).  6266 1/2 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.467.0660; 825 W. 9th St., downtown, 213.362.0880 $$  Map H13, I16 Musso & Frank Grill  Hollywood’s oldest (1919). Flannel cakes, lobster Thermidor; the martini. B, L, D (Tu– Sa).  6667 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.467.7788 $$  Map H13 Noé  Neo bistro fare with a Japanese spin (calamari with yuzu crème fraiche, chicken katsu sliders) near Walt Disney Concert Hall. D (nightly).  Omni Hotel, 251 S. Olive St., downtown, 213.356.4100 $$  Map H16 OFF VINE  Comfort cuisine in a remodeled 1908 Craftsman bungalow. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  6263 Leland Way, Hollywood, 323.962.1900 $$  Map H14

In 2009, Eric Greenspan of the Foundry (above) challenged Sang Yoon to a burger cook-off, posting his request on the doors of Father’s Office (p. 76) with ketchup. The duel has yet to occur.

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Dining TENDER GREENS Casual concept serves tasty salads and comforting “hot plates” with proteins, greens and buttery mashed potatoes. L, D (daily). 9523 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.842.8300; 8759 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.358.1919; 6290 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.382.0380 $ Map L11, I12, H14 TRUE FOOD KITCHEN Restaurant at Santa Monica Place offers health-conscious menu inspired by Dr. Andrew Weil’s anti-inflammatory diet principles. Several vegan and gluten-free options. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). 395 Santa Monica Place, Santa Monica, 310.593.8300 $ Map M8

Flourless chocolate cake from True Food Kitchen in Santa Monica

THE PENTHOUSE Dazzling 18th-floor spot with whiteon-white color scheme, cabana dining, panoramic ocean views. B, L, D (daily). Huntley Hotel, 1111 2nd St., Santa Monica, 310.393.8080 $$$ Map L8 PHILIPPE THE ORIGINAL Purported birthplace of French dip sandwich is low on ambience, but this gritty cafeteria is an L.A. institution, established in 1908. Try the beet-pickled hardboiled eggs and 9-cent coffee. Cash only. B, L, D (daily). 1001 N. Alameda St., downtown, 213.628.3781 $ Map G17 R+D KITCHEN Bustling industrial-style eatery with salads, sandwiches, meat loaf and more. L, D (daily). 1323 Montana Ave., Santa Monica, 310.395.3314 $$ Map K8 THE RESTAURANT Round-the-clock upscale diner eats and mix of Italian and American entrees. Seating at booths, counter. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su). The Standard Downtown, 550 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.439.3030 $$ Map H16 ROLLING STONE RESTAURANT & LOUNGE New. Magazine’s restaurant concept offers rock ‘n’ roll ambience and upscale comfort fare. Lounge with DJ and small plates. Open until 2 am (F–Sa). L, D (daily). Hollywood & Highland Center, 6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.464.4000 $$ Map H13 THE ROYCE Chef David Feau does unconventional flavor combinations: lobster and pomegranate “hot and snow,” venison and lychee compote, porcini casserole with pear. D (Tu–Sa). The Langham Huntington Hotel, 1401 S. Oak Knoll Ave., Pasadena, 626.585.6410 $$$$ Map S20 RUBY’S DINER Hickory burger, clam chowder, malts and shakes amid 1940s nostalgic atmosphere. Malibu Pier location open seasonally. B, L, D (daily). 6405 E. Pacific Coast Hwy., Long Beach, 562.596.1914; 23000 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu Pier, 310.456.3443; 6100 Topanga Canyon, Woodland Hills, 818.340.7829; and four other locations; visit rubys.com. $ Map east of G7, O17, east of H7 SADDLE PEAK LODGE Haute game in hunting lodge– style space with moose heads and nudes. Br (Su), D (W– Su). 419 Cold Canyon Road, Calabasas, 818.222.3888 $$$$ Map northwest of A1 SAVORY Excellent seafood and seasonal French-tinged fare in an elegantly minimalist dining room. D (Tu– Su). 29169 Heathercliff Road, Malibu, 310.589.8997 $$$ Map west of A1

UMAMI BURGER Hot specialty burger joint; try the signature Umami Burger with tempura onion rings. (No alcohol served at La Brea Avenue location.) L, D (daily). 4655 Hollywood Blvd., Los Feliz, 323.669.3922; 1520 Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood, 323.469.3100; Fred Segal, 500 Broadway, 310.451.1300; 850 S. La Brea Ave., 323.931.3000; 12159 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, 818.286.9004 $ Map W22, H14, L8, J13, A2 THE VEGGIE GRILL Cheery, fast-casual vegan restaurant that even carnivores can enjoy. Soy- and gluten-free options. L, D (daily). 8000 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.822.7575; 2025 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.829.1155; Plaza El Segundo, 720 Allied Way, El Segundo, 310.535.0025; Rolling Hills Plaza, 2533 Pacific Coast Hwy., Torrance, 310.325.6689 $ Map H12, L8, C2, N14 THE WAFFLE Coffee shop offers inventive twists on comfort cuisine. Open late. B, L, D (daily). 6255 W. Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.465.6901 $$ Map H14 WHIST New American fare at British-themed boutique hotel: flat-iron steak, black sea bass with sugar snap peas. B, L, D (daily). Viceroy, 1819 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.260.7511 $$$ Map M8 WILSHIRE Superb market-driven fare with Asian influences in an ultrastylish space with a romantic back patio. L (M–F), D (M–Sa). 2454 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.586.1707 $$$ Map L8 XIV Michael Mina’s opulent 14th restaurant has a fun, funky, fine menu: small bites like a trio of fries sprinkled with harissa, cheddar and entrees such as tapiocacrusted Thai snapper. D (M–Sa). 8117 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.656.1414 $$$$ Map H12

Breweries/Gastropubs THE CAT & FIDDLE Traditional pub fare (bangers and mash, shepherds pie); popular nightspot. L, D (daily). 6530 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.468.3800 $ Map H13 DISTRICT Handsome bistro with hearty fare: duck fat Yorkshire pudding, chili cheese fries with dry-aged steak. D (Tu–Su). 6600 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, 323.962.8200 $$$ Map H14 FATHER’S OFFICE Microbrew mecca; one of L.A.’s best burgers. Santa Monica: L (Sa–Su), D (nightly). Culver City: L (F–Su), D (nightly). 1018 Montana Ave., Santa Monica, 310.393.2337; Father’s Office 2, 3229 Helms Ave., Culver City, 310.736.2224 $$ Map L8, L11 FORD’S FILLING STATION Gastropub from chef Benjamin Ford. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). 9531 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.202.1470 $$ Map M11

SIMON L.A. “Rock ‘n’ roll chef” Kerry Simon is at the Sofitel. Junk Food Sampler dessert. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa– Su). 8555 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 310.358.3979 $$$ Map I12

KARL STRAUSS BREWERY Garlic-Parmesan fries; lemon Hefeweizen chicken; beer-brined pork chops. Taster 6 flights. L, D (daily). Universal CityWalk, 1000 Studio Blvd., Universal City, 818.753.2739 $ Map U20

SKY ROOM Very romantic deco dining room with panoramic harbor views. D (M–Sa). 40 S. Locust Ave., Long Beach, 562.983.2703 $$$ Map O16

KINGS ROW GASTROPUB New. British pub staples like shepherd’s pie get a gourmet update, plus creative fusion dishes (duck confit bánh mì). Br (Sa–Su), L

(W–Sa), D (nightly). 20 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626.793.3010 $$ Map Q19 LAZY OX CANTEEN Relaxed neighborhood hot spot. Crispy pig ear chicharrónes with lime, ricotta fritters, plus laundry list of daily specials. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (daily). 241 S. San Pedro St., Little Tokyo, 213.626.5299 $$ Map H17 PUBLIC KITCHEN & BAR New. Meat-heavy but still refined menu includes chicken liver terrine with kumquat marmalade sweetbreads, crispy oxtail galette with poached egg; bar serves cured meats, cheeses and cocktails. L, D (daily). Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, 7000 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.7000 $$$ Map G13 WATERLOO & CITY Modest on the outside, cool British gastropub on the inside. House-made charcuterie, creative pizzas, red meat galore. Br (Su), D (nightly). 12517 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, 310.391.4222 $$ Map M10 YARD HOUSE Creative Amer-Asian. Nearly 250 draft beers. L, D (daily). 401 Shoreline Village Drive, Long Beach, 562.628.0455; 330 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626.577.9273; L.A. Live, 800 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.745.9273 $$ Map O16, Q20, I15 YE OLDE KING’S HEAD Pub/restaurant with cozy dining rooms, fish and chips, high tea, gift shop. B, L, D (daily), high tea (Sa). 116 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.451.1402 $ Map L8

California Cuisine AKASHA An ode to all things organic, plus thoughtful vegan and vegetarian options, in an industrial-cool dining room. B (M–Sa), L (M–F), D (nightly). 9543 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.845.1700 $$ Map L11 BLVD 16 Diverse menu of comfort food with sustainable/organic emphasis. Tender bistro filet; decadent chocolate terrine dessert. B, D (daily), Br (Sa– Su). Hotel Palomar, 10740 Wilshire Blvd., Westwood, 310.474.7765 $$$ Map J10 BREEZE Creative “grill cuisine,” plus sushi bar. Fabulous desserts; distinctive décor. Reservation recommended. B, L, D (daily). Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel & Spa, 2025 Avenue of the Stars, Century City, 310.551.3334 $$$ Map J11 CHAYA Franco-Asian fare, ambience draw the beautiful people and their agents. L (M–F), D (nightly). Beverly Hills, Venice: L (M–F), D (nightly). 8741 Alden Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.859.8833; 525 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.236.9577; 110 Navy St., Venice, 310.396.1179 $$ Map I11, H16, M8 CHEZ MELANGE Eclectic restaurant at Palos Verdes Inn is a mélange that works. Br (Su), D (daily). 1611 S. Catalina Ave., Redondo Beach, 310.540.1222 $$ Map M13 CHINOIS ON MAIN Arguably Wolfgang Puck’s most innovative restaurant. East meets West in (noisy) culinary explosion. Reservations required. L (W–F), D (nightly). 2709 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.392.9025 $$$ Map M8 ENCOUNTER The landmark restaurant with the space-age arches at the Theme Building at LAX reopens with new lava lamps, chairs and carpeting. L (daily), D Th–Su). 209 World Way, Westchester, 310.215.5151 $$ Map O11 EVA RESTAURANT Patina Group alum Mark Gold graciously serves creative, affordable Cal fare in intimate dining room. Family-style, prix fixe dinner on Sundays. Br (Su), L (F), D (Tu–Su). 7458 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.634.0700 $$ Map I13

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Dining fig restaurant  Chef Ray Garcia, ex–French Laundry, crafts a seasonal menu of bistro fare; trendy charcuterie bar. Br (Su), B, L (daily), D (Tu–Sa).  Fairmont Miramar Hotel, 101 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.319.3111 $$  Map L8

RS

Geoffrey’s  Prettiest patio in paradise? 180-degree Pacific views; creative seafood. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  27400 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, 310.457.1519 $$$  Map northwest of K7

LA

Gina Lee’s Bistro  Unassuming but daring CalAsian eatery is among the South Bay’s finest. D (Tu–Su).  211 Palos Verdes Blvd., Redondo Beach, 310.375.4462 $$  Map N13

RESTAURANT & LOUNGE

Hal’s Bar & Grill  Innovative and terrific. Br (Sa– Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  1349 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.396.3105 $$  Map M9 hatfield’s  Couple that met in the kitchens of Spago serve their own eloquent version of California cuisine. Karen Hatfield’s desserts soar. D (nightly).  6703 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.935.2977 $$$  Map I13 Inn of the Seventh Ray  Gourmet organic fare (fish/meat/poultry/vegetarian) in romantic creekside setting. Br (Su), L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  128 Old Topanga Canyon Road, Topanga, 310.455.1311 $$  Map B1 Jer-ne  Excellent Cal cuisine amid cool décor; desserts earn raves. B, L, D (daily), Br (Su).  Ritz-Carlton, 4375 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey, 310.823.1700 $$$  Map N9 Joe’s  Boisterous benchmark of Cal cuisine is an Abbot Kinney classic. Nicely edited menu with notable desserts. Br (Sa–Su), L (Tu–F), D (Tu–Su).  1023 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.399.5811 $$$  Map M9 LUCA fresh bites  Fast-casual Cal-Ital: pizzas, pastas, salads, sandwiches, healthful smoothies and juices. B, L, D (daily).  7950 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.822.2900 $  Map 12H mar’sel  Sustainable menu with produce and herbs from chef’s on-site garden. Overlooks sparkling peninsula. D (W–Su).  Terranea Resort, 100 Terranea Way, Rancho Palos Verdes, 310.265.2800 $$$$  Map O13 M CAFÉ DE CHAYA  Macrobiotic cuisine that actually tastes good. Oh-so-L.A.! B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa– Su).  7119 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, 323.525.0588; 9433 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills, 310.858.8459 $  Map H13, J11 michael’s  Michael McCarty’s influential restaurant, opened in 1979, endures. Enjoy Liberty Farms duck confit or butter-poached monkfish on the breezy patio. L (M–F), D (M–Sa).  1147 3rd St., Santa Monica, 310.451.0843 $$$  Map L8 Napa Valley Grille  Wine country-inspired cuisine. Steaks and choice of tasty sides (garlic herb fries, roasted brussels sprouts). Br (Su), L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  1100 Glendon Ave., Westwood, 310.824.3322 $$  Map J10 Nic’s  Sleek restaurant with glass-walled VodBox kept at 10 degrees for vodka and caviar sampling (furs provided), millions of martinis. D (nightly).  453 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.443.8211 $$  Map I11

3 completely unique experiences under one roof!

Nine Thirty  Hip hotel’s sexy eatery does upgraded comfort staples: mustard-braised brussels sprouts, sourdough onion rings, maple syrup-braised pork shank. B, L, D (daily).  W Hotel, 930 Hilgard Ave., Westwood, 310.208.8765 $$$  Map N9

6801 HOLLYWOOD BLVD, LOS ANGELES 323.464.4000 ROLLINGSTONELA.COM

Ocean & Vine  Farmers market–inspired cuisine; lovely room with coastal view. B, L, D (daily).  Loews Santa Monica Beach Hotel, 1700 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.576.3180 $$$  Map L8

RESTAURANT | LOUNGE | B-SIDE

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Dining TRAXX Deco-inspired restaurant offers quiet elegance amid bustle of Union Station. L (M–F), D (M–Sa). 800 N. Alameda St., downtown, 213.625.1999 $$$ Map H17

PORCH RESTAURANT Southern fare at live music venue House of Blues. Gospel Brunch every other Sunday, D (W–Sa). 8430 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.848.5136 $$ Map H12

208 RODEO Cafe spills onto cobblestone via at luxe Two Rodeo. A gem. Pan-Asian, French influences. B, L, D (daily). Two Rodeo, 208 Via Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.275.2428 $$ Map J11

SUPPERCLUB New. International prix fixe menu and dinner show featuring performance artists, dancers and musicians. D (W–Sa). 6675 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.1900 $$$ Map H14

VU California cuisine gets the molecular gastronomy treatment. Views of the marina. B, L, D (daily). 14160 Palawan Way, Marina del Rey, 310.439.3033 $$$ Map N9

THE TAR PIT From Campanile team, updated classics (steak Diane, shrimp cocktail) and 1940s-inspired drinks in glitzy, art moderne space. D (nightly). 609 N. La Brea Ave., L.A., 323.965.1300 $$ Map I13

WESTSIDE TAVERN Chef Warren Schwartz does rustic Cal fare. Creamy chicken-liver mousse, excellent cocktails. Below Landmark Theatres. L, D (daily). Westside Pavilion, 10850 W. Pico Blvd., West L.A., 310.470.1539 $$ Map K10

VIBRATO GRILL AND JAZZ Trumpeter Herb Alpert’s superb spot in shopping center atop Beverly Glen Canyon serves up American fare including excellent steaks. D (Tu–Su). 2930 N. Beverly Glen Circle, Bel-Air, 310.474.9400 $$$ Map G10

ONE PICO Great view, exceptional kitchen. Romantic room with huge limestone fireplace. Br (Su), L, D (daily). Shutters on the Beach, 1 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.587.1717 $$$ Map M8

WOLFGANG PUCK BISTRO Puck’s casual cafe offers wood oven-fired pizzas, pastas, salads and more. L, D (daily). 1000 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, 818.985.9653; Wolfgang Puck Express, 1315 3rd Street Promenade, Santa Monica, 310.576.4770 $ Map U20, L8

Eclectic/Fusion

PALATE FOOD + WINE Glendale goes gourmet at this Cal-Med bistro, featuring top-notch selection of wine and artisanal cheeses; wine bar and wine shop. L (F–Sa), D (nightly). 933 S. Brand Blvd., Glendale, 818.662.9463 $$ Map southeast of T23

Chinese

Mussels tagine at Cleo in Hollywood

PARKWAY GRILL Handsome dining room; one of Pasadena’s best restaurants. Diverse menu includes tiger shrimp corndogs, prosciutto-and-arugula pizza, duck breast with cherry reduction. L (M–F), D (nightly). 510 S. Arroyo Pkwy., Pasadena, 626.795.1001 $$$ Map N16 POLO LOUNGE Legendary celeb watering hole. McCarthy salad is a perennial favorite; great people watching. B, L, D (daily), Br (Su). Beverly Hills Hotel, 9641 Sunset Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.887.2777 $$$ Map I11 RESTAURANT AT THE GETTY CENTER Chic room, spectacular views of the Santa Monica Mountains and progressive fare at the hilltop museum. Br (Su), L (Tu–Sa), D (Sa). 1200 Getty Center Drive, L.A., 310.440.6810 $$$ Map H9 RESTAURANT AT THE SUNSET MARQUIS Mix of game (carpaccio of bison) and lighter seafood fare (miso-crusted black cod, yellowfin ahi tuna poke). Covered patio has romantic garden view. B, L, D (daily). 1200 Alta Loma Road, West Hollywood, 310.358.3759 $$$$ Map H12 SIR WINSTON’S Elegant dining on the Queen Mary; classic cuisine, coastal panoramas. Reservations required; jackets for men. D (nightly). 1126 Queens Hwy., Long Beach, 562.499.1657 $$$ Map O16 SPAGO BEVERLY HILLS There are Spagos from Maui to Vegas, but Wolfgang Puck’s flagship, a celebrity magnet, is the best. Fantastic chef Lee Hefter, pastry chef Sherry Yard. L (M–Sa), D (nightly). 176 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.385.0880 $$$ Map I11 THE SUNSET A short ways down a Zuma Beach road, from owners of Allegria and Moonshadows. Cal-Med brunch. Br (Sa–Su), L (F–Su), D (nightly). 6800 Westward Beach Road, Malibu, 310.589.1007 $$$ Map northwest of K7 TAVERN Suzanne Goin’s third L.A. restaurant explores rustic Cal fare. Variety of seating options: sunlit indoor patio; quiet bar; casual “larder” (bakery/deli). B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su). 11648 San Vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310.806.6464 $$$ Map J9

CBS SEAFOOD Fine dim sum in a setting not quite so huge as others in Chinatown or Monterey Park. B, L, D (daily). 700 N. Spring St., Chinatown, 213.617.2323 $$ Map G17 EMPRESS PAVILION Huge, Hong Kong-style eatery with menu to match; dim sum. L, D (daily). 988 N. Hill St., Chinatown, 213.617.9898 $$ Map G17 JOSS CUISINE Upscale Chinese cuisine in a lowkey atmosphere. L (M–F), D (nightly). 9919 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.277.3888 $$ Map J11 MANDARETTE West Hollywood hipsters and a loyal following dine on high-end Szechuan and Cantonese fare. L, D (daily). 8386 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.655.6115 $$ Map I12 MR. CHOW L.A. edition of sceney restaurants in New York and London. Imperial Beijing cuisine. L (M–F), D (nightly). 344 N. Camden Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.278.9911 $$$ Map I11 OCEAN SEAFOOD Vast and boisterous spot serves amazing array of traditional dishes, superfresh seafood, top-of-the-line dim sum. B, L, D (daily). 750 N. Hill St., Chinatown, 213.687.3088 $$ Map G17 PHILIPPE Mr. Chow rival Philippe Chow serves contemporary Chinese in sleek space. L (M–Sa), D (nightly). 8284 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.951.1100 $$$ Map I12 XINO Upscale Chinese on top floor of Santa Monica Place mall; variety of dim sum, including lobster potstickers, seafood spinach dumplings. L, D (daily). Santa Monica Place, 395 Santa Monica Place, Santa Monica, 310.755.6220 $$ Map L8

Clubs/Supper Clubs

A-FRAME Roy Choi, whose Kogi launched a thousand food trucks, offers a bizarro comfort-food menu (beercan chicken, furikake kettle corn) with Korean influences. D (nightly). 12565 Washington Blvd., Culver City, 310.398.7700 $$ Map M10 ASBURY FUSION The flavors of Asia, the Americas and the Mediterranean collide—think East Indian risotto, honey chicken tikka, and a burger cooked seven ways. L (M–F), D (nightly). 2501 W. 6th St., East L.A., 213.739.0909 $ Map H15 ASIA DE CUBA Innovative Pan-Asian/Cuban menu at Mondrian hotel. Beautiful patio outside, chic white-on-white décor inside. Dim sum. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su). 8440 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.650.8999 $$$ Map H12 CAFÉ DEL REY Global menu. “Day Boat” is the catch of the day and info about the boat that caught it. Br (Su), L, D (daily). 4451 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey, 310.823.6395 $$$ Map N9 CAFE SIERRA Cal–Continental-Chinese menu, Vegasstyle dinner buffet and entertainment. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su). Hilton Universal City, 555 Universal Hollywood Drive, Universal City, 818.509.2030 $$ Map U19 ELEMENTS KITCHEN Seasonal menus feature a handful of key ingredients—for instance, beef, tomato or cabbage—with a variety of interpretations. Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly). Elements Cafe: Br (Sa–Su), L (Tu–Su). 37 S. El Molino Ave., Pasadena, 626.440.0044; Elements Cafe, 107 S. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena, 626.440.0100 $$ Map Q19, Q20 THE GORBALS The dining room is shabby-quirky, but the Scottish/Jewish/Spanish/American fare—from Top Chef winner Ilan Hall—is supercreative. “BLT” with chicken skin, haggis burger, bacon-wrapped matzo balls. D (M–Sa). Alexandria Hotel, 501 S. Spring St., downtown, 213.488.3408 $$ Map I16 GORDON RAMSAY Temperamental top toque Gordon Ramsay invades L.A. with a Cal-Asian melange. More casual Boxwood Café is adjacent. D (nightly). London West Hollywood, 1020 N. San Vicente Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.358.7788 $$$$ Map H11

FIREFLY Valley hot spot. Cool library lounge, retractable roof-covered patio. Bistro and Mediterranean dishes. D (nightly). 11720 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, 818.762.1833 $$ Map U18

LA SEINE French-Japanese fusion. Selection of sushi rolls; Bordeaux-braised short ribs with wasabi; handtorn pasta with chicken nanban. Kehilla Kosher certified. D (nightly). 14 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.358.0922 $$$ Map J12

FIRST & HOPE American classics with Southern touch. Live music and cabaret. Across the street from the Music Center. L, D (daily). 710 W. 1st St., downtown, 213.617.8555 $$ Map H16

MAISON AKIRA Fine French cuisine with Japanese flair (such as a bento box with Kobe beef, miso sea bass, foie gras and chawanmushi) in Pasadena’s playhouse district. Eight-course omakase available. Br (Su), L (F),

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Dining D (Tu–Su).  713 E. Green St., Pasadena, 626.796.9501 $$$  Map Q20 roxolana restaurant & wine bar  Russian, Ukrainian and American dishes. Try cold borscht with pierogi or zharkoe kiev, served in a clay pot. L, D (daily).  34 S. Raymond Ave., Pasadena, 626.792.0440 $$  Map Q19 susan feniger’s street  Star of Food Network’s Too Hot Tamales offers global fare inspired by street vendor offerings. Br (Su), L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  742 N. Highland Ave., L.A., 323.203.0500 $$  Map I13

French BASTIDE  Much-lauded spot. Four- and seven-course prix-fixe dinners, plus a la carte menu; lovely setting, superb service and stellar wine list. D (Tu–Sa).  8475 Melrose Place, West Hollywood, 323.651.5950 $$$$  Map I12 Bistro 45  Cal-French fare in stylish restaurant housed in art deco bungalow. One of L.A.’s top wine lists according to Wine Spectator. D (Tu–Su).  45 S. Mentor Ave., Pasadena, 626.795.2478 $$$  Map Q20

Simple, pure flavors...

bistro provence  Affordably priced fare influenced by the lighter cooking style of southern France. L (M–F), D (M–Sa).  345 N. Pass Ave., Burbank, 818.840.9050 $$  Map T20 bouchon  Superchef Thomas Keller offers his brasserie concept in cavernous dining room with spacious, popular zinc bar. Bar Bouchon downstairs. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily).  235 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.271.9910 $$$  Map J11

Seasonal local and regional ingredients...

Cafe Pinot  Glass box of a restaurant adjacent to Central Library offers sky­line views—from bottom up. CalFrench from Joachim Splichal. L (M–F), D (nightly).  700 W. 5th St., downtown, 213.239.6500 $$$  Map H16

Great tasting food that’s good for you.

church & State  Charming bistro with an industrial vibe. Moules marinière, escargots de bourgogne. L (M–F), D (nightly).  1850 Industrial St., downtown, 213.405.1434 $$  Map J17 COMME ÇA  Top L.A. chef David Myers offers his takes on bistro fare, and supremely innovative cocktails, amid black-and-white décor. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  8479 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.782.1104 $$  Map I12

Developed in partnership with Dr. Andrew Weil

delphine  Menu of French classics (onion soup gratinée, trout meunière), sprinkled with Mediterranean dishes. B, L, D (daily).  W Hollywood, 6250 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.798.1355 $$$  Map H13

NOW OPEN ! Santa Monica Place | 395 Santa Monica Pl. | 310.593.8300

the hall  Classic brasserie fare—moules frites, côte du boeuf—in boutique hotel. Br (Su), B, L (Tu–Sa), D (Tu– Su).  Palihouse Holloway, 8465 Holloway Drive, West Hollywood, 323.656.4020 $$$  Map H12 IVAN KANE’s CAFE WAS  Turn-of-the-century piano bar from nightlife impresario Ivan Kane. Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly).  1521 N. Vine St., Hollywood, 323.466.5400 $$$  Map H14 Jiraffe  Raphael Lunetta’s stylish Cal-French bistro. D (M–Sa).  502 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.917.6671 $$$  Map L8

(Near the corner of 2nd St. & Colorado Ave.)

PACIFIC OCEAN

Also at: Fashion Island | 451 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach, CA | 949.644.2400

truefoodkitchen.com

Kendall’s Brasserie  Fast-paced brasserie and seafood bar at the Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. L (daily), D (Tu–Su).  135 N. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.972.7322 $$  Map H16 la cachette bistro  Moderately priced small plates. Risk-taking chef Jean François Meteigner might combine kiwi fruit with pesto or chocolate truffles with sevruga caviar. L (Tu–F), D (Tu–Su).  1733 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.434.9509 $$  Map M8

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Dining Le Clafoutis  French-influenced entrees, pastas, salads; sidewalk patio. B (Sa–Su), L, D (daily).  Sunset Plaza, 8360 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.659.5233 $$  Map H1 The Little Door  Cuisine from south of France is offered on romantic patio behind a trellis gate. D (nightly).  8164 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.951.1210 $$$  Map I12 Mélisse  Michelin-starred contemporary AmericanFrench from acclaimed chef Josiah Citrin. Four-course prix-fixe; nine-course market tasting. Top cheese cart. D (Tu–Sa).  1104 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.395.0881 $$$$  Map M8 Monsieur Marcel  Charming bistro and wine bar at Farmers Market and Third Street Promenade. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily).  6333 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.939.7792; 1260 Third Street Promenade, Santa Monica, 310.587.1166 $$  Map I13, L8 Patina  Joachim Splichal’s flagship restaurant at the Walt Disney Concert Hall, arguably the best of his large collection. D (Tu–Su).  141 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.972.3331 $$$$  Map H17 Petrossian  Chef Giselle Wellman works with the brand’s signature caviar in creative ways. Highlights include caviar- and roe-topped blinis, vanilla panna cotta with espresso “caviar” (actually tapioca). B (daily), L, D (M–Sa).  321 N. Robertson Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.271.6300 $$$  Map J12 Pinot Bistro  Charming, less formal Patina spinoff in San Fernando Valley. Bistro classics get a seasonal Cal twist. L (M–F), D (nightly).  12969 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, 818.990.0500 $$  Map A2

Indian akbar cuisine of india  Extensive menu of Northern Indian fare. Santa Monica location is most stylish. L (M–F), D (nightly).  44 N. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena, 626.577.9916; 2627 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.586.7469; 3115 Washington Blvd., Marina del Rey, 310.574.0666; 1101 Aviation Blvd., Hermosa Beach, 310.937.3800 $  Map Q19, K9, N9, L13 Chakra  Excellent “modern Indian” cuisine. Bar matches cocktails and small plates to your chakras. Br (Su), L, D (daily).  151 S. Doheny Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.246.3999 $$  Map J12 TANZORE  Sleek, sexy spot transforms Restaurant Row from classic Gaylord. Start with a clove martini. Br (Su), L, D (daily).  50 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.652.3894 $$$  Map J12

Italian Ago  Garlicky seafood soup, bistecca alla Fiorentina. Investors include Robert De Niro. L (M–F), D (nightly).  8478 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.655.6333 $$$  Map I12 Angelini Osteria  Gino Angelini’s boisterous room is one of the city’s top Italian restaurants. L (Tu–F), D (Tu– Su).  7313 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.297.0070 $$$  Map I13 bottega louie  Traditional fare plus extensive smallplates menu; white marble palatial interiors. Gourmet market, fresh pastries. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su).  700 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.802.1470 $$  Map I16 buca di beppo  Heaping, family-style portions. Call for hours.  80 W. Green St., Pasadena, 626.792.7272; 17500 Ventura Blvd., Encino, 818.995.3288; 1670 S. Pacific Coast Hwy., Redondo Beach, 310.540.3246; 1000 Universal Studios Blvd., Universal City, 818.509.9463; bucadibeppo.com for more locations. $$  Map Q21, A1, M14, U20

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SUAVECITA CENTRAL What could top Parkers’ Lighthouse? HOW ABOUT A

FABULOUS NEW STEAKHOUSE The third floor of Parkers’ Lighthouse is now home to the new Queensview Steakhouse. It features elegant “supper club” dining in a warm intimate setting. Diners can listen to live music while enjoying an exclusive menu of steaks, chops, lobster and fresh grilled fish.

562-432-6500 | 435 Shoreline Village Drive,

Long Beach

www.parkerslighthouse.com/queensviewsteakhouse

D I N N E R T H U R S DAY, F R I DAY & S AT U R DAY N I G H T S

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Dining Capo  Restaurateur Bruce Marder’s intimate treasure on the coast, near Santa Monica Pier. Fabulous wine list. D (Tu–Sa).  1810 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.394.5550 $$$$  Map L8 cecconi’s  See-and-be-seen scene; Sonoma Valley lamb chops and ossobuco from wood oven; cicchetti (small plates) menu. B, L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su).  8764 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 310.432.2000 $$$  Map I12 Celestino  Calogero Drago, one of four L.A.restaurant-owning brothers, offers house-made pastas and Sicilian and Northern Italian dishes. L (M–F), D (nightly).  141 S. Lake St., Pasadena, 626.795.4006 $$  Map Q21 Cicada  Majestic deco room in historic Oviatt building with seasonal menus. Superior service. Call for hours.  617 S. Olive St., downtown, 213.488.9488 $$$  Map I16 Cube  Bustling Italian and international cafe with charcuterie and cheese bar. L, D (Tu–Sa).  615 N. La Brea Ave., L.A., 323.939.1148 $$  Map H13 culina  Warm, contemporary restaurant with sleek crudo bar. Veal chop with ciabatta crumbs, paper-thin pizzas. B, L (M–Sa), D (nightly), Br (Su).  Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills, 300 S. Doheny Drive, L.A., 310.860.4000 $$$  Map J12 Dan Tana’s  New York–style restaurant, an L.A. classic for nearly 50 years. Red-sauced pastas, huge steaks. Reservations required. D (nightly).  9071 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.275.9444 $$$  Map I11

d o w nto w n d e fi n e d

Drago  The first restaurant in the Drago dining dynasty features dishes from Celestino Drago’s native Sicily. Try the six-course duck tasting menu, $59. L (M–F), D (nightly).  2628 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.828.1585 $$$$  Map K8 drago centro  Deftly executed Italian fare—garganelli with pork sausage and fennel seeds, parmesancrusted chicken with farro—and extensive wine list. L (M–F), D (nightly).  525 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.228.8998 $$$  Map H16 Enoteca Drago  Celestino Drago creation is casual, sophisticated. From a pastry to grilled veal chops; 50 regional Italian wines by the glass. L (M– Sa), D (daily).  410 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.786.8236 $$  Map J11

fedora cabaret

Il Cielo  Frolicking cherubs, 50,000 twinkling lights, flowered courtyard with retractable glass roof. 1,400 couples have married here. Even the food is romantic. L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  9018 Burton Way, Beverly Hills, 310.276.9990 $$$  Map I11 Il Fornaio  Trattoria-style favorites; adjoining bakeries offer pastries, sandwiches to take out. Beverly Hills: B, L, D (daily). Manhattan Beach: Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). Santa Monica: Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). Pasadena: Br (Su), L, D (daily).  301 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.550.8330; 1800 Rosecrans Ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.725.9555; 1551 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.451.7800; 1 Colorado, Pasadena, 626.683.9797 $$  Map J11, L13, L8, Q19 Il Ristorante di Giorgio Baldi  Late, legendary Giorgio Baldi’s celebrity-frequented eatery featuring cooking of Baldi’s native Tuscan village. D (Tu–Su).  114 W. Channel Road, Santa Monica, 310.573.1660 $$$  Map L7

213. 617. 8555 Open 2hrs. prior to curtain :: Sun - Thurs ‘til 11pm :: Fri & Sat ’til 12:30am

IL SOLE  Intimate trattoria lures A-listers and neighborhood folks alike. A makeover courtesy of entrepreneur Brent Bolthouse lends a trendy, loungelike ambience. D (nightly).  8741 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.657.1182 $$$$  Map H12

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Dining PAPARAZZI RISTORANTE Contemporary Italian, steaks and comforting sides. D (M–Sa). Sheraton Gateway Hotel, 6101 Century Blvd., Westchester, 310.642.4820 $$ Map O11 PICCOLO Eatery a block from the beach. Six-course seasonal tasting menu, monthly “reversal dinners” with chosen wines paired to dishes. D (nightly). 5 Dudley Ave., Venice, 310.314.3222 $$$ Map M8 PIZZERIA MOZZA Foodie hot spot from culinary stars Nancy Silverton, Mario Batali and Joseph Bastianich. Pizza with squash blossoms and burrata cheese; 50 Italian wines under $50. L, D (daily). 641 N. Highland Ave., L.A., 323.297.0101 $$ Map H13

Sushi and sashimi platter from Aburiya Toranoko downtown

LA BOTTE Means “the barrel” in Italian (décor features oak wine barrels). Sibling to Venice’s popular Piccolo Ristorante Italiano. D (nightly). 620 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.576.3072 $$$ Map L8 LA DOLCE VITA Personable Northern Italian standby restored to its original 1966 decor. Steak Sinatra originated here; Reagans, Pecks were regulars. Dishes prepared table-side. D (M–Sa). 9785 Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.278.1845 $$$ Map J11 LA VECCHIA Rustic Northern Italian in a laid-back bistro. More than a dozen pastas for dinner, plus pizzas, ossobuco alla Romana and other traditional favorites. L, D (daily). 2654 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.399.7979 $$ Map M8 LOCANDA DEL LAGO Northern Italian restaurant featuring organic produce from Santa Monica farmers markets. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). 231 Arizona Ave., Santa Monica, 310.451.3525 $$ Map L8 LOCANDA VENETA Tiny trattoria among L.A.’s best. “Next best thing to eating in Venice” (Zagat). L (M–F), D (nightly). 8638 W. 3rd St., L.A., 310.274.1893 $$ Map I12 LOUISE’S TRATTORIA Traditional Italian dishes—linguine pescatore, eggplant parmigiana—with a few Californian, Asian, even Cajun offerings. L, D (daily). 1008 Montana Ave., Santa Monica, 310.394.8888; 2 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626.568.3030; 232 N. Larchmont Blvd., L.A., 323.962.9510 $ Map L8, Q19, I14 MARINO RISTORANTE Classic Neapolitan fare: linguine alle vongole, cheesecake with house-made ricotta. Open since 1983. Next-door Marino To-Go offers takeout. L (M–F), D (M–Sa). 6001 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.466.8812 $$ Map I13 MATTEO’S An old favorite of the Rat Pack endures. Burrata campana salad, Prince Edward Island mussels in white wine, ossobuco Milanese. D (Tu–Su). 2321 Westwood Blvd., L.A., 310.475.4521 $$ Map K10 MAURO’S CAFE Fred Segal’s casual eatery is packed at lunch. Expect to trip over famous feet, not to mention expensive shoes, en route to your table. B, L (M– Sa), Br (Su). 8112 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.653.7970 $$ Map I12 OSTERIA MOZZA From master baker Nancy Silverton and Iron Chef Mario Batali. Elegant sibling to Pizzeria Mozza, adjacent. Mozza 2 Go offered. Reservation recommended. D (nightly). 6602 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.297.0100 $$$ Map H13 PANE E VINO Dependable trattoria; frescoes adorn the dining room, while bougainvilleas and palm trees shade the outdoor patio. L (M–Sa), D (nightly). 8265 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.651.4600 $$ Map I12

SCARPETTA Scott Conant replicates his NYC-based restaurant at the Montage Beverly Hills. His simple spaghetti with tomato and basil endures in popularity; duck-and-foie-gras ravioli deserves raves, too. D (nightly). 225 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.860.7970 $$$ Map I11 SOR TINO RISTORANTE Reasonably priced Florentine menu. Open kitchen, cozy ambience. L, D (daily). 908 S. Barrington Ave., Brentwood, 310.442.8466 $$ Map J9 THE STINKING ROSE “We season our garlic with food,” from Gartini cocktail to garlic ice cream. 40-Clove Garlic Chicken, Silence of the Lamb Shank. L, D (daily). 55 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.652.7673 $$ Map I12 TOSCANA Contemporary spot serves Adriaticinspired fare to stylish crowd. L (M–Sa), D (nightly). 11633 San Vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310.820.2448 $$$ Map J9 TRA DI NOI Mainstay restaurant at the Malibu Country Mart; pastas made in house daily. L, D (daily). 3835 Cross Creek Road, Malibu, 310.456.0169 $$$ Map K7 TRATTORIA TRE VENEZIE Specialties from Venetian chef include ricotta ravioli with beets; intimate dining room has Old World charm. D (W–Sa). 119 W. Green St., Pasadena, 626.795.4455 $$$ Map Q19 VALENTINO Chef Ezio Gamba moves from Valentino Las Vegas to the venerated original. Spot often cited as having one of America’s best wine cellars. L (F), D (Tu–Sa). 3115 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.829.4313 $$$$ Map L9 VILLA BLANCA Highly stylish white dining room and Asian-accented menu. L, D (daily). 9601 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills, 310.859.7600 $$$ Map J11 VINCENTI RISTORANTE Trattoria with exhibition kitchen turns out Northern Italian specialties from a wood-burning oven. Upscale pizza menu on Mondays. L (F), D (M–Sa). 11930 San Vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310.207.0127 $$ Map J9 ZUCCA RISTORANTE Joachim Splichal venue; massive church doors, Venetian carnival murals. L (M–F), D (nightly). 801 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.614.7800 $$$ Map I16

Japanese ABURIYA TORANOKO New. Sushi and izakaya. Noodles, sumiyaki; daring fare like miso-marinated beef tongue, and snow crab and jellyfish with cucumber sunomono. L, D (daily). 243 S. San Pedro St., Little Tokyo, 213.621.9500 $$ Map H17 ASANEBO Hidden in a minimall but Michelin-rated, this cozy sushi bar and restaurant offers memorable sushi, seared toro in garlic cream and uni tempura in shiso leaf. L (Tu–F), D (Tu-Su). 11941 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, 818.760.3348 $$ Map A1

BENIHANA The original exhibition kitchen—at your table! Encino: L (Su–F), D (nightly). Beverly Hills: L, D (daily). Torrance: L, D (daily). Santa Monica: L, D (daily). 38 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 323.655.7311; 1447 4th St., Santa Monica, 310.260.1423; Encino, 818.788.7121; Torrance, 310.316.7777 $$ Map I12, L8, G9, M14 GONPACHI One of America’s most elaborate Japanese restaurants, made from centuries-old Japanese homes and complete with stone bridge and garden. Beverly Hills: D (nightly). Torrance: B, L, D (daily). 134 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.659.8887; 21381 S. Western Ave., Torrance, 310.320.6700 $$$ Map J12, M14 GYU-KAKU Japanese-style barbecue. L (varies by location), D (nightly). 10925 W. Pico Blvd., West L.A., 310.234.8641; 163 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.659.5760; 14457 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks, 818.501.5400; 70 W. Green St., Pasadena, 626.405.4842 $$ Map K10, J12, G9, Q19 KATANA Robata-style cuisine: open-flame-grilled meat, vegetables, seafood on skewers. Stylish rooms, patio. D (nightly). 8439 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.650.8585 $$$ Map H12 KATSUYA Designer Philippe Starck and sushi master Katsuya Uechi offer provocative take on Japanese aesthetics, cuisine. Sushi, robata bars and creative cocktails. L (varies by location), D (nightly). Downtown: D (Tu– Su). 11777 San Vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310.207.8744; 6300 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.871.8777; 702 Americana Way, Glendale, 818.244.5900; L.A. Live, 800 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.747.9797 $$$ Map K9, H14, northeast of T23, I15 KATSU-YA Top sushi bar along the Valley’s Sushi Row; no-frills décor. Expect a crowd. Studio City: L (M–Sa), D (nightly). Encino: L (M–Sa), D (nightly). 11680 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, 818.985.6976; 16542 Ventura Blvd., Encino, 818.788.2396 $$ Map U18, A1 KOI Hip, popular spot offers sushi, Japanese fare “reimagined.” D (nightly). 730 N. La Cienega Blvd., L.A., 310.659.9449 $$$ Map I12 KOJI’S SUSHI & SHABU SHABU Be your own chef with shabu shabu; sushi includes una-fino with basil, citrus chili paste and chives. L, D (daily). Hollywood & Highland, 6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.871.0200 $$ Map H13 K-ZO Sushi and Japanese fare with European touches; cool, industrial-modern dining room. L (M–Sa), D (nightly). 9240 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.202.8890 $$ Map I11 MAISON RIZ French-Japanese fusion on Redondo Beach Pier. Five-, 6- and 7-course tasting menus. L (daily), D (nightly). 112 Fisherman’s Wharf, Redondo Beach, 310.379.1300 $$$ Map M13 MATSUHISA Sushi bar, superchef Nobu Matsuhisa’s first, is one of L.A.’s culinary treasures. Dishes dazzle eyes and palate. L (M–F), D (nightly). 129 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.659.9639 $$$$ Map I12 NOBU Nobu Matsuhisa serves sushi, innovative Japanese-Peruvian fusion dishes to hipsters and celebs. D (nightly). 903 N. La Cienega Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.657.5711; Nobu Malibu, 3835 Cross Creek Road, Suite 18A, Malibu, 310.317.9140 $$$$ Map H12 ROBATA BAR Japanese grilling from the Sushi Roku, Katana and Boa team. Striking design by Dodd Mitchell. D (nightly). 1401 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.458.4771 $$$ Map L8 R23 Gem hidden among warehouses in the Arts District serves excellent sushi. Contemporary art and Frank Gehry-designed décor lend a hip vibe. L (M–F), D (nightly). 923 E. 2nd St., downtown, 213.687.7178 $$$ Map I17

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Dining

YE OLDE KING'S HEAD

World Famous British Pub, Restaurant & Shoppe

SUGARFISH  Chef Kazunori Nozawa (the “Sushi Nazi” at Sushi Nozawa in Studio City) relaxes, dishing three preset “Trust Me” menus with reasonable tabs. Albacore sashimi practically melts on the tongue. L, D (daily).  47221/4 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey, 310.306.6300; 11640 San Vicente Blvd., Brentwood, 310.820.4477; 600 W. 7th St., downtown, 213.627.3000; 1345 2nd St., Santa Monica, 310.393.3338 $$  Map N9, K9, I16, L8 Sushi Nozawa  Chef’s choice only (omakase) at renowned sushi bar. Low on ambience, high on quality and authenticity. L, D (M–F).  11288 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, 818.508.7017 $$$  Map G12

British Fare, imported beers and world famous Fish & Chips. Open for breakfast weekends at 8am, Fabulous happy hour Mon–Fri 4-7pm. Traditional Afternoon Tea is served Saturdays 2-5pm. Karaoke Sundays at 9pm. Heated patio. Quiz shows every Wednesday. Call for soccer schedule. Stop by the gift shoppe for food and collectibles from the British Isles, including bone china, teapots, souvenir items, tea, candy, wine, cheese and much more.

Sushi Roku  Nouvelle Japanese, sleek décor. West 3rd Street and Santa Monica restaurants have the most creative menus, including albacore tacos, salmon sashimi with black truffles shaved tableside. L.A.: L (M–Sa), D (nightly); Santa Monica and Pasadena: L, D (daily).  8445 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.655.6767; 1401 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.458.4771; 33 Miller Alley, Pasadena, 626.683.3000 $$$  Map I12, L8, Q19 sushi sasabune  Don’t ask for a California or spicy tuna roll, but do expect incredibly fresh, authentically prepared sushi. Impressive omakase is recommended. L (M–F), D (M–Sa).  12400 Wilshire Blvd., West L.A., 310.820.3596 $$$$  Map K9 TAKAMI SUSHI & ROBATA  Sushi, robata and other Japanese specialties in a hip dining room and veranda with awesome views. L (M–F), D (nightly).  811 Wilshire Blvd., 21st floor, downtown, 213.236.9600 $$  Map I16

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w w w.y e o l d e k i n g s h e a d. c o m

Urasawa  Hiroyuki Urasawa’s tiny spot may be the L.A. area’s most exquisite restaurant; it’s also the most pricey, at $275 minimum per person. D (Tu–Sa).  218 N. Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.247.8939 $$$$  Map I11 Yamashiro  Creative Cal-Asian in exquisite Kyoto palace replica. Spectacular city views; koi garden dining. D (nightly).  1999 N. Sycamore Ave., Hollywood, 323.466.5125 $$$  Map G13

Korean chosun galbee  Korean barbecue restaurant offers a more upscale ambience than most, with an elegant open-air patio. L, D (daily)  3330 W. Olympic Blvd., Koreatown, 323.734.3330 $$$  Map Seoul Jung  Traditional Korean barbecue, hot pot specialties prepared at table. L (M–F), D (nightly).  Wilshire Grand Hotel, 930 Wilshire Blvd., downtown, 213.688.7880 $$$  Map H16 soot bull jeep  One of K-Town’s best, with all array of savory meats cooked on tabletop grills. L, D (daily).  3136 W. 8th St., Koreatown, 213.387.3865 $$  Map east of J14

Mediterranean Sunday -family diier nite Monday -1/2 oo boole sake nite Wednesday -1/2 oo boole wine nite Mon - Sun Lunch 11:30-2:30 pm Sun- Thu Diier 5:00-11:00 pm Fri-Sat 5:00-12:00

A.O.C.  Star chef Suzanne Goin and Caroline Styne (Lucques) offer a wine bar, cheese bar and charcuterie bar. A few dishes are prepared in a wood-burning oven. Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly).  8022 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.653.6359 $$  Map I12 barbrix  Small-plate eatery in converted schoolhouse. Tapas bar, charming patio and exhibition kitchen. D (nightly).  2442 Hyperion Ave., Silver Lake, 323.662.2442 $$$  Map east of W23 Campanile  Chef-owner Mark Peel’s enduring first restaurant. Grilled meats, pastas, vegetables; you can’t go wrong. Gourmet grilled cheese Thursdays. Br (Sa– Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  624 S. La Brea Ave., L.A., 323.938.1447 $$$  Map J13

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Dining AbUeLItAs Dine inside “la casa” or on the patio—the rustic canyon setting is always the best view. Authentic family-style fare. Br (Su), L (F–Sa), D (nightly). 137 S. Topanga Canyon Blvd., Topanga, 310.455.8788 $$ Map west of K7 border grILL Nuevo Latino fare from Susan Feniger and Mary Sue Milliken. Downtown location offers free shuttle to L.A. Live and Music Center, Tu–Su. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). 1445 4th St., Santa Monica, 310.451.1655; 445 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.486.5171 $$ Map L8, H16

Playa on Beverly Boulevard cLeo Noisy, posh mezze bar in sexy boutique hotel. Flatbreads and vegetables like the outstanding crispy brussels sprouts are prepared in a wood-burning oven. D (nightly). The Redbury, 1717 Vine St., Hollywood, 323.962.1711 $$$ Map H14 FIg & oLIve New. New York-based restaurant’s cuisine is an ode to olive oil: gorgonzola jamón ibérico ravioli drizzled with porcini olive oil, grilled branzino glazed with fig and picholine olive oil. Champagne bar upstairs; retail component. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly). 8490 Melrose Place, L.A., 310.360.9100 $$$ Map I12 FrAÎche Rustic bistro offers market-fresh cuisine with French and Italian accents. Culver City: Br (Sa–Su), L (M–Sa), D (nightly). Santa Monica: L (M–F), D (nightly). 9411 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.839.6800; 312 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.451.7482 $$$ Map L11, L8 gJeLINA Lively, spirited spot featuring organic, seasonal dishes; pizzas are popular. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly). 1429 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.450.1429 $$ Map N9 J restAUrANt & LoUNge Soulful, brick-clad spot with live music. Duck two ways, crispy grilled salmon. Br (Su), L (M–F), D (M–Sa). 1119 S. Olive St., downtown, 213.746.7746 $$$ Map I16 LUcQUes Ever-hot chef Suzanne Goin and Caroline Styne (AOC) serve fabulous French-Med menu. Nowhere do vegetables taste as good! L (Tu–Sa), D (nightly). 8474 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.655.6277 $$$ Map I13 MeZZe New. Mediterranean and Middle Eastern small plates. Signature dishes are yellowtail crudo with toasted pine nuts and cherry gremolata, and flatbreads topped with merguez sausage and tomato jam. D (M–Sa). 401 La Cienega Blvd., L.A., 310.657.4103 $$ Map I12 MoMed Lighter, contemporary Mediterranean in minimalist, casual yet sleek cafe. Try the pide (Turkish flatbread) with minced chicken and grilled peaches. Lebanese manaeesh with Turkish coffee for breakfast. B, L, D (daily). 233 S. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.270.4444 $ Map J11 Petros Fine contemporary Greek fare in a cool white dining room or on the covered patio. Dress code for indoor diners. L, D (daily). 451 Manhattan Beach Blvd., Manhattan Beach, 310.545.4100 $$$ Map L13 rAy’s & stArK bAr New. Petite, Renzo Piano– designed eatery at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Contemporary Med-inspired cuisine including vegetables cooked in wood-burning oven. Adjacent Stark Bar offers designer cocktails on an outdoor patio. L, D (Th–Tu). 5905 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.857.6180 $$ Map J13

cAsA Modern Mexican featuring upscale tacos; close to MOCA. Margarita picante with jalapeño has an excellent kick. L (M–F), D (M–Sa). 350 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.621.2249 $$ Map H16 FrIdA Stylish alta cocina Mexicana. Beverly Hills: Br (Su), L, D (daily). Glendale: L, D (daily). 236 S. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.278.7666; 750 Americana Way, Glendale, 818.551.1666 $$$ Map I11, southeast of T23 LA sereNAtA de gArIbALdI One of L.A.’s best Mexican eateries, featuring its lighter coastal specialties. Gourmets make pilgrimage to East L.A. location. L, D (daily). West L.A.: B (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). 10924 W. Pico Blvd., West L.A., 310.441.9667; 1842 E. 1st St., Boyle Heights, 323.265.2887 $$ Map L8, K10, east of H17 MALo East L.A.-meets-Mexico City cuisine. Silver Lake location has a neighborhood feel, while downtown’s new Más Malo is eclectically glam. Malo: Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly). Más Malo: Br (Sa-Su), L (M–F), D (nightly). 4326 W. Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake, 323.664.1011; 515 W. 7th St., downtown, 213.985.4332 $$ Map south of W23, I16 MUcho ULtIMA MexIcANA Modernized Mexican fare, plus tasty margaritas and mojitos. D (nightly). 903 Manhattan Ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.374.4422 $$ Map K13 PLAyA New. “Urban Latin” small plates from chef John Sedlar. Tapas include maize cakes with fillings such as shrimp, Napa cabbage and mustard ice cream; flower-inlaid tortillas are a Sedlar signature. Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly). 7360 Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.933.5300 $$ Map red o Contemporary Mexican cuisine guru Rick Bayless arrives in L.A., and his thoughtful cuisine is matched by a sexy, transporting space. Extensive tequila list. Br (Su), D (nightly). 8155 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.655.5009 $$$ Map I12 rIverA From acclaimed Southwestern-influenced chef John Sedlar; custom-blended tequilas are a specialty; artful plating with designs stenciled in spices. L (M–F), D (nightly). 1050 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.749.1460 $$$ Map I16 seÑor Fred Lively, surprisingly sophisticated cantina. Try quesadilla with sadero cheese, poblano chiles, huitlacoche (corn fungus delicacy). L, D (daily). 13730 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks, 818.789.3200 $$ Map G10

Pan-Asian crUstAceAN Very stylish French–Vietnamese; glass-covered koi stream underfoot. Prawns, large crabs, garlic noodles. Popular bar; live music on select nights. L (M–F), D (nightly). 9646 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.205.8990 $$$ Map I11 LUKshoN New. Sang Yoon of Father’s Office opens a Southeast Asian eatery with a selection of craft beers and Far East-inspired cocktail program. D (M–Sa). 3239 Helms Ave., Culver City, 310.202.6808 $$$ Map K12

the sPIce tAbLe New. Dishes inspired by Singaporean and Vietnamese traditions: satays, noodle soups, clay pot catfish, grilled or wood-burned vegetables. L, D (M–Sa). 114 S. Central Ave., Little Tokyo, 213.620.1840 $$ Map H17 trAder vIc’s Pan-Asian and Polynesian fare—pupu platters, mai tais—in kitschy-fun tiki dining room. L (M– Sa), D (nightly). 800 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.785.3330 $$$ Map I15 wP24 Wolfgang Puck hits it just right on the 24th floor of the Ritz. Suckling pig or foie gras-filled bao to start; two-pound Maine “Angry Lobster” entree. D (M–Sa). The Ritz-Carlton, Los Angeles, 900 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.743.8824 $$$$ Map I15 yANgtZe One of Third Street Promenade’s classier eateries, this striking restaurant and sushi bar serves accessible pan–Asian. L, D (daily). 1333 Third Street Promenade, Santa Monica, 310.260.1994 $ Map L8

Seafood cAtch Sophisticated seafood at Hotel Casa del Mar. Wraparound windows, ocean views, handsome sushi bar. B, L, D (daily). 1910 Ocean Way, Santa Monica, 310.581.7714 $$$ Map M8 chArt hoUse Perennial favorite; beachfront or marina views. Renowned salad bar, fresh fish, slowroasted prime rib. L (call for hours), D (nightly). 18412 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, 310.454.9321; 13950 Panay Way, Marina del Rey, 310.822.4144; 231 Yacht Club Way, Redondo Beach, 310.372.3464 $$ Map west of K7, N9, M13 dUKe’s MALIbU Mainland outpost of busiest restaurant in Hawaii offers island seafood, spectacular ocean views. Barefoot Bar. Br (Su), L (Tu–Sa), D (nightly). 21150 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, 310.317.0777 $$ Map west of K7 gLAdstoNe’s MALIbU One of SoCal’s biggest hits with a million visitors each year. Dramatic ocean views. B (Sa–Su), L, D (daily). 17300 Pacific Coast Hwy., Pacific Palisades, 310.454.3474 $$ Map west of K7 the hUNgry cAt East Coast fare in hip little spots. Dungeness crab benedict; you-peel or they-peel shrimp by the half-pound. Hollywood: Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly); Santa Monica: D (nightly). Sunset+Vine, 1535 N. Vine St., Hollywood, 323.462.2155; 100 W. Channel Road, Santa Monica, 310.459.3337 $$ Map H14, L7 the Lobster Excellent seafood in landmark spot overlooking the pier; great sunsets, of course. L, D (daily). 1602 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.458.9294 $$$ Map L8 MccorMIcK & schMIcK’s Classy wood, glass and brass space; seafood any way you like it. Happy hour. L (varies by location), D (nightly). 206 N. Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.859.0434; 111 N. Los Robles Ave., Pasadena, 626.405.0064; 633 W. 5th St., downtown, 213.629.1929; 2101 Rosecrans Ave., El Segundo, 310.416.1123; 3500 W. Olive Ave., Burbank, 818.260.0505 $$ Map Q19, I11, H16, L13, T20 PArKers’ LIghthoUse Working lighthouse with panoramic views of Long Beach Bay and city skyline. Sushi bar with waterfront patio seating. L, D (daily). 435 Shoreline Village Drive, Long Beach, 562.432.6500 $$ Map N16 ProvIdeNce Extraordinary chef Michael Cimarusti offers an adventure at sea and on land. Outstanding cocktails complement Michelin-recognized cuisine. L (F), D (nightly). 5955 Melrose Ave., L.A., 323.460.4170 $$$$ Map I14

RYAN TANAKA

Mexican/Latin

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Dining

Rose Tree Cottage A Regal English Afternoon Tea by reservation

Exclusively British — Barbour Clothing • AGA Cookers • Teas • Foods • China

801 S. Pasadena Ave. • Pasadena

626-793-3337

www.rosetreecottage.com

r e m m u S

roy’s Hawaiian fusion chef Roy Yamaguchi opens L.A. locations. D (nightly). Downtown: L (M–F), D (nightly). 800 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.488.4994; 6363 Topanga Canyon Blvd., Woodland Hills, 818.888.4801; 641 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626.356.4066 $$$ Map I16, west of A1, Q21 soN oF A gUN New. The meat-loving chefs at Animal turn to the sea, cooking up salmon collar, lobster rolls and shrimp toast sandwiches in a nautically themed space. D (nightly). 8370 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.782.9033 $$$ Map I12 wAter grILL Chef Amanda Baumgarten cold-poaches and slow-steams at classic venue. Excellent raw bar, shellfish platters; no wine corkage fee. L (M–F), D (nightly). 544 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.891.0900 $$$$ Map H16

Spanish

L OBS T E R

bAr PINtxo Prominent California chef Joe Miller (Joe’s) offers authentic tortilla Española, bacalao and croquetas de jamón and Spanish wines. L (M–F), D (nightly). 109 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.458.2012 $$$ Map M8

SP peC cialS

the bAZAAr by José ANdrés Star chef José Andrés brings whimsical set of Spanish-style dining experiences to SLS Hotel. Tasting room Saam offers an unforgettable, 22-course tasting menu, $95. Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly). 465 S. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.246.5555 $$ Map H16

avioli

ter R Lobs

cAFe sevILLA Authentic Spanish fare and tapas bar on a bustling strip in downtown Long Beach. Dinner show on Saturdays; nightclub upstairs. D (nightly). 140 Pine Ave., Long Beach, 562.495.1111 $$ Map N16 cobrAs & MAtAdors Tops for tapas. Tortilla española, albondigas (meatballs). It’s BYOB; pick up a bottle at Erewhon market across the street. D (nightly). 7615 W. Beverly Blvd., L.A., 323.932.6178 $$ Map J13 tINto tAPAs esPAÑA Small, hip, sexy take on traditional tapas bar with all-Spanish wine list. D (M–Sa). 7511 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.512.3095 $$$ Map H13

Also try our traditional Italian dishes

Steak

featuring CHICKEN PARMIGIANA, SPAGHETTI WITH MEATBALLS, CHEESE MANICOTTI, MOZZARELLA CAPRESE and many more!

Claremont 909.399.3287 enCino 818.995.3288

PaSadena 626.792.7272 redondo BeaCh 310.540.3246

Santa moniCa 310.587.2782 thouSand oakS 805.449.3688

univerSal CityWalk 818.509.9463 valenCia 661.253.1900

bucadibeppo.com

Arroyo choPhoUse Exclusively USDA Prime at handsome spot. D (nightly). 536 S. Arroyo Pkwy., Pasadena, 626.577.7463 $$$$ Map R20

Cozy up to our fireplace in our 1908 Craftsman bungalow once owned by Beryl Wallace, famed showgirl of the Earl Carrol Theatre. Minutes from the Pantages Theatre and famous intersection, Hollywood & Vine Dinner nightly Lunch Monday thru Friday Saturday and Sunday Brunch (bottomless mimosa’s, champagne & bloody marys)

Offering two private rooms from 20 -55 guests (or buy out the entire restaurant)

Restaurant Serving American/California Cuisine

6263 Leland Way, Hollywood

(one block south of Sunset, just east of Vine)

(323) 962-1900 www.offvine.com offvinerestaurant@sbcglobal.net

Top 10 most romantic restaurant in the country - Forbes Traveler

Most romantic restaurant in L.A. - City Search

ArNIe MortoN’s oF chIcAgo Clubby ambience, show-and-tell menu, huge portions. L (M–F), D (nightly). 735 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.553.4566; The Pinnacle, 3400 W. Olive Ave., Burbank, 818.238.0424 $$$ Map I16, T20

2010 Winner/Diners Choice Award - Open Table

beso Hip spot (meaning “kiss”) from superchef Todd English and Desperate Housewives star Eva Longoria. Pan-Latin appetizers and entrees plus a half-dozen beef cuts; exotic cocktails from the “juice bar.” D (M– Sa). 6350 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.467.7991 $$$ Map G14 bLt steAK A branch of a New York City favorite; raw bar and all-American steakhouse standards get a dose of French technique and modern setting. D (Tu–Su). 8720 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.360.1950 $$$$ Map H12 boA Way hip, way fine steakhouse. Steak rubs and dips; out-there cocktails. Santa Monica: L, D (daily); West Hollywood: L (M–F), D (nightly). 101 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.899.4466; 9200 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.278.2050 $$$ Map M8, H11

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Dining

New Linens

Cut  Wolfgang Puck–architect Richard Meier collaboration is cutting-edge steakhouse. D (M– Sa).  Beverly Wilshire Hotel, 9500 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.276.8500 $$$$  Map J11 Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar  Excellent steak, 100 wines by the glass. Downtown: L (M–F), D (nightly); Woodland Hills, El Segundo: D (nightly).  2301 Rosecrans Ave., El Segundo, 310.643.6911; 6373 Topanga Canyon Blvd., Woodland Hills, 818.346.1005; 800 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.745.9911 $$$  Map C2, west of A1, I15 Fogo de Chão  L.A.’s finest Brazilian churrascaria; gaucho-garbed chefs carve prime skewered meats table-side. Amazing sides bar. Prix fixe. L (M–F), D (nightly).  133 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.289.7755 $$$  Map J12

THE Grill on the Alley  Legendary woodand-brass chophouse. L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  9560 Dayton Way, Beverly Hills, 310.276.0615 $$$  Map I11 L.A. Prime  Dine in high style 35 floors up. Aged USDA certified Prime beef from Chicago. D (nightly).  Westin Bonaventure, 404 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.624.1000 $$$  Map H16 Lawry’s the Prime Rib  A Restaurant Row classic. Prime rib, to-die-for creamed corn and spinach served with showmanship from table-side carts. D (nightly).  100 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.652.2827 $$$  Map I12 Mastro’s Steakhouse  Swanky “steakhouse with personality.” Bone-in-filet reigns; warm butter cake melts in your mouth. D (nightly).  246 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.888.8782 $$$  Map J11 Morels French Steakhouse  Dry-aged steaks and selection of three dozen cheeses at the Grove. Br (Sa–Su), L, D (daily).  189 The Grove Drive, L.A., 323.965.9595 $$  Map I13 
 Nick and Stef’s  Joachim Splichal’s slick haven for carnivores. L (M–F), D (nightly).  Wells Fargo Building, 330 S. Hope St., downtown, 213.680.0330 $$$  Map H16 Pacific Dining Car  Oldie but goodie. Open 24/7. B, L, D (daily).  1310 W. 6th St., downtown, 213.483.6000; 2700 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.453.4000 $$$  Map H16, K The Palm  Big in The Biz. Sketches of famous customers adorn the walls. L (M–F), D (nightly).  9001 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.550.8811; 1100 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.763.4600 $$$  Map I12, J16 Ruth’s Chris Steak House  At this upscale chain, steak arrives sizzling in butter. L (varies), D (nightly).  224 S. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.859.8744; 369 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626.583.8122 $$$  Map I11, Q20 STK  Sultry steakhouse for the young crowd, with fun appetizers such as shrimp “rice krispies” and Wagyu beef sliders . Open-air lounge with DJ. D (nightly).  755 N. La Cienega Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.659.3535 $$$$  Map I12

ZAGAT RATED 2010Excellent

french cuisine with a japanese flair

713 east gr een str eet pasadena 626 796 9501 m a i s o n a k i r a . n e t

West  Steakhouse atop Hotel Angeleno; striking modern décor and Westside view (monitor the 405!). B, L, D (daily), Br (Su).  170 N. Church Lane, Brentwood, 310.481.7878 $$$  Map I9 WOLFGANG’S STEAKHOUSE  Chef Wolfgang Zwiener opens outpost of his New York steakhouse; dry-aged porterhouse steak for two, three or four. L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  445 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.385.0640 $$$$  Map J11

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Dining Thai Chan Dara  Traditional specialties. L, D (daily).  11940 W. Pico Blvd., West L.A., 310.479.4461; 1511 N. Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood, 323.464.8585; House of Chan Dara, 310 N. Larchmont Blvd., Hollywood, 323.467.1052 $$  Map L10, H14, I14 Natalee Thai  Thai menu sprinkled with a few tried-and-true pan-Asian dishes; stylish design. L, D (daily).  10101 Venice Blvd., Culver City, 310.202.7003; 998 S. Robertson Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.855.9380 $  Map L11, I11 Palms Thai  Traditional dishes in Thai Town. Most famous for its “Thai Elvis,” an impersonator who hams it up for diners. Near Pantages Theater. L, D (daily).  5900 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.462.5073 $  Map H14 TALÉSAI  Elegant duo of eateries serving refined Thai cuisine). L (M–F), D (nightly).  9043 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.275.9724; 9198 W. Olympic Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.271.9345 $  Map I12, J11

Wine Bars BOTTLEROCK  Reasonably priced wine and small bites; will open any bottle with purchase of two glasses. Culver City: L (Tu–Sa), D (nightly). Downtown: L (M–Sa), D (nightly).  3847 Main St., Culver City, 310.836.9463; 1050 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.747.1100 $$$  Map L11, I16 PRIMITIVO WINE BISTRO  Tapas and extensive wine list. Br (Sa–Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).  1025 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.396.5353 $$$  Map M9 Rustic Canyon  Cool, cozy wine bar and seasonal cuisine from chef Evan Funke. D (nightly).  1119 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.393.7050 $$$  Map L8 salutÉ wine bar  Sampling from automatic wine dispensers or by the glass. Italian small plates including salumi and well-chosen cheeses, plus larger entrees. Br (Sa–Su), D (nightly).  2435 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.450.3434 $$  Map M9 vertical wine bistro  Seventy wines by the glass, 650 on the list. New American menu plus fun small plates, cheeses and charcuterie. D (Tu–Su).  70 N. Raymond Ave. (upstairs), Pasadena, 626.795.3999 $$$  Map Q19 vinoteque  Eclectic Italian- and Frenchaccented menu, mostly small plates; turbot with fingerling potatoes, lamb meatballs with goat cheese. Late-night menu. Br (Su), L (F–Sa), D (Tu–Su).  7469 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 310.860.6060 $$  Map I13

Authentic Thai Chinese and Sushi Bar Dining & Outdoor Patio

where?

1333 3rd St. Promenade Santa Monica

310.260.1994 FAX 310.260.1944

Log on anywhere. WhereLA.com WHERE LOS ANGELES  87

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Restaurants City Index Our superguide by area, with cross reference to listings by cuisine.

BEVERLY HILLS

THE BAZAAR  (Spanish).............................................. 85 THE BELVEDERE  (American).................................. 74 BLVD  (American)................................................................ 74 bouchon  (French)....................................................... 79 cafe pinot  (French).................................................. 79 Chakra  (Indian).............................................................80 CHAYA  (California)............................................................ 76 CRUSTACEAN  (Pan-Asian)........................................ 84 Culina  (Italian).................................................................81 CUT  (Steak).......................................................................... 86 enoteca drago  (Italian)......................................81 Frida  (Mexican/Latin).................................................... 84 IL CIELO  (Italian)................................................................81 il fornaio  (Italian)......................................................81 the grill on the alley  (Steak)................ 86 joss cuisine  (Chinese)............................................ 78 KATE MANTILINI  (American)............................... 74 la dolce vita  (Italian).......................................... 82 MASTRO’S STEAKHOUSE  (Steak)................... 86 m café de CHAYA  (California)............................ 77 McCORMICK & SCHMICK’S  (Seafood)............ 84 momed  (Mediterranean)................................................ 84 MR. CHOW  (Chinese).................................................... 78 NATALEE THAI  (Thai)................................................ 87 NIC’s  (California)................................................................ 77 POLO LOUNGE  (California)....................................... 78 RUTH’s CHRIS  (Steak)................................................ 86 Scarpetta  (Italian).................................................... 82 SPAGO  (California)............................................................ 78 talésai  (Thai)................................................................. 87 208 Rodeo  (California).............................................. 78 URasawa  (Japanese)................................................... 83 villa blanca  (Italian)............................................ 82 wolfgang’s Steakhouse  (Steak)......... 86

BEVERLY Boulevard  3RD street  MELROSE avenue

AGO  (Italian)...................................................................80 Angelini osteria  (Italian). .............................80 aoc  (Mediterranean).................................................... 83 bastide  (French)........................................................ 79 BLD  (American)....................................................................... 74 cobras & matadors  (Spanish)..................... 85 Comme çA  (French)..................................................... 79 eva restaurant  (California)................................... 76 The Foundry  (American )......................................... 74 hatfield’s  (California)............................................ 77 jar  (American).................................................................... 74 Joan’s on third  (American)........................... 74 the little door  (French)...................................80 LOCANDA VENETA  (Italian).................................. 82 lucques  (Mediterranean)........................................... 84 mandarette  (Chinese)........................................... 78 MARINO RISTORANTE  (Italian)......................... 82 mauro’s cafe  (Italian)........................................... 82 m café de CHAYA  (California)............................ 77 morels steakhouse  (Steak)........................ 86 OSTERIA MOZZA  (Italian)....................................... 82 pane e vino  (Italian)................................................. 82 philippe  (Chinese)......................................................... 78 Pizzeria Mozza  (Italian)..................................... 82 playa  (Mexican/Latin).................................................... 84 providence  (Seafood)............................................. 84 red o  (Mexican/Latin).................................................... 84 Simon L.A.  (American)............................................... 76 son of a gun  (Seafood)........................................ 85 sushi roku  (Japanese)............................................. 83

Brentwood

KATSUYA  (Japanese)...................................................... 82 sor tino ristorante  (Italian)..................... 82 sugarfish  (Japanese)................................................ 83 TAVERN  (California)....................................................... 78 toscana  (Italian)......................................................... 82 VINCENTI ristorante  (Italian)...................... 82 west  (Steak)...................................................................... 86

BURBANK

ARNIE MORTON’S  (Steak)...................................... 85 bistro provence  (French)............................. 79 THE castaway  (American)................................. 74 mccormick & Schmick’s  (Seafood)............ 84 restaurant at getty  (California).............. 78

CENTURY CITY

BREEZE  (California)......................................................... 76 CRAFT  (American)............................................................ 74

Culver City

a-Frame  (Eclectic)......................................................... 78 akasha  (California)....................................................... 76 BOTTLEROCK  (Wine Bar).......................................... 87 father’s office 2  (Brew/Pub)...................... 76 ford’s filling station  (Brew/Pub).......... 76 FRAÎCHE  (Mediterranean)............................................. 84 k-zo  (Japanese).................................................................. 82

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NATALEE THAI  (Thai)................................................ 87 tender greens  (American)............................. 76 waterloo & city  (Brew/Pub)........................ 76

downtown

aburiya toranoko  (Japanese)..................... 82 arnie morton’s  (Steak)...................................... 85 asbury fusion  (Eclectic)..................................... 78 bar + Kitchen  (American).................................... 74 beso  (Steak)....................................................................... 85 bottega louie  (Italian)........................................80 bottlerock  (Wine Bar).......................................... 87 cafÉ Pinot  (French).................................................. 79 catch  (Seafood)............................................................... 84 casa  (Mexican/Latin)...................................................... 84 cbs seafood  (Chinese).......................................... 78 chaya  (California)............................................................ 76 church & State  (French)..................................... 79 cicada  (Italian).................................................................81 drago centro  (Italian)..........................................81 Empress pavilion  (Chinese)............................. 78 engine co. no. 28  (American)........................... 74 first & HOPE  (Club).................................................. 78 the gorbals  (Eclectic)........................................... 78 J Restaurant & Lounge  (Medit.)............. 84 katsuya  (Japanese)...................................................... 82 kendall’s brasserie  (French)..................... 79 L.a. market  (American)........................................... 74 L.a. prime  (Steak)......................................................... 86 la serenata de garibaldi  (Mexican)....... 84 lazy ox canteen  (Brew/Pub)......................... 76 lukshon  (Pan-Asian)................................................... 84 magnolia  (American)................................................ 74 más malo  (Mexican/Latin)....................................... 84 McCORMICK & SCHMICK’S  (Seafood)............ 84 nick and stef’s  (Steak)...................................... 86 NOÉ  (American).................................................................. 74 OCEAN SEAFOOD  (Chinese)................................. 78 pacific dining car  (Steak).............................. 86 the palm  (Steak).......................................................... 86 patina  (French)................................................................80 PHILIPPE the original  (American)............. 76 The restaurant  (American)............................. 76 rivera  (Mexican/Latin)................................................ 84 roy’s  (Seafood)................................................................. 85 R23  (Japanese)..................................................................... 82 seoul jung  (Korean)................................................ 83 the spice table  (Pan-Asian).............................. 84 SUGARFISH  (Japanese)................................................ 83 TAKAMI SUSHI  (Japanese)........................................ 83 trader vic’s  (Pan-Asian)....................................... 84 traxx  (California)............................................................ 78 water grill  (Seafood)............................................ 85 WP24  (Pan-Asian)............................................................. 84 zucca ristorante  (Italian)............................. 82

HOLLYWOOD/EASTSIDE

barbrix  (Mediterranean)............................................ 83 the cat & Fiddle  (Brew/Pub)............................ 76 cleo  (Mediterranean)...................................................... 84 delphine  (French)........................................................ 79 district  (Brew/Pub)................................................... 76 HARD ROCK CAFE  (American)............................. 74 the HUNGRY CAT  (Seafood)................................. 84 ivan kane’s cafÉ Was  (French).................. 79 KATSUYA  (Japanese)...................................................... 82 koji’s sushi  (Japanese)............................................ 82 lamill coffee  (American)................................... 74 magnolia  (American)................................................ 74 malo  (Mexican/Latin)..................................................... 84 MUSSO & FRANK  (American)................................. 74 off vine  (American).................................................. 74 PaLMS THAI  (Thai)..................................................... 87 public kitchen + Bar  (Brew/Pub).............. 76 rolling stone  (American).................................. 76 supperclub  (Club).................................................... 78 Susan feniger’s street  (Eclectic)........... 79 tender greens  (American)............................. 76 umami burger  (American)................................... 76 the waffle  (American)........................................... 76 YAMASHIRO  (Japanese).............................................. 83

LA BREA/MIDTOWN

ANIMAL (American)......................................................... 74 CaMPANILE  (Mediterranean)..................................... 83 chosun galbee  (Korean).................................... 83 cube  (Italian).......................................................................81 LUNA PARK  (American)............................................... 74 ray’s & stark bar  (Mediterranean)............... 84 soot bull jeep  (Korean)..................................... 83 the tar pit  (Club)...................................................... 78

LA CIENEGA boulevard  RESTAURANT ROW

FOGO DE CHÃO  (Steak).......................................... 86 gonpachi  (Japanese).................................................. 82 koi  (Japanese)..................................................................... 82 la seine  (Eclectic)......................................................... 78

LAWRY’S PRIME RIB  (Steak)................................ 86 MATSUHISA  (Japanese)............................................... 82 mezze  (Mediterranean).................................................. 84 NOBU  (Japanese)............................................................... 82 THE STINKING ROSE  (Italian)............................. 82 TANZORE  (Indian)..........................................................80

LONG BEACH

café Sevilla  (Spanish)........................................ 85 PARKERs’ LIGHTHOUSE  (Seafood).................. 84 SIR WINSTON’S  (California)..................................... 78

MALIBU

charlie’s  (American).................................................. 74 chart house  (Seafood)......................................... 84 duke’s malibu  (Seafood)...................................... 84 geoffrey’s  (California)............................................ 77 gladstone’s malibu  (Seafood).................... 84 NOBU MALIBU  (Japanese)........................................ 82 ruby’s diner  (American)........................................ 76 saddle peak lodge  (American)................... 76 savory  (American)........................................................ 76 THE SUNSET  (California)............................................. 78 tra di noi  (Italian)...................................................... 82

MArina del rey

CAFÉ DEL REY  (Eclectic).......................................... 78 chart house  (Seafood)......................................... 84 jer-ne  (California)........................................................... 77 SUGARFISH  (Japanese)................................................ 83

pasAdena

arROYO CHOPHOUSE  (Steak).......................... 85 bistro 45  (French)....................................................... 79 buca di beppo  (Italian).........................................80 celestino  (Italian)........................................................81 elements kitchen  (Eclectic)............................ 78 gyu-kaku  (Japanese).................................................. 82 il fornaio  (Italian)......................................................81 KATSUYA  (Japanese)...................................................... 82 kings row gastroPub  (Brew/Pub).......... 76 Louise’s Trattoria  (Italian)........................... 82 maison akira  (Eclectic)......................................... 78 mccormick & schmick’s  (Seafood)............ 84 PALATE FOOD + WINE  (California).................. 78 parkway grill  (California).................................. 78 roxolana  (Eclectic)................................................... 79 the royce  (American)............................................... 76 roy’s  (Seafood)................................................................. 85 RUTH’s CHRIS  (Steak)................................................ 86 sushi roku  (Japanese)............................................. 83 TRATTORIA TRE VENEZIE  (Italian)................ 82 vertical wine bistro  (Wine Bar)............. 87 yard house  (Brew/Pub).......................................... 76

santa monica

bar pintxo  (Spanish)................................................ 85 boa  (Steak).......................................................................... 85 Border Grill  (Mexican/Latin)............................ 84 CATCH  (Seafood)............................................................... 84 CAPO  (Italian)......................................................................81 CHINOIS ON MAIN  (California)............................. 76 DRAGO  (Italian)..................................................................81 father’s office  (Brew/Pub)........................... 76 fig restaurant  (California)............................... 77 fraÎche  (Mediterranean)............................................. 84 giorgio baldi  (Italian)............................................81 the hungry cat  (Seafood)................................. 84 il fornaio  (Italian)......................................................81 ivy at the shore  (American)......................... 74 jiraffe  (French)........................................................... 79 Josie  (American)............................................................. 74 la botte  (Italian)............................................................... 82 la cachette BISTRO  (French).............................. 79 La vecchia  (Italian)................................................... 82 THE LOBSTER  (Seafood)............................................ 84 Locanda del lago  (Italian)............................ 82 Louise’s Trattoria  (Italian)........................... 82 MÉLISSE  (French).............................................................80 Michael’s  (California)................................................. 77 monsieur marcel  (French)..............................80 ocean & vine  (California)...................................... 77 one pico  (California)................................................... 78 pacific dining car  (Steak).............................. 86 THE PENTHOUSE  (American)................................. 76 r+d kitchen  (American)......................................... 76 robata bar  (Japanese)........................................... 82 rustic canyon  (Wine Bar).................................. 87 SalutÉ wine bar  (Wine Bar)............................ 87 sushi roku  (Japanese)............................................. 83 true food kitchen  (American).................... 76 VALENTIno  (Italian)..................................................... 82 whist  (American)............................................................ 76 Wilshire  (American)................................................... 76 wolfgang Puck  (California)............................. 78 xino  (Chinese)................................................................... 78 YANGTZE  (Pan-Asian).......................................... 84 YE OLDE KING’S HEAD  (Brew/Pub)................. 76

SOUTH BAY

akbar  (Indian).................................................................80 BENIHANA  (Japanese).................................................. 82 buca di beppo  (Italian).........................................80 chart house  (Seafood)......................................... 84 chez melange  (California)................................... 76 fleming’s Steakhouse  (Steak).................. 86 GINA LEE’S BISTRO  (California).......................... 77 gonpachi  (Japanese).................................................. 82 il fornaio  (Italian)......................................................81 maison riz  (Japanese).............................................. 82 MAR’SEL  (California)....................................................... 77 mccormick & schmick’s  (Seafood)............ 84 mucho ultima Mexicana  (Mexican)....... 84 PETROS  (Mediterranean)............................................... 84 ruby’s diner  (American)........................................ 76 sky room  (American)................................................. 76 the veggie grill  (American)............................ 76 yard house  (Brew/Pub).......................................... 76

TOPANGA CANYON

abuelitas  (Mexican/Latin)....................................... 84 inn of seventh ray  (California)................... 77

UNIVERSAL CITY

buca di beppo  (Italian).........................................80 CAFE SIERRA  (Eclectic)............................................. 78 HARD ROCK CAFE  (American)............................. 74 karl strauss brewery  (Brew/Pub)....... 76

Valley

asanebo  (Japanese).................................................... 82 BENIHANA  (Japanese).................................................. 82 buca di beppo  (Italian).........................................80 firefly  (Club).................................................................. 78 fleming’s steakhouse  (Steak)..............86 frida  (Mexican/Latin)..................................................84 KATE MANTILINI  (American)............................... 74 KATSU-YA  (Japanese).................................................... 82 pinot bistro  (French).............................................80 roy’s  (Seafood)................................................................. 85 seÑor fred  (Mexican/Latin).................................. 84 SUSHI NOZAWA  (Japanese).................................... 83 umami burger  (American)................................... 76 wolfgang Puck  (California)............................. 78

VENICE

beechwood  (American)......................................... 74 chaya  (California)............................................................ 76 GJELINA  (Mediterranean)............................................. 84 hal’s bar & Grill  (California)........................... 77 JOE’S  (California)............................................................... 77 piccolo  (Italian)............................................................ 82 primitivo  (Wine Bar)................................................... 87

WEST HOLLYWOOD

ASIA DE CUBA  (Eclectic).......................................... 78 BLT STEAK  (Steak)........................................................ 85 BOA  (Steak).......................................................................... 85 cecconi’s  (Italian).........................................................81 chan dara  (Thai)...................................................... 87 DAN TANA’S  (Italian).....................................................81 fig & Olive  (Mediterranean).................................... 84 Gordon Ramsay  (Eclectic)................................. 78 the hall  (French)......................................................... 79 il sole  (Italian).................................................................81 ivy restaurant  (American)............................... 74 katana  (Japanese)......................................................... 82 le clafoutis  (French)............................................80 luca fresh bites  (California)........................... 77 monsieur marcel  (French)..............................80 the palm  (Steak).......................................................... 86 petrossian  (French).............................................. 80 PORCH RESTAURANT  (Club).............................. 78 STK  (Steak)........................................................................... 86 sunset marquis  (California).............................. 78 talÉsai  (Thai)................................................................. 87 tender greens  (American)............................. 76 tinto  (Spanish)................................................................. 85 the veggie grill  (American)............................ 76 vinoteque  (Wine Bar).............................................. 87 XIV  (American)..................................................................... 76

WESTSIDE

blvd 16  (California)......................................................... 76 chan dara  (Thai)...................................................... 87 encounter  (California)............................................ 76 gyu-kaku  (Japanese).................................................. 82 la serenata de garibaldi  (Mexican)........ 84 matteo’s  (Italian)....................................................... 82 napa valley grille  (California)................... 77 NINE THIRTy  (California)............................................ 77 paparazzi  (Italian)..................................................... 82 sushi sasabune  (Japanese)............................. 83 VIBRATO grill  (Club).............................................. 78 vu  (California)...................................................................... 78 westside tavern  (California)........................... 78

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208 RODEO Set atop the stairs on Via Rodeo’s cobblestone street, 208 Rodeo serves up luxury and bistro fare in a unique, romantic setting. Exuding Rodeo Drive elegance—the restaurant’s flagstone patio overlooks the Beverly Wilshire Hotel, the setting of the film Pretty Woman—208 Rodeo is a gem among the ritzy shops of Two Rodeo. Whether it’s for breakfast, lunch, dinner or a quick bite, 208 Rodeo offers it all amid warm Hollywood Regency décor. The eatery offers California cuisine with pan-Asian and French influences, serving dishes that are both beautifully presented and imaginatively prepared with seasonal ingredients. Menu highlights include tomato bisque, coconut sesame prawns, tuna tartar, penne arrabbiata and pan-roasted striped bass. 208 Rodeo also offers a delectable dessert list featuring chocolate Florentine cannoli and tiramisu. A children’s menu is available for all meals. B, L, D (daily)

208 Via Rodeo, Beverly Hills

310.275.2428

Starters Organic tomato bisque French onion soup Crispy calamari Caprese salad with burrata Mediterranean tuna tartar Goat cheese with roasted baby beets Coconut sesame prawns Smoked salmon platter Assorted sliders Classic Caesar salad Iceberg Cobb salad Thai beef salad Seared ahi tuna Niçoise salad Asian grilled prawn-spinach salad Lobster-and-white-truffle salad Entrees Brioche French toast Cobblestone omelets Organic parfait Gourmet grilled cheese sandwich Grilled chicken breast sandwich Kobe beef avocado burger Penne arrabbiata Roasted salmon Strip bass meunière Provençal mussels and fries Grilled Jidori chicken Baby lamb chop New York strip steak Flat iron steak and French green beans Filet mignon and Brussels sprouts Desserts Chocolate Florentine cannoli Mixed berry rolada Napoleon Tiramisu Triple-layer chocolate mousse White chocolate cheesecake

208rodeo.com

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MENU HIGHLIGHTS Starters Crab cakes with micro greens Prime filet carpaccio Charlie’s cheese plate Oysters

CHarLIE’S Charlie DiLorenzo opened her dream restaurant in spring 2009 to outstanding reviews. Embraced by the local community and diners visiting the spectacular coastal location, Charlie’s serves classic steaks, seafood and pastas—including a 16-oz. rib eye, lamb lollipops with blue cheese fondue and seared dry pack sea scallops—as well as the house favorite, white pizza with ricotta, feta, mozzarella and Parmesan cheeses and white truffle essence. A recently introduced lunch menu offers salads, sandwiches, pizzas and pastas along with starters including lobster spring rolls and crisp calamari steaks. Charlie’s also boasts a contemporary bar program of original cocktails and a wine cellar with 150 labels from vineyards from Malibu to the Médoc. A stylish yet casual dining room and lounge features neutral tones and natural woods, highlighted by striking Dolce & Gabbana leopard-print “mademoiselle”chairs and a hand-blown glass chandelier. L (M–F), D (nightly).

Entrees Spaghetti aglio y olio Angel hair pomodoro Penne a la vodka White pizza with white truffle essence Wild mushroom and goat cheese pizza Charlie’s Kobe burger Portobello mushroom sandwich Prime rib-eye sandwich Filet mignon New York strip steak Rib eye steak Pork chop Lamb with blue-cheese fondue Duck with Port wine and cherries Half-roasted Jidori chicken Grilled salmon Grilled jumbo prawns Seared dry pack scallops Lobster tail

22821 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu

310.456.3132 charliesmalibu.com

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MENU HIGHLIGHTS Appetizers Grilled Pancetta & Burrata Crostino Carpaccio with Roasted Mushrooms Grilled Pancetta Wrapped Jumbo Shrimp Spinach & Ricotta Dumplings Crab Cake Prosciutto & Melon

FIrENzE OSTErIa A stone’s throw from Universal Studios, Firenze Osteria is setting the standard for Italian cuisine in Los Angeles. Executive Chef Fabio Viviani, a fan favorite on Bravo’s Top Chef Season 5, brings 500-year-old recipes from Florence to Southern California diners; a delicious menu includes homemade pastas, dry-aged meats and imported cheeses, as well as an extensive wine list and unique martinis created by award-winning mixologist Jacopo Falleni. Classic Tuscan décor bathed in rustic browns and yellows transports diners to Italy without the need for a passport. Firenze Osteria’s high quality and commitment to excellence makes every dining experience memorable, from catering to private parties. The restaurant can customize a special menu for parties of 20 to 250, or bring the warmth of fine Italian dining to private dinners and large events.

4212 Lankershim Blvd., Toluca Lake

818.760.7081 firenzeosteria.com

Salads Caesar Poached Pear Crispy Duck Salad Burrata Salad Buffalo Caprese Light Menu Wheat Spaghetti with Chicken Flat Iron Steak Mediterranean Style Light Salmon Salad Filet of Sole Pasta & Risotto Sausage & Mushroom Risotto Lobster Ravioli Gnocchi Pesto Braised Short Rib Ravioli Trofie Pasta with Duck Sausage Butternut Squash Ravioli Fettuccini Bolognese Seafood Linguini Lobster Mac & Cheese Entrees Cioppino Mediterranean Seabass Roasted Chicken Sliced Filet with Arugula Balsamic Baby Back Ribs Ossobucco Pork Chop Fried Pounded Veal Chop Rib-Eye Filet Mignon Rack of Lamb Dessert Panna Cotta Flourless Chocolate Cake Tiramisu Homemade Gelatos

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LE cLafoUTIS For the past 21 years, Le Clafoutis has served the best in French cuisine to the visitors and locals of West Hollywood. Set in the center of Sunset Plaza, the eatery boasts a full bar, large booths, a friendly atmosphere and is a well-known hideout for celebrities. The outdoor patio overlooking the Sunset Strip is the perfect place to enjoy a cocktail and people-watch. At Le Clafoutis, every dish—from choice meats and seafood to breads and pastries baked fresh daily—is created using artisan ingredients. Stop by for happy hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 7:30 pm and nightly from 9:30 pm to close. L, D (daily), Br (Sa–Su)

Starters Onion soup Gazpacho Caesar salad Clafoutis salad Warm goat cheese salad Belgian endive Beets medley Escargots Burrata caprese Fried calamari Ahi tuna tartar Entrees Fettuccine chicken alfredo Chicken ravioli Penne portofino Prawn risotto Mussels Poulette Whitefish filet Wild king salmon Grilled ahi tuna Roasted duck Chicken sunset Chopped steak au poivre Rib eye Lamb chops Short ribs

8630 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood

310.659.5233 leclafoutis.fr

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MENU HIGHLIGHTS Antipasti Vitello tonnato Octopus carpaccio with arugula Beef tongue with salsa verde Tuna-avocado tartare, plantain chips Organic lettuce trio

LOCANDA DEL LAGO At Locanda del Lago, a top Italian chef blends Santa Monica farmers market organic produce with the finest Italian ingredients to create exceptional, best-of-both-worlds dishes. The impeccably executed traditional recipes attract an eclectic crowd of foodies, celebrities, locals and travelers who dine and mingle as if on the shores of Lake Como. Regulars rave about such unique dishes as beef tongue with salsa verde, whole-wheat pizzoccheri with bitto cheese and Savoy cabbage, gorgonzola-and-beet risotto and baked Chilean sea bass. Says Gourmet magazine, “Don’t miss the ossobuco alla milanese.” The certified green restaurant uses organic produce and sources sustainable seafood and meats, in addition to making its pasta, focaccia bread, desserts and gelato in-house daily. The upscale eatery, with its warm, inviting interior, expansive windows and a sidewalk patio looking out on the colorful Third Street Promenade, also offers a popular happy hour that features market-driven artisan cocktails as well as local and Italian wines. L, D (daily).

Primi Piatti Pumpkin-amaretti ravioli, crispy sage Cauliflower gnocchi with lake fish ragu Pizzoccheri Smoked chicken lasagna, basil pesto Housemade sausage risotto Secondi Piatti Ossobuco alla milanese Filet mignon with summer truffle sauce Salt-baked Chilean sea bass Wild Loch Duart salmon Jidori chicken trio with sunchoke puree

231 Arizona Ave., Santa Monica

310.451.3525 lagosantamonica.com

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La foCaCCErIa Tra DI NoI The team behind Tra di Noi in Malibu has taken over the historic Prego space in Beverly Hills to create spin-off La Focacceria Tra di Noi. Owners Tarcisio Mosconi, Antonio Alessi and chef-partner Francesco Velasco divided the downstairs venue in two, with one half offering high-end Italian fare, including tuna tartare and short ribs braised in Chianti, served at comfortable booths and linen-covered tables. The other half features casual all-day dining, such as focaccia sandwiches and panini, plus a bakery, salumeria and espresso bar. Signature dishes include macaroni ripieni—candele pasta stuffed with ricotta and basil and sauced with tomatoes, guanciale and sweet onions—and prosciutto pizza topped with tomato sauce, prosciutto, mozzarella, arugula and shaved Parmesan cheese. Meals can be paired with Prosecco cocktails or fine wines from Italy and California. Upstairs, private rooms allow for parties and business meetings; a front patio offers alfresco dining. B, L, D (daily).

Starters Beef tenderloin carpaccio with arugula Tuna tartare over micro greens Prosciutto, cantaloupe and arugula Ricotta-stuffed zucchini blossoms Sauteed mussels with white wine Fennel with oranges and goat cheese Baby spinach with Gorgonzola and figs Romaine hearts with shaved Parmesan Pastries Focaccia Ciabatta Prosciutto Speck Salami Parmigiano-Reggiano Bufala mozzarella Burrata Taleggio Entrees Prosciutto pizza Risotto scampi with asparagus Macaroni ripieni Roasted Dover sole Costolette al Chianti

362 N. Camden Drive, Beverly Hills

310.277.7346 tradinoimalibu.com

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paparazzI rISToraNTE Paparazzi Ristorante in the Sheraton Gateway Hotel delights diners with fresh pasta in authentic sauces as well as artistically prepared seafood, poultry and steaks. The restaurant inspires the senses with its Old World Italian-meets-contemporary cuisine. Start with a tasty salad such as one with grilled romaine, or choose from a list of appetizers that includes seared scallops with cauliflower beurre noisette and braised short ribs with spinach-and-ricotta tortellini. Other menu highlights include spaghetti Bolognese, dry-aged New York strip steak and “chicken under the brick.” Paparazzi’s crisp, clean and classy décor features chandeliers, black pin-cushioned booths and white linen tablecloths; framed celebrity photographs decorate the walls. An elegant private dining room accommodates 40 guests and is equipped for entertainment and audio-visual needs. D (M–Sa).

Starters Seared scallops in cauliflower puree Pan-friend garlic calamari Lobster ravioli with sweet corn sauce Roasted artichokes Beef tips pazzaiola Grilled romaine Caesar salad Heirloom caprese Not-so-French onion soup Tomato basil bisque Entrees 8 oz. filet mignon 12 oz. dry-aged New York strip steak 16 oz. Porterhouse steak Pan-seared jumbo prawns Spaghetti alla bolognese Oven-roasted striped bass Salmon with vegetables caponata Lavender braised lamb shank Desserts Lavender crème brûlée Berries a la crème Flourless chocolate tart Gelato Tiramisu

6101 W. Century Blvd., Westchester

310.642.4820 sheratonlax/paparazzi.com

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MENU HIGHLIGHTS Starters Escargot in shell Oysters Rockefeller Bluefin tuna gateau Wagyu beef tenderloin tartare Crispy pork belly

L.A. PRIME Located on the 35th floor of the Westin Bonaventure Hotel and Suites, the award-winning L.A. Prime invites diners to experience a culinary adventure in a relaxed atmosphere with refined service. Known for its innovative and edgy cuisine, L.A. Prime offers prime beef steaks, both wet and dry-aged, as well as beautiful lamb chops and veal Oscar, fresh fish and shellfish. Dishes are enhanced with local produce and paired with wines from an award-winning list recognized by Wine Spectator. Executive chef Andreas Nieto has created a masterful menu of artfully presented dishes made with fresh ingredients to please the palate. Stars wink at diners through floor-to-ceiling windows as they sit back, relax and enjoy all that downtown has to offer. D (nightly).

404 S. Figueroa St., downtown

213.624.1000 thebonaventure.com

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Soup or salad French onion soup Uni soup with halibut cheek Caesar salad prepared tableside Petite iceberg wedges Heirloom tomatoes with burrata Beets with goat cheese White and green asparagus Bloomsdale baby spinach Entrees Bone-in Delmonico ribeye Prime New York strip steak Filet mignon Steak au poivre Wet-aged Porterhouse steak Grilled Colorado lamb chops Roast prime rib of beef Petite filet with bÊarnaise Veal loin Neiman Ranch pork chop Mano de Leon jumbo scallop Sauteed shrimp scampi Cedar-plank salmon Sea bass Pan-roasted chicken breast Hand-cut fettuccini White truffle risotto Sides Baked potato White cheddar macaroni Gratin jumbo asparagus Honey-glazed carrots Desserts Banana cream pie crème brulee Strawberries Romanoff Fuji apple vanilla bean cobbler

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VILLA BLANcA Villa Blanca, the sexy, stylish and romantic restaurant owned and operated by Lisa Vanderpump, a member of Bravo’s “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,” is the place to see and be seen. Set in the heart of Beverly Hills, the St. Tropez-like eatery boasts stylish furnishings and creative décor, with a large patio that’s perfect for celebrity sightings. Executive Chef Francis Demetrius, an expert in Asian and Asian-fusion dishes, has created an exceptional and affordable menu featuring Mediterranean and Italian influences; standout entrees include the pappardelle Bolognese ragu. L, D (daily)

Starters Ahi tuna tartare Beef carpaccio Breadcrumb-encrusted eggplant Caprese a la Villa Blanca Cornmeal-dusted calamari Crispy rock shrimp Villa Blanca vegetable miso soup Asian pear and endive salad Caesar salad Caprese a la Villa Blanca Fresh lobster and crab salad Pandora’s salad Red and golden beet salad Entrees Fusilli and sausage Pappardelle bolognese Drunken-battered fish and chips Grilled Australian lamb chops Grilled organic salmon Cherry-miso duck breast Miso-glazed black cod Roasted prime filet mignon Roasted Chilean sea bass Seafood paella Veal marsala Desserts Hawaiian mochi English sticky toffee pudding Villa Blanca cheesecake Molten chocolate cake Villa Blanca sundae Lemon Charlotte cake

9601 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills

310.859.7600 villablancarestaurant.com

TM

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MENU HIGHLIGHTS Starters Crispy portobello fries Bistro fritto misto Grilled wild calamari Foie blond torchon Roasted heirloom beets Chef-made fresh mozzarella

A/K/A (AN AMErIcAN BISTro) From highly regarded restaurateur Robert Simon comes a/k/a (An American Bistro), featuring American cuisine with a wine-country sensibility. Located at Old Pasadena’s tony One Colorado Plaza, a/k/a is a destination eatery that lures diners with delicious food and a relaxing atmosphere. a/k/a’s unique menu offers a smart presentation of stylish, comfort-driven plates that highlight the quality of ingredients; standouts include filet beef tartare served with pickled mustard seed and farm yolk, and a charcuterie platter featuring house country pâté, foie blond torchon, Prosciutto di Parma and handmade San Francisco salumi served with mixed olives, pickled fennel and house-made mustard. a/k/a’s vivid flavors pair naturally with an exceptional and well-priced wine selection and six craft beers from California on tap. The restaurant’s inviting interior features a wood-wrapped bar, thick butcher-block table tops, a glassenclosed wine room with more than 2,000 bottles, two private rooms as well as bistro-style alfresco dining overlooking the plaza. L, D (daily).

Entrees Prince Edward Island mussels Spring sweet pea risotto Pan roasted Ji-dori chicken Pan-seared Scottish salmon Grilled double-cut Prairie Fresh pork chop Desserts Bread pudding, vanilla ice cream and bourbon sauce Caramel ice cream profiteroles Butterscotch pot au crème Warm very chocolate cake Upside down blackberry tart Lemon curd and soft merengue tart

41 Hugus Alley, Pasadena

626.564.8111 akabistro.com

{An American Bistro}

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la dining Il Fornaio

Il Fornaio’s award-winning authentic Italian cuisine is a favorite in Los Angeles. Specialties include house-made pastas, wood-fired pizza, grilled fish, authentic risotto, and rotisserie meats. Artisan breads and pasta are made fresh daily. Each month a special menu from a different region of Italy is featured. With an event coordinator on-site to handle all of your needs, Il Fornaio is the perfect location for special events and business functions. Winner of the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence 2008.

301 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.550.8330 1800 Rosecrans Ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.725.9555 1551 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica, 310.451.7800 1 Colorado, Pasadena, 626.683.9797 ilfornaio.com

Matteo’s Restaurant  Frequented in its early days by celebs including Frank Sinatra and the rest of the Rat Pack, Matteo’s Restaurant has redefined its look and cuisine while maintaining status as the epitome of classic cool. A unique menu that changes with the seasons and an upscale supper club atmosphere form a winning combination of homey and hip. Executive chef Antonio Orlando’s menu feature sumptuous, cosmopolitan Italian fare like veal tartufato, lamb and weekly game specials. Happy hour specials Tuesday through Friday and on Sunday include half-off drinks and a $7 and under bar menu. For lunch, visit adjacent cafe Hoboken, open weekdays. D (Tu-Su).

2321 Westwood Blvd., L.A. 310.475.4521 matteosla.com

Noé Restaurant & Bar

Nestled among skyscrapers and the numerous water features of California Plaza is Noé Restaurant & Bar in the Omni Los Angeles Hotel. Awarded a notable 3 fork-and-knife rating in the Los Angeles 2008 Michelin Guide, executive chef Glen Ishii’s market-driven menu of neo bistro cuisine tempts palates of diners nightly. With dishes rotating regularly and portion sizes ranging from delicate small plates to full-bodied entrees, Noé Restaurant & Bar has become a popular setting for downtown residents to unwind after quitting time or for theater patrons grabbing a quick bite before the curtain rises at the numerous theaters in the area. This summer, Noé features a happy hour, 4 pm to 7 pm Monday through Friday, offering an array of imaginative $2 sliders and discounted drinks. D (nightly).

Omni Los Angeles Hotel, 251 S. Olive St., downtown 213.356.4100 noerestaurant.com special advertising section

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la dining Bouchon Bistro

Bouchon emphasizes leading American chef and restaurateur Thomas Keller’s reputation for impeccable ingredients and service, offered in a vibrant gem of a dining room. Rooted in tradition, the bistro highlights France’s culinary heritage, serving such classic entrees as steak frites and trout amandine, as well as an extensive raw bar. Also on the menu, find assorted charcuterie and cheeses, quiches, salads and soups; an international wine list boasts selections from France and the U.S., primarily California. Located downstairs and open from 10am–10pm, Bar Bouchon has a traditional neighborhood feel and features an extensive bar menu. Br (Sa-Su), L (M–F), D (nightly).

235 N. Cañon Drive, Beverly Hills 310.271.9910 bouchonbistro.com

LUCA-Fresh Bites  LUCA-Fresh Bites, is a welcome city retreat where customers can find healthy menu options using the freshest natural and organic ingredients in an eco-friendly contemporary setting. The menu is inspired by the simple and wholesome food that you would find in a typical Italian home with a touch of Southern California cuisine. The design of the restaurant is an extension of the menu. They used eco-friendly building materials, natural finishes and extensive plantings to create a peaceful and natural environment where customers can escape the demands of their day and the bustling L.A. traffic. B, L, D (daily).

7950 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood 323.822.2900 lucafreshbites.com

Vampire Lounge & Tasting Room  Discover a seductive escape in the heart of Beverly Hills at Vampire Lounge & Tasting Room. On the menu is Vampire Vineyards’ full range of delicious wines; try Dracula Syrah, Trueblood Pinot Noir or Je T’aime Rosé Champagne. Also sample bittersweet chocolates, superb cappuccinos, fine teas and other delicious `lite bites’. The lounge features décor with gothic undertones, including plush red velvet upholstery and gold-and-crystal chandeliers. Twilight Happy Hour, featuring 25 percent off reserve wines, is a must. Anne Rice fans will adore this place, which offers a chance to sip the blood of the vine. Gifts and specialty food products are also available.

9865 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills 310.826.7473 vampiretastingroom.com special advertising section

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la dining Benihana Beverly Hills At the heart of the Benihana experience lies the teppanyaki table, where masterful chefs expertly prepare fine Japanese cuisine on hibachi grills. Favorites like filet mignon, New York strip steak, shrimp with butter and lemon, Seafood Diablo with udon noodles or the signature hibachi chicken fried rice are cooked to order right in front of guests. The appetizer menu includes sushi and tempura selections. The beverage menu includes interesting wines, creative cocktails and a variety of sake. A children’s menu is also available. L, D (daily).

38 N. La Cienega Blvd., Beverly Hills 323.655.7311 benihana.com

The Stinking Rose  Located on Beverly Hills’ famed Restaurant Row, The Stinking Rose has made a name for itself, and its popularity is evident—people fill the unique dining rooms to partake of the tasty food enhanced by the fragrant bulb. Specialties include two pounds of whole, garlic-roasted Dungeness crab in a secret garlic sauce, garlic-encrusted baby back ribs and the ever-popular forty-clove garlic chicken. L, D (daily).

55 N. La Cienega Blvd. (near Wilshire Blvd.), Beverly Hills 310.652.7673 thestinkingrose.com

Cafe Sierra Within walking distance of Universal Studios Entertainment Center, Cafe Sierra offers an extravagant, Vegas-style seafood, lobster and prime rib dinner buffet with entertainment. On the weekend, they offer a delectable champagne brunch which has been voted best in Los Angeles. Signature American international breakfast buffet, which is perfect for early morning power meetings and offers Wi-Fi capabilities. A la carte breakfast, lunch and dinner menus offer a wide selection of continental cuisine. With a wide selection of award winning wines, the atrium lounge features great appetizers and happy hour. Alfresco dining at Hollywood Pool and Cabanas (weather permitting). Free self-parking. 10% discount on dinner buffet with hotel key. B, L, D (daily).

555 Universal Hollywood Drive, Universal City 818.509.2030 hiltonuniversal.com special advertising section

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Entertainment tion.  Ahmanson Theatre, 135 N. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.628.2772  Map H16

Guidelines

Map locators at the end of each listing (Map A3; Map H10, etc.) refer to maps on pages 123–126. Compendium includes editors’ recommendations and advertisers.

Index Special Events..................103 Theater...............................103 Music + Dance..................103 Sports..................................103 Attractions........................103 Studio Tours......................106

Studio Tapings.................106 Museums.......................... 107 Shopping Destinations... 110 Nightlife............................... 112 Beaches............................... 118 Tours + Transport.............120

Special Events TASTE OF FARMERS MARKET  July 12. Tasting tour of more than 50 restaurants and shops at the legendary Farmers Market, plus entertainment, cooking demonstrations. 5–9 pm. $35–$65.  6333 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.933.9211  Map I13 l.a. street food fest  July 16. Huge festival offers 80 food vendors including trucks, carts and stands, plus appearances from celebrity chefs, street-food-inspired dishes from area restaurants. Bars and beer gardens. Three limited-attendance sessions are 10 am–1 pm; 2–5 pm; 6–9 pm (ages 21 and over). $60.  Brookside Park, 360 N. Arroyo Blvd., Pasadena, lastreetfoodfest.com  Map P18 eat real fest  July 16–17. Food festival has a focus on sustainable ingredients and street and ethnic foods, craft beers and wines. Demonstrations, workshops and live music. July 16, 10:30 am–9 pm; July 17, 10:30 am–5 pm. Admission free.  Helms Bakery District, 8800 Venice Blvd., Culver City, 510.250.7811  Map L12 IRIS  Opening July 21. Cirque du Soleil’s newest production, a tribute to film, takes up permanent residence at the Kodak Theatre. Performances Tu–Su. $43–$133; VIP Ticket $253.  6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 877.943.4747  Map H13 X GAMES 17  July 28–31. More than 200 athletes compete in professional BMX, motocross, rally-car racing and skateboarding competitions. Enduro X and a rally street circuit are new. Tickets via Ticketmaster (800.745.3000) or at Staples Center box office.  1111 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.742.7340  Map I15 L.A. RISING  July 30. Concert festival featuring Rage Against the Machine, Muse, Rise Against, Lauryn Hill, Immortal Technique, El Gran Silencio. 3 pm. $69– $99.  Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Exposition Park, 800.745.3000  Map K15

Theater extraordinary chambers  Through July 3. An American couple in Cambodia gets caught in a web of deception and danger.  Geffen Playhouse, 10886 Le Conte Ave., Westwood Village, 310.208.5454  Map J10 superior donuts  Through July 10. At one community’s gathering place, a local doughnut shop, the arrival of a fast-talking dreamer named Franco shakes things up.  Geffen Playhouse, 10886 Le Conte Ave., Westwood Village, 310.208.5454  Map J10 Les MisÉrables  Through July 31. Reimagined 25thanniversary production of Boublil and Schönberg’s classic musical set in the time of the French Revolu-

Music + Dance club nokia  July 8 The Dan Band. July 9 Saul Hernandez. July 14 Streetlight Manifesto, Reel Big Fish, Rodeo Ruby Love, the Maxies. July 15 Boyz II Men. July 17 Ottmar Liebert, Luna Negra. July 21 Owl City, Mat Kearney, Breanne Duren. July 24 B’z. July 29 Mint Condition. July 30 Zoe.  800 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.480.3232  Map I15 hollywood bowl  July 2–4 Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, Daryl Hall & John Oates, Thomas Wilkins. July 8–9 Los Angeles Philharmonic, conductor David Newman. July 10 A.R. Rahman, L.A. Philharmonic, Karsh Kale, Rhythms of Rajasthan, Bollywood Step Dance, Sher Foundation, host Tom Schnabel. July 12, 14 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, pianist Lang Lang. July 13 Chris Botti, Bobby McFerrin with the Yellowjackets. July 15–16 Sarah McLachlan, conductor Thomas Wilkins, Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. July 17 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, soprano Christine Brewer. July 19 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, violinist Gil Shahan. July 20 Eddie Izzard. July 21 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, violinist Pinchas Zukerman. July 22–23 Dolly Parton. July 24 Rickey Minor, Stevie Wonder and Friends. July 25 Maroon 5, Train. July 26 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Vasily Petrenko, pianist Alexander Gavrylyuk. July 27 Gladys Knight, James Ingram. July 28 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Vasily Petrenko, violinist Martin Chalifour. July 29–30 L.A. Philharmonic, conductor Jack Everly, vocalist and pianist Michael Feinstein, Wayne Brady, Florence Henderson, Cheyenne Jackson, Dick Van Dyke. July 31 Ziggy Marley, I-Threes, Mowatt, Toots Hibbert, Mighty Diamonds, Ras Michael, Jeremy Sole.  2301 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, 323.850.2000  Map G13 THE WILTERN  July 8 Eddie Vedder. July 13–14 Widespread Panic. July 21 Ben Folds. July 22 INXS.  3790 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 877.598.8698  Map J13

Sports Dodger Stadium  July 4–7 Los Angeles Dodgers vs. New York Mets. July 8–10 Dodgers vs. San Diego Padres. July 22–24 Dodgers vs. Washington Nationals. July 25–27 Dodgers vs. Colorado Rockies. July 29–31 Dodgers vs. Arizona Diamondbacks.  1000 Elysian Park Ave., L.A., 866.363.4377  Map G17 HOME DEPOT CENTER  July 2 Chivas U.S.A. vs. Chicago Fire. July 4 Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Seattle Sounders F.C. July 6 Chivas U.S.A. vs. San Jose Earthquakes. July 9 Brandon Rios vs. Urbano Antillon; L.A. Galaxy vs. Chicago Fire. July 16 Chivas U.S.A. vs. New York Red Bulls. July 20 L.A. Galaxy vs. Columbus Crew. July 23 Chivas U.S.A. vs. Houston Dynamo. July 24 L.A. Galaxy vs. Manchester City. July 29–31 2011 Reebok CrossFit Games.  1000 E. Victoria St., Carson, 310.630.2102  Map M15

Attractions Adamson House  1930s home filled with famed Malibu Potteries tile. Grounds open daily; house W–F 10:30 am–3:30 pm, Sa 11 am–3 pm. $2–$5, under 6 free. No credit cards.  23200 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, 310.456.8432  Map west of K7 AMERICAN GIRL PLACE  Multilevel venue with boutique, bookstore and cafe dedicated to the designer dolls. M–Th 10 am–8 pm; F–Sa 10 am–9 pm; Su 10 am–7 pm.  The Grove, 189 The Grove Drive, L.A., 877.247.5223  Map J13

Eye of the Beholder

The Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City presents an exploration of feminine beauty in the exhibition Beauty CULTure, on view all month. With works by more than 100 renowned beauty, fashion and fine-art photographers, the show encourages discussion about the pursuit of female beauty, its cult-like glorification and the multibillion-dollar industries that surround it. Featured names include documentary photographer Lauren Greenfield, portrait artists Philippe Halsman and Chuck Close and fashion photographer Herb Ritts. In addition to 170 print photographs are hundreds of digital images. (Pictured: Alek Wek, photographed by Gilles Bensimon.) p. 107

When the Farmers Market opened in 1934, it had 18 food stalls. It also hosted L.A.’s first self-service gas station; customers would save 5 cents by pumping their own. p. 104

WHERE LOS ANGELES  103

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Attractions + Museums annenberg community beach house  Public facility on Santa Monica State Beach with pool, play area, beach volleyball and tennis courts, gardens, cafe. Free tours of Marion Davies Guest House. Daily 8:30 am–8:30 pm. Pool: Su, Tu, Th 10 am–6 pm; M, W, F–Sa 10 am–8 pm. Pool pass: $4–$10, family of four (two youth, two adults) $24; admission to other facilities, free. Parking $3/hour, $8/day.  415 Pacific Coast Hwy., Santa Monica, 310.458.4904  Map L8

CAMERON MACKINTOSH’S SPECTACULAR NEW PRODUCTION

Aquarium of the Pacific  Focus on Pacific Ocean sea life. Pet the sharks at Shark Lagoon; Lorikeet Forest, Monsters of the Abyss 3-D. Daily 9 am– 6 pm. $12.95– $24.95, under 3 free.  100 Aquarium Way, Long Beach, 562.590.3100  Map O16 Catalina Express  Year-round boat service to Catalina Island; daily departures from Long Beach, Dana Point, San Pedro. Reservation recommended. Call for hours. $25.50–$34.25 one way, $51–$68.50 round-trip; under 2, $2–$4.  800.995.4386, catalinaexpress.com Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels  Stunning contemporary cathedral opposite Music Center. M–F 6:30 am–6 pm; Sa 9 am–6 pm; Su 7 am–6pm.  555 W. Temple St., downtown, 213.680.5200  Map H17 Chinatown  Ornate architecture, dim sum, shops with Eastern wares. Art and antiques on Chung King Road.  Between Cesar E. Chavez Avenue and Bernard Street, Yale and Spring streets, downtown  Map G17 DESCANSO GARDENS  North America’s largest camellia collection (34,000 plants amid 20 acres of oaks) and much more, including lilacs, azaleas, irises. 9 am–5 pm daily. $3–$8, under 5 free.  1418 Descanso Drive, La Cañada Flintridge, 818.949.4200  Map Q19 Disneyland  Mickey Mouse’s theme park. Recent additions include Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage. Updated Pirates of the Caribbean and Space Mountain. Fireworks, fantastic Fantasmic! continues. Call for hours. Admission (includes all rides and attractions): $68– $76, under 2 free.  1600 S. Disneyland Drive, Anaheim, 714.781.4565  Map I10 Disney’s California Adventure  Soarin’ Over California, A Bug’s Land, Twilight Zone Tower of Terror. “4-D” video game ride Toy Story Mania!. Call for hours. Admission (includes all rides and attractions): $68–$76, under 2 free.  1600 S. Disneyland Drive, Anaheim, 714.781.4565  Map I10

BOUBLIL & SCHÖNBERG’S LEGENDARY MUSICAL Lyrics by HERBERT KRETZMER

Downtown Disney  Twenty acres of admissionfree shopping, dining and nightlife adjacent to theme parks.  1510–1590 S. Disneyland Drive, Anaheim  Map I10 Egyptian TheatRE  Restored 1922 Hollywood landmark screens classics, cult favorites, indie films. Excellent Forever Hollywood screens daily. Call for schedule. $5–$10.  6712 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.3456  Map H13 El Capitan TheatrE  1926 Spanish-style movie palace screens Disney films new and old. Musical accompaniment to many shows. Call for schedule. $12–$13. VIP admission with reserved seat $25.  6838 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.467.7674  Map H13

Now – July 31, 2011

El Pueblo de Los Angeles  Birthplace of Los Angeles. Twenty-seven buildings include 1818 Avila Adobe, L.A.’s oldest.  130 Paseo de la Plaza, downtown, 213.628.1274  Map H17

Ahmanson Theatre

213.972.4400 CenterTheatreGroup.org/LesMiz

EXPOSITION ROSE GARDEN  Grassy pathways bisect 20,000 rose bushes of nearly 200 varieties. Daily 9 am–5 pm. Free.  701 State Drive, downtown, 213.763.0114  Map K15 Farmers Market  Local landmark with 120 produce stalls, restaurants and gift shops in open-air setting. M–F 9 am–9 pm; Sa 9 am–8 pm; Su 10 am–7 pm.  6333 W. 3rd St., L.A., 323.933.9211  Map I13

Groups 213.972.7231 season sponsors

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H O L LY WO O D BOW L 2 011 THERE’S A STORY IN EVERY SEAT.

Attractions + Museums Grauman’s Chinese Theatre  Historic Hollywood venue with walkway of stars’ hand- and footprints in the forecourt. Call for movie schedule.  6925 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.464.8111  Map H13 Greystone MANSION AND PARK  Gardens and park grounds open daily. Tours first Saturday of the month. 10 am–6 pm most days. Free.  905 Loma Vista Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.285.6830  Map I11 Griffith Observatory  Iconic attraction overlooking Hollywood. Hourly shows at planetarium. Tu–F noon–10 pm; Sa–Su 10 am–10 pm. Free; donations accepted.  2800 E. Observatory Road, L.A., 213.473.0800  Map U23 Guinness World Record Museum  Shrine to amazing achievements. Daily 10 am–midnight. $6.95–$15.95, under 6 free.  6764 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.463.6433  Map H13

GUSTAVO DUDAMEL

DARYL HALL & JOHN OATES

EDDIE IZZARD

Hollywood Walk of Fame  Celebs get stars. Free.  Hollywood Boulevard from Gower Street to La Brea Avenue, Hollywood, 323.469.8311  Map H13 Hollywood Wax Museum  Hollywood and pop culture greats in wax. Su–Th 10 am–midnight; F–Sa 10 am–1 am. $8.95–$15.95, $5.95–$12.95 online, under 5 free.  6767 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.462.5991  Map H13 Knott’s Berry Farm  More than 165 rides and attractions. Roller coasters include Silver Bullet, GhostRider, Montezooma’s Revenge and Sierra Sidewinder. Call for hours. $22.99–$46.99, under 3 free.  8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park, 714.220.5200  Map D5

A.R. RAHMAN

DOLLY PARTON

WEST SIDE STORY

Kodak Theatre  Tour the home of the Academy Awards. Daily 10:30 am–4 pm. $10–$15, under 3 free.  6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.308.6300  Map H13 L.A. LIVE  Burgeoning entertainment center is home to the Grammy Museum, Nokia Theatre and Club Nokia; restaurants, high-tech bowling lanes and nightspots such as the Conga Room.  800 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.763.5483  Map I15 L.A. Zoo AND Botanical Gardens  Wildlife in parklike setting. Daily 10 am–5 pm. $9–$14, under 2 free.  Golden State (5) and Ventura (134) freeways, 5333 Zoo Drive, L.A., 323.644.4200  Map T23

CHRIS BOTTI

GLADYS KNIGHT

SARAH M C LACHLAN

LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC

JOSHUA BELL

WALT DISNEY’S FANTASIA

THE HUMAN LEAGUE • THE B-52S

JOHN WILLIAMS

HAIRSPRAY

MICHAEL FEINSTEIN GEORGE BENSON

ORQUESTA BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB® FEATURING OMARA PORTUONDO

ITZHAK PERLMAN

LANG LANG

DAVE KOZ & FRIENDS

...and more!

Don’t miss this iconic L.A. experience! HollywoodBowl.com | 323.850.2000 800.745.3000 Groups (10+) 323.850.2050 Parking, shuttle & venue policies at HollywoodBowl.com/GettingThere Programs, artists, prices and dates subject to change.

LOS ANGELES COUNTY ARBORETUM & BOTANIC GARDEN  Peafowl roam the grounds and roost overhead at 127-acre garden. Make your own idyllic route or take the tram tour. Su–F 9 am–5 pm (last admission 4:30 pm); Sa, call for hours. Free third Tuesday of the month. $3–$8, under 5 free.  301 N. Baldwin Ave., Arcadia, 626.821.3222  Map Q22 madame tussauds Hollywood  Wax museum with some 115 likenesses of celebrities in music, film, sports and more. Costumes provided for photo ops with figures. Call for hours. $18–$25, $14.40–$20 online, under 4 free.  6933 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.798.1670  Map H13 The Music Center  The 90-minute Symphonian Music Center Tour includes history, architecture. Also see listing for Walt Disney Concert Hall at the Music Center. First come, first served. 10 am–2 pm most days. Free.  151 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.972.4399  Map H16 Ocean Front Walk  Boardwalk with street performers, souvenir vendors. Muscle Beach–adjacent.  Along beach between Marine Street and Grand Boulevard, Venice  Map N9 Olvera Street  Festive open-air Mexican marketplace with restaurants, shops at historic El Pueblo de Los Angeles.  Alameda Street between Main and Los Angeles streets, downtown, 213.628.1274  Map H17

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Attractions + Museums PACIFIC PARK Amusement park on the Santa Monica Pier with rides including a solar-powered Ferris wheel, plus midway games, food vendors, specialty shops. M–Tu noon–7 pm; F–Sa 11 am–midnight; Su 11 am–11 pm. Admission free; rides $3–$5, unlimited pass $15.95–$24.95. 380 Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, 310.260.8744 Map L8 QUEEN MARY SHIP AND SEAPORT Historic ocean liner—bigger than the Titanic!—permanently berthed in Long Beach Harbor. Shops, dining, art deco lounge. Daily 10 am–6 pm for self-guided and guided tours. $12.95–$24.95, under 5 free. 1126 Queens Hwy., Long Beach, 562.435.3511 Map O16 RIPLEY’S BELIEVE IT OR NOT! MUSEUM Three hundred displays feature curiosities gathered by traveler Robert Ripley in the 1930s. Daily 10 am–midnight. $8.99–$14.99, under 5 free. 6780 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.6335 Map H13 RONALD REAGAN PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM Air Force One Pavilion houses the Flying White House. Daily 10 am–5 pm. $6–$12, under 11 free. 40 Presidential Drive, Simi Valley, 800.410.8354 Map northwest of A1 RUSSIAN FOXTROT SUBMARINE Tour the Scorpion, moored next to historic Queen Mary ocean liner. Daily 10 am–6 pm. $9.95–$10.95, under 5 free. 1126 Queens Hwy., Long Beach, 562.432.0424 Map O16 SAN ANTONIO WINERY Complimentary tastings and tour of the only producing winery in L.A. Restaurant and wine shop on site. Open daily; call for hours. 737 Lamar St., downtown, 323.223.1401 Map G17 SANTA MONICA MOUNTAINS NATIONAL RECREATIONAL AREA Hiking, horseback riding, birdwatching on 150,000 acres. National Park Service Visitor Center open daily 9 am–5 pm (holidays exempt). 401 W. Hillcrest Drive, Thousand Oaks, 805.370.2301 Map 140-318_GM_WhereLA_JUL11_final2.indd 1 west of B1 SIX FLAGS MAGIC MOUNTAIN Theme park has 17 coasters; dozens of attractions; rides including world’s tallest, fastest and longest flying coaster, Tatsu. Call for hours. $34.99– $59.99, under 3 free. 26101 Magic Mountain Pkwy., Valencia, 661.255.4111 Map A2 UNIVERSAL CITYWALK Eye-popping dining, shopping and entertainment promenade includes boutiques such as Fossil, Guess? and Abercrombie & Fitch, novelty stores and state-of-the-art cinema and IMAX theater. iFLY Hollywood is a simulated sky-diving wind tunnel. Call for hours. 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, 818.622.4455 Map U20 UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOLLYWOOD World’s biggest motion picture/TV studio. Rides include Jurassic Park, The Simpsons Ride and Revenge of the Mummy—the Ride. Tram studio tour includes the new King Kong 360 3-D and film and TV sets. VIP Experience is private guided tour through prop warehouse, working movie sets, soundstages. Call for hours. $66–$74, under 3 free. VIP Experience $259. 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, 800.864.8377 Map U20

PROFESSIONAL

6/2/11 8:59:39 AM

Free InspIratIon wIth every

purchase.

FIDM campus parkside 919 s. Grand ave. La 90015 fidmmuseumshop.org 213.623.5821

WALT DISNEY CONCERT HALL Frank Gehry-designed architectural landmark at the Music Center. Tour options include 45-minute self-guided audio tour narrated by John Lithgow; guided tours at noon and 1 pm; prematinee guided tours. Guided tours for 15 or more by reservation. 10 am–2 pm most days. Free. 151 S. Grand Ave., downtown, 213.972.4399 Map H16

Studio Tours NBC STUDIOS Seventy-five-minute walking tour; see sets of The Tonight Show With Jay Leno, Days of Our Lives; wardrobe, makeup, special effects, sound effects. M–F 9 am–3 pm. $5–$8.50, under 5 free. 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, 818.840.3538 Map T21

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Attractions + Museums PARAMOUNT STUDIOS VIP TOUR Two-hour group tour of the longest-operating and only remaining major studio in Hollywood. Reservation required. Tours M–F (holidays exempt) at 10 am, 11 am, 1 pm and 2 pm. $40. 5555 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, 323.956.1777 Map I14 SONY PICTURES STUDIOS Two-hour walking tour of historic motion picture studio includes live productions, sets of television shows and films including Spider-Man. Reservation, photo ID required. M–F 9:30 am–2:30 pm. $33; under 12 not admitted. 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, 310.244.8687 Map L11 UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOLLYWOOD See listing under Attractions. 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, 818.622.3801 Map U20 WARNER BROS. STUDIOS Two-hour VIP tour of working movie and TV studio includes backlots, enormous soundstages and costume department, memorabilia museum and observation of filming when possible. VIP tours available. Reservation recommended; photo ID required. M–F 8:20 am–4 pm. $48, under 8 not admitted. 3400 Riverside Drive, Burbank, 818.972.8087 Map U20

experience

the art and

magic of “living pictures”

Studio Tapings AUDIENCES UNLIMITED Free tickets to live tapings of TV shows on CBS, FOX, NBC and CW. Minimum age 12–18, varies by show. Satellite TV Ticket Booth, Universal Studios Hollywood, 818.260.0041, Ext. 1. tvtickets.com

July 7-August 31 • Tickets start at $15 • PageantTickets.com 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, California

©2011 Festival of Arts. A non-profit organization. Proceeds support the Arts.

A hot new twist on the Dickens classic! Hear the musical pulse of 1920’s New Orleans. See show-stopping numbers directed and choreographed by DEBBIE ALLEN.

l to r:) Tamyra Gray, Alaman Diadhiou. Photo by Jim Cox

A story that will steal your heart!

THE ELLEN DEGENERES SHOW Free tickets for taping of comedienne’s daytime talk show. Minimum age 14; minors must show photo ID and be accompanied by a parent. Advance tickets, go to ellen.warnerbros. com/tickets; day-of tickets, call before noon. Warner Bros. Studios, 3400 Riverside Drive, Burbank, 818.954.5929 Map U20 JIMMY KIMMEL LIVE Free tickets for live tapings of late-night ABC show. Minimum age 18. Phone line open M–F 1–4 pm. El Capitan Entertainment Center, 6838 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 866.546.6984 Map H13 NBC TELEVISION Reserve seats for sitcoms and The Jay Leno Show day of show only at NBC Ticket Box. Two tickets per person, first come, first served. Advance tickets except The Tonight Show through Audiences Unlimited. Minimum age 16. 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, 818.840.3537 Map T21 ON-CAMERA AUDIENCES Free tickets to live tapings of TV shows including American Idol, Family Feud, The Late Late Show, MADtv. Minimum age 12–18, varies by show. 818.295.2700, ocatv.com PARAMOUNT STUDIOS Tickets to tapings of shows offered first come, first served five days in advance and via website. Minimum age 12–18, varies by show. (Dr. Phil tickets, 323.461.7445, Audience@CBSParamount. com.) 5555 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, 323.956.1777, paramount.com Map I14

Museums THE ANNENBERG SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY Ten thousand square feet with digital projection gallery, print exhibit area. Continuing Beauty CULTure. W–Su 11 am–6 pm. Parking $3.50, $1 after 4:30 pm and all day Sa–Su. Admission free. 2000 Avenue of the Stars, Century City, 310.209.4560 Map J11

FINAL WEEKS!

Call 626.356.7529 PasadenaPlayhouse.org

CALIFORNIA AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM History, culture, art. Continuing Ain’t Nothing Like the Real Thing: How the Apollo Theater Shaped American Entertainment; Betye Saar: CAGE. Ongoing Gallery of Discovery. Tu–Sa 10 am–5 pm; Su 11 am–5 pm. Free. Parking $8. 600 State Drive, Exposition Park, 213.744.7432 Map M8

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Attractions + Museums California Heritage Museum  American decorative arts, folk art. Continuing Shortboard Revolution: Surf Design 1967–1984. W–Su 11 am–4 pm. $3–$5, children under 12 free.  2612 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.392.8537  Map M8 California Science Center  Interactive exhibits for budding scientists. New Ecosystems wing. Continuing 1001 Inventions: Discover the Golden Age of Muslim Civilization; Small World. Ongoing Forty Years of Space Photography; After Life; FADE: The Dark Side of Light. Daily 10 am–5 pm. Permanent exhibition gallery, free; admission for other exhibits and Imax varies. Admission to exhibit galleries free. Parking $8.  700 State Drive, Exposition Park, downtown, 323.724.3623  Map K15 Craft AND Folk Art Museum  International folk and contemporary craft art. Continuing Ann Weber: Love and Other Audacities; Jennifer Angus: All Creatures Great and Small. Tu–F 11 am–5 pm, Th until 7 pm; Sa–Su noon–6 pm. $5–$7, under 10 free.  5814 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.937.4230  Map J13 fowler museum  Art and material culture from Africa, Asia, the Pacific, the Americas. Through July 24 Central Nigeria Unmasked: Arts of the Benue River Valley. Continuing Launching a Dream: Reviving Tongva Maritime Traditions; Radiance and Resilience: Arts of Africa and the Americas from the Goldenberg Collection; Jam Session: America’s Jazz Ambassadors Embrace the World. Ongoing Intersections: World Arts, Local Lives. W–Su noon–5 pm, Th until 8 pm. Free. Parking $8.  UCLA, 308 Charles E. Young Drive N., Westwood, 310.825.4361  Map I10 Getty Center  Beautiful travertine-clad hilltop facility houses stunning collections of paintings, drawings, antiquities, photographs and decorative arts. Fabulous central garden and city views. Through July 3 In Focus: The Tree. Opening July 19 Luminous Paper: British Watercolors and Drawings. Opening July 26 In Focus: the Sky. Continuing Fashion in the Middle Ages; A Revolutionary Project: Cuba From Walker Evans to Now; Fashion in the Middle Ages; Display and Art History: The Düsseldorf Gallery and Its Catalogue; Paris: Life & Luxury; Gods of Angkor: Bronzes From the National Museum of Cambodia. Ongoing New Galleries for Medieval and Renaissance Sculpture and Decorative Arts; La Roldona’s Saint Ginés: The Making of a Polychrome Sculpture. Tu–F, Su 10 am–5:30 pm; Sa 10 am–9 pm. Free. Parking $15, free Sa after 5 pm.  1200 Getty Center Drive, L.A., 310.440.7300  Map K7 Getty Villa  Getty Center’s exquisite coastal counterpart features Roman and Greek antiquities. Continuing Apollo From Pompeii: Investigating an Ancient Bronze; In Search of Biblical Lands: From Jerusalem to Jordan in 19th-Century Photography. Ongoing Molten Color: Glassmaking in Antiquity; Roman Ephebe From Naples. Th–M 10 am–5 pm. Free. Parking $15. Advance timed tickets required.  17985 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu, 310.440.7300  Map K7 grammy museum  Museum on L.A. Live campus explores music across genres, the creative and recording processes, and Grammy Award history. Continuing Roy Orbison: The Soul of Rock & Roll; Bob Marley, Messenger; Barbra Streisand; Muzak Archives Preservation. Daily 10 am–6 pm. $10.95–$12.95, under 6 free.  800 W. Olympic Blvd., Suite A245, downtown, 213.765.6800  Map I15 Hammer Museum  Traveling shows and installations and permanent collection. Through July 11 A Selection From the Permanent Collection: Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy; Paul McCarthy: White Snow Dwarf (Dopey #1). Opening July 16 Shannon Ebner. Continuing Ed Ruscha: On the Road; Linn Meyers; Paul Thek: Diver, a Retrospective; Danica Dakic. Tu–W, F–Sa 11 am–7 pm, Th until 9 pm, Su until 5 pm. $5–$10.  10899 Wilshire Blvd., Westwood, 310.443.7000  Map J10 Hollywood Museum  Ten thousand artifacts on four floors: costumes such as Robert Pattinson’s and Taylor Lautner’s in Twilight; sets including Hannibal

CALIFORNIA AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM Camera and Community Through June 5, 2011

Daufuskie Island: Photographs by Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe Through June 5, 2011

Ain’t Nothing Like the Real Thing: How the Apollo Theater Shaped American Entertainment June 1 – September 4, 2011

Target Sundays at CAAM Bee Bop, Doo Wop, Scat and the Blues! June 5, 2011

Betye Saar: CAGE A New Series of Assemblages and Collages June 16 – August 7, 2011

Permanent Collection and Gallery of Discovery, ongoing

CALIFORNIA AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM 600 State Drive Exposition Park LA 90037 For more information go to www.caamuseum.org or call 213-744-7432. Parking at 39th and Figueroa Streets and is $8 per vehicle. FREE ADMISSION! Image: Betye Saar with The Destiny of Latitude & Longitude, 2010 Photo by Jacob Wheeler

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Attractions + Museums Lecter’s cell, props, photos, movie posters, scripts; and Max Factor’s makeup rooms, where Marilyn Monroe became a blonde and Lucille Ball a redhead. In restored Max Factor Building. Continuing Harlow at 100. W–Su 10 am–5 pm. $12–$15. 1660 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, 323.464.7776 Map H13 huNTINGTON lIbRARy, ART cOllEcTIONS, ANd bOTANIcAl GARdENS Stellar art, buildings and grounds, children’s garden. Gallery includes Pinkie and The Blue Boy. Expanded Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art. Continuing Revisiting the Regency: England, 1811–1820. M, W–F noon–4:30 pm; Sa–Su 10:30 am–4:30 pm. $6–$20, under 5 free. 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, 626.405.2141 Map R21 JApANESE AMERIcAN NATIONAl MuSEuM Continuing The California Hotel: Hawaii’s Home Away from Home; Fighting for Democracy: Who is the “We” in “We, the People”? Tu–W, F–Su 11 am–5 pm; Th noon–8 pm. $5–$9, under 6 free. 369 E. 1st St., downtown, 213.625.0414 Map H17

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lOS ANGElES cOuNTy MuSEuM OF ART Diverse premier collections; Broad Contemporary Art Museum and Resnick Pavilion are latest additions. LACMA West nearby. Opening July 2 Possible Worlds: Mario Ybarra, Jr. and Slanguage Studio Select From the Permanent Collections. Through July 4 Human Nature: Contemporary Art From the Collections. Through July 24 David Smith: Cubes and Anarchy. Through July 31 The Mourners: Tomb Sculptures From the Court of Burgundy. Continuing Gifts of the Sultan: The Arts of Giving at the Islamic Courts; Tim Burton. M–Tu, Th noon–8 pm, F until 9 pm; Sa–Su 11 am–8 pm. Closed W. $10–$15, under 18 free. LACMA West free. LACMA, 5905 Wilshire Blvd.; LACMA West, 6067 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.857.6000 Map J13 MuSEuM OF cONTEMpORARy ART (MOcA) Premier contemporary art venue. Through July 3 William Leavitt: Theater Objects (GA). Opening July 10 George Herms: Xenophilia (Love of the Unknown) (PDC). Opening July 31 Lynda Benglis (GA). Continuing Art in the Streets (GC); From the Recent Past: New Acquisitions (GA). Ongoing A Selection of Works From MOCA’s Permanent Collection (GA). M, F 11 am–5 pm; Th 11 am–8 pm; Sa–Su 11 am–6 pm. Pacific Design Center, Tu–F 11 am–5 pm, Sa–Su until 6 pm. $5–$10, under 12 free. Free at PDC. MOCA Grand Avenue (GA), 250 S. Grand Ave., downtown; Geffen Contemporary (GC), 152 N. Central Ave., downtown; MOCA Gallery at Pacific Design Center (PDC), 8687 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 213.626.6222 Map H16, H17, I12 MuSEuM OF JuRASSIc TEchNOlOGy Subversive venue blends fact and fiction. Th 2–8 pm; F–Su noon–6 pm. $3–$5 suggested donation. 9341 Venice Blvd., Culver City, 310.836.6131 Map L11 MuSEuM OF TOlERANcE Exhibits examine prejudice and discrimination, legacy of the Holocaust and humanrights issues. Continuing Besa: Albanian Muslims Who Saved Jews During the Holocaust; Para Todos Los Niños: For All the Children. Ongoing Finding Our Families, Finding Ourselves. M–Th 10 am–5 pm, F until 3 pm; Su 11 am–5 pm. $11–$15, under 5 free. 9786 W. Pico Blvd., West L.A., 310.553.8403 Map J11

J

ourney to the icy edges of the Earth at the Aquarium of the Pacific! Explore the Arctic and Antarctic, and discover the animals, people and plants that depend on these fascinating fragile regions. Touch sea jellies. View king crabs. And meet a real live Arctic fox! Witness how climate change puts our polar regions at risk. Travel across the planet in an immersive multimedia experience.

aquariumofpacific.org 562 . 590 . 3100 100 AQUARIUM WAY, LONG BEACH, CA 90802

NATuRAl hISTORy MuSEuM OF lOS ANGElES cOuNTy Thirty-three million objects from dino fossils to fish. See paleontologists preparing fossil specimens at Dino Lab. Age of Mammals is the permanent exhibition. Opening July 16 Dinosaur Hall. Continuing Butterfly Pavilion, with free-flying butterflies and moths. Daily 9:30 am–5 pm. $2–$9, under 5 free. 900 Exposition Blvd., downtown, 213.763.3466 Map K15 NORTON SIMON MuSEuM Stellar collection of Renaissance to 20th-century masterworks and sculpture garden. Opening July 8 Vermeer’s Woman with a Lute on Loan From the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Continuing Where Art Meets Science: Ancient Sculpture From the Hindu-Buddhist World; Surface Truths: Abstract Paint-

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Shopping ing in the Sixties. W–M noon–6 pm. $5–$10; students with photo ID, children under 18 free.  411 W. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626.449.6840  Map Q19

Original Works of Native American Indian Jewelry and Art

PALEY CENTER FOR MEDIA  Formerly Museum of Television & Radio. Exhibits, screenings and radiolistening series; tens of thousands of programs on view. W–Su noon–5 pm. Free.  465 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, 310.786.1000  Map I11 Pasadena Museum of California Art  California art, architecture, design. Continuing Street Cred: Graffiti Art From Concrete to Canvas; Clayton Brothers: Inside Out; Getting Upper: Graphic Designers and Artists Reconsider the Alphabet. W–Su noon–5 pm. $5–$7, under 12 free.  490 E. Union St., Pasadena, 626.568.3665  Map Q19 Petersen Automotive Museum  Continuing Supercars: When Too Much Is Almost Enough. Ongoing The Streetscape: The Car and the City in Southern California; Hollywood Gallery: Cars of Film & Television; Alternative Power: Lessons From the Past, Inspiration for the Future; Hot Wheels Hall of Fame. Tu–Su 10 am–6 pm. $3–$10, under 5 free.  6060 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.930.2277  Map J13 Skirball Cultural Center  The American Jewish experience; stunning views. Continuing Houdini: Art and Magic; Masters of Illusion: Jewish Magicians of the Golden Age. Ongoing Visions and Values: Jewish Life From Antiquity to America; Noah’s Ark at the Skirball. Tu–F noon–5 pm; Sa–Su 10 am–5 pm. $5–10, children under 2 free.  2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., L.A., 310.440.4500  Map G9

Shopping Destinations THE AMERICANA AT BRAND  Huge downtown Glendale hot spot with Main Street, U.S.A., atmosphere and trolley from the creators of The Grove. Ninety Taos_WLA0711_v1.indd 1 stores and dining options. Boutiques include a Tiffany & Co. concept store, Kate Spade and Kiehl’s; other draws include Barneys CO-OP and Pacific Theatre cinema.  Brand Boulevard and Americana Way, Glendale, 818.637.8900  Map southeast of T23

Visitors from around the world seek out Taos Indian Trading Co. for unique, quality jewelry, pottery, sculptures, paintings and a variety of other artifacts representing 57 tribes.

Mon-Sat 11am-7pm Sun 12pm-5pm

310.395.3652

403 Santa Monica Blvd. TaosIndianTrading.com

6/1/11 10:24 AM

Beverly Center  Trend-setting mall near West Hollywood has 160 boutiques (Tiffany & Co., Forever 21, Fendi, Henri Bendel, Prada) and restaurants; the Rooftop Terrace offers excellent views. Anchors include Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s.  La Cienega and Beverly boulevards, L.A., 310.854.0070  Map I12 Fashion District  This downtown neighborhood is a bargain hunter’s paradise. More than 1,000 stores sell to the public at 30%–70% discounts on apparel, accessories, textiles and flowers.  Between Main and San Pedro streets; Olympic Boulevard and 7th Street, downtown, 213.488.1153  Map J16 Fred Segal  A multitude of international trends since 1968 began in what may be L.A.’s most famous store, an emporium of individually owned boutiques. Café and salon are popular for shoppers and drop-ins.  8100 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 323.655.3734; 420 and 500 Broadway, Santa Monica, 310.394.9814  Map I13, L8 Glendale Galleria  Family-oriented mall with department stores and boutiques including Nordstrom, Crabtree & Evelyn and Vans  Colorado Boulevard and Central Avenue, Glendale, 818.240.9481  Map U23 The Grove  Popular outdoor center has more than 50 shops, a Barneys CO-OP, Nordstrom and nine restaurants in a setting that suggests a grand old downtown. Movie theater, trolley and dancing fountain are draws. The Wall Street Journal rates concierge services No. 1 in the nation. Adjacent to Farmers Market.  3rd Street and Fairfax Avenue, L.A., 323.900.8080  Map I13

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Babette July 2011 Ad WhereLA 1/3 PAGE SQUARE 4.625” x 4.875”

Shopping Hollywood & Highland CENTER  Home of the Academy Awards’ Kodak Theatre. Tinseltown-themed retail, dining and entertainment center features several restaurants, cinema, high-tech bowling lanes and stores such as Louis Vuitton and Lucky Brand Jeans.  Hollywood Boulevard and Highland Avenue, Hollywood, 323.467.6412  Map H13

1 3 4 3 4 T H S T R E E T, S A N TA M O N I C A

Japanese Village Plaza  Popular plaza in Little Tokyo features some 40 shops selling Japanese books, art, gifts and sundries. Restaurants are Japanese, though one serves excellent Korean barbecue. Mikawaya sells mochi ice cream.  335 E. 2nd St., downtown  Map H17 Jewelry District  Retailers offer 50%–70% savings on gems, watches and fine jewelry. At the St. Vincent’s Jewelry Center (645–650 S. Hill St.), you’ll find 500 jewelry merchants.  Between Hill Street and Broadway, from 5th to 8th streets, downtown  Map I16 malibu country mart  Outdoor center tucked away in beach town with upscale boutiques such as Ron Herman, James Perse, Madison; galleries, spas, children’s play area. Restaurants include Tra di Noi and Nobu Malibu.  3835 and 3900 Cross Creek Road, Malibu  Map northwest of K7

B A B E T T E S F. C O M

Manhattan Village  This mall by the shore features a Diane’s Beachwear as well as a Macy’s and Macy’s Men’s and Home. Concierges assist with taxies, strollers and even lottery tickets.  3200 Sepulveda Ave., Manhattan Beach, 310.546.5555  Map L13

Summer Sale

THE BOWL STORE

METLOX  Pottery factory converted to upscale shopping destination; Design Within Reach, Trilogy Spa and restaurants including Petros Greek Cuisine.  Between Manhattan Beach Boulevard, Valley and Morningside drives and Manhattan Beach Civic Center  Map L13 One COlorado  Outdoor plaza with boutiques such as Gold Bug, Kate Spade, Juicy Couture, Papyrus, Armani A/X and deluxe movie theater Gold Class Cinemas. Refuel after retail therapy at Italian restaurant Il Fornaio or Sushi Roku.  24 E. Union St., Old Pasadena, 626.564.1066  Map Q19 Paseo Colorado  Outdoor shopping promenade near Old Town features Jigsaw London, Tommy Bahama and big bargains on designer clothes at Loehmann’s.  Los Robles Avenue and Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, 626.795.8891  Map Q20 Santa monica place  Sleek outdoor mall at one end of Third Street Promenade, two blocks from Santa Monica State Beach. Anchored by Nordstrom and Bloomingdale’s. Fifty boutiques including 7 for All Mankind, CB2 and Barneys CO-OP. Rooftop Dining Deck with food court and six restaurants.  395 Santa Monica Place, Santa Monica, 310.394.1049  Map L8 Santee Alley  Open-air pedestrian bazaar with heaps of hugely discounted clothes, jewelry and toys. Cash only.  Between Olympic Boulevard and 12th Street, Maple and Santee streets, downtown  Map I16

Freeze the Bag Cool wine all night long!

Visit L.A.’s most beloved outdoor music venue and take home something special! Choose from a wide selection of music, books, picnic items, apparel, gifts and toys. Located in the Box Office Plaza • LAPhilStore.com

HOLLYWOOD BOWL 2301 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, CA 90068 Open daily 10am-5pm, with extended hours on concert days

South Coast Plaza  High-end center boasts nearly 300 boutiques, 30 restaurants and several spas. Stores include Chanel, Gucci, Valentino, Chloé, Jimmy Choo, Christian Dior. Concierge at five locations.  3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa, 800.782.8888  Map 6E Sunset Plaza  Upscale row of boutiques and sidewalk cafes is L.A.’s Euro hang. Calypso, Catherine Malandrino, Chez Bop, Ole Henriksen spa and H. Lorenzo stores.  8600–8700 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood  Map H12 Third Street Promenade  Pedestrian-only shopping zone includes Zara, French Connection, Restoration Hardware, kiosks and a wide array of very entertaining street performers.  3rd Street between Broadway and Wilshire Boulevard, Santa Monica  Map L8 Two Rodeo  Center with cobblestones in the heart of Beverly Hills features Versace, James Elliot and other

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Nightlife high-end boutiques, plus restaurants including 208 Rodeo and salon services. At Rodeo Drive and Wilshire Boulevard, Beverly Hills, 310.247.7040 Map J11 wESTFIEld cENTuRy cITy Sleek open-air mall with more than 175 stores, including Bloomingdale’s, Macy’s and Tiffany & Co. Luxe AMC multiplex with Imax screen, beautifully designed food court atrium and terrace. 10250 Santa Monica Blvd., Century City, 310.277.3898 Map J11 wESTSIdE pAvIlION Center south of Westwood Village is anchored by Nordstrom and Macy’s. Landmark theater is the country’s most spectacular indie cineplex. 10800 W. Pico Blvd., West L.A., 310.474.6255 Map J11

Nightlife ThE AbbEy Fixture of the WeHo gay scene serves flavored martinis galore. 692 N. Robertson Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.289.8410 Map H12 AlIbI ROOM Modern neighborhood bar; serves food from Kogi, a trendy Korean barbecue truck. 12236 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, 310.390.9300 Map M10 ANGEl cITy bREwING New. Award-winning microbrewery in a brick-clad industrial building. 216 S. Alameda St., downtown, 213.622.1261 Map I17 ThE ASSOcIATION The gang from Bar Copa and the Room turn out another nightlife mainstay. 110 E. 6th St., downtown, 213.627.7385 Map I16 bARbAREllA bAR Black, gray and scarlet-themed décor and 10-ounce martinis. 2609 N. Hyperion Ave., Silver Lake, 323.644.8000 Map W23 bARdOT Hollywood elite come for live music nights from Green Door team. 1737 Vine St., Hollywood, 323.462.1307 Map H14 bAR MARMONT Dreamy bar next door to historic Chateau Marmont. 8171 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.650.0575 Map H12 bARNEy’S bEANERy Route 66 roadhouse bar. 8447 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.654.2287; 1351 3rd St., Santa Monica, 310.656.5777; 250 N. 1st St., Burbank, 818.524.2912 Map H12, M8, A3

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bAR 1200 Laid-back bar caters to music industry insiders. Sunset Marquis, 1200 N. Alta Loma Road, West Hollywood, 310.657.1333 Map H12 bASEMENT TAvERN New. Underground speakeasy in a Victorian abode; live music. The Victorian, 2640 Main St., Santa Monica, 310.392.4956 Map M8 ThE bRIG Former dive bar has new look. DJ on weekends. 1515 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.399.7537 Map N9 cAÑA RuM bAR AT ThE dOhENy New. Premium rum bar with some 140 small-batch rums and cigar pairings. 714 W. Olympic Blvd., downtown, 213.745.7090 Map I16 cANTER’S KIbITZ ROOM Live music nightly; attached to beloved deli. 419 Fairfax Ave., West Hollywood, 323.651.2030 Map I13 chlOE Parisian-inspired lounge nearby Third Street Promenade. 1449 2nd St., Santa Monica, 310.899.6999 Map L8 ThE cOlONy The Hamptons meet Hollywood at this seaside-styled club. 1743 N. Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood, 323.525.2450 Map H14

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GO BEHIND THE SCENES!

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city tavern  New. Brews, California wines and cocktails. Booths outfitted with computerized craft brew taps; patrons pour their own.  9739 Culver Blvd., Culver City, 310.838.9739  Map L11

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copa d’oro  Design-your-own cocktails from a list of farmers-market ingredients.  217 Broadway, Santa Monica, 310.576.3030  Map L8 corkbar  Wine bar focuses on California wineries; 40-something wines by the glass.  403 W. 12th St., downtown, 213.746.0050  Map J15 CROWN BAR  The team behind Winston’s and tiny Dime opens lounge with Old (West) Hollywood décor.  7321 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.882.6774  Map H13 Drai’s  Vegas nightlife king Victor Drai’s flashy rooftop spot.  W Hollywood, 6250 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.962.1111  Map H14 eagle rock brewery  Family-run microbrewery with tasting room.  3056 Roswell St., Eagle Rock, 323.257.7866  Map northeast of W23

S TA I N E D G L A S S & G A L L E R “Largest Selection of Artglass in Los Ange

THE ECHO  Hip Echo Park dance club books local and indie bands. DJs, dancing; Echoplex, with separate entrance, is downstairs.  1822 Sunset Blvd., Echo Park, 213.413.8200; Echoplex, 1154 Glendale Blvd., Echo Park, 213.413.8200  Map G16 THE EDISON  Posh renovated power plant. Get there early—especially for the 35-cent cocktail offered Thursdays, 5–7 pm. Dress code.  108 W. 2nd St., downtown, 213.613.0000  Map H17

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harvard & stone  New. Fine cocktails in a grittychic industrial space.  5221 Hollywood Blvd., L.A., 323.466.6063  Map W22 Hemingway’s  Sumptuous library-styled lounge.  6356 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.469.0040  Map H14

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1886  New. Artisanal cocktails inside retro restaurant the Raymond.  1250 S. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena, 626.441.3136  Map S19 EL REY THEATRE  Hot indie bands play art deco theater on Miracle Mile.  5515 Wilshire Blvd., L.A., 323.936.6400  Map J13

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high  Boutique hotel’s rooftop bar with 360-degree views of Venice Beach.  Hotel Erwin, 1697 Pacific Ave., Venice, 310.452.1111  Map N9 Hotel CafE  Tiny gem offers live rock music.  16231/2 Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood, 323.461.2040  Map I14 House of Blues  Name bands in faux bayou setting.  8430 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.848.5100  Map H12 h. wood  Comfy lounge with cocktails ‘n’ chess; open during day as coffee shop.  1738 N. Orange Drive, Hollywood, 323.871.2262  Map H13 Hyde  SBE lounge has spawned a duo of local offshoots. Reservation recommended.  8029 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.656.4933; Hyde at Staples Center, 1111 S. Figueroa St., downtown, 213.742.7326; Hyde Beach at Gladstone’s, 17300 Pacific Coast Hwy., Pacific Palisades 310.454.3474  Map I14, I15, northwest of K7 la descarga  Cuban-inspired rum bar. Live band and dance performances. Reservation recommended.  1159 N. Western Ave., Hollywood, 323.466.1324  Map east of H14 las perlas  Festive tequila and mezcal bar with sophisticated cocktails.  107 E. 6th St., downtown, 213.988.8355  Map I16

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SEE 10,000 REAL SHOWBIZ TREASURES The Most Extensive Collection of Hollywood Memorabilia In the World!

Look for our helpful Downtown Ambassadors for maps and information!

Tour the historic Hollywood photo gallery, walk through Hannibal Lector’s jail cell. See Marilyn Monroe’s Million Dollar Dress, Elvis, I Love Lucy, Superman, Star Trek,Transformers, Twilight, Glee, High School Musical and more SPECIAL EXHIBIT: June 15 - Nov 30 “Lucille Ball at 100, ‘I Love Lucy’ at 60” The Hollywood Museum exhibit celebrates the milestone birthdays of America’s favorite comedienne and TV’s greatest comedy series including the genius of Desi Arnaz and Desilu. See costumes, props, personal items, letters, inventions, posters, remembering the careers and romance of Hollywood’s lovebirds, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.

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Nightlife Laugh Factory  Famed comedy nightclub.  8001 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.656.1336; 151 S. Pine Ave., Long Beach, 562.495.2844  Map H12

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Mountain Bar  Hipster hang in Chinatown.  473 Gin Ling Way, downtown, 213.625.7500  Map G17 myhouse  Home-styled nightclub from David Judaken.  7080 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.960.3300  Map H13 The Otheroom  Microbrews and wines by the glass, New York City-style.  1201 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice, 310.396.6230  Map N9 playhouse hollywood  Features entertainment from burlesque dancers and acrobats.  6506 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.656.4800  Map H14 pourtal  Self service, pay-by-the-pour Enomatic dispensers; great bar bites, cheeses.  104 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica, 310.393.7693  Map L8 THE roger room  Hidden speakeasy with creative cocktails.  370 N. La Cienega Blvd., L.A., 310.854.1300  Map J12 THE ROXY  Historic rock ‘n’ roll venue on the strip.  9009 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.276.2222  Map H12 rush street  Culver City’s full of wine bars, but this huge Chicago-style hangout has all the libations.  9546 Washington Blvd., Culver City, 310.837.9546  Map L11 
 SEVEN GRAND  Whiskey bar with tongue-incheek hunt-club décor.  515 W. 7th St., downtown, 213.614.0737  Map I16 Skybar  Chic open-air roost with a view at the Mondrian hotel. Reservations required.  8440 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.848.6025  Map H12 The Spare Room  New. Lounge-cum-rec room with board games and bowling lanes.  Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, 7000 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.769.8882  Map H13 The Standard DOWNTOWN  Rooftop bar with panoramic city views, pool, vibrating red waterbeds.   550 S. Flower St., downtown, 213.892.8080  Map I16 THE STANDARD HOLLYWOOD  Lounge with swinging seats, glowing purple walls.  8300 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 323.650.9090  Map H12 thirsty crow  Classy whisky and bourbon bar.  2939 W. Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake, 323.61.6007  Map south of W23

Forget the hassles of waiting for cabs or shuttles. Enterprise is happy to help your group with discounted rentals; locally or at the airport. We want you to have the full experience on your visit!

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Applies to Economy through Full size vehicles reserved in advance for rentals up to six days at participating Southern California locations. Participating locations are available by calling 1 800 rent-a-car. Sorry, this offer is not valid at airport locations. Rates are as posted at time of reservation at enterprise.com or by calling 1-888-484-4683. Weekly rates may apply depending on length of rental or for longer rental needs. Rental must end by May 31, 2012. Offer may not be used with other coupons, offers or discounted rates. Vehicles are subject to availability. Standard rental qualifications apply. Offer does not apply to taxes, surcharges, recovery fees, and optional products and services including damage waiver at $14.99 or less per day. Check your auto insurance policy and/or credit card agreement for rental vehicle coverage. Other restrictions, including holiday and blackout dates, may apply. Pick-up and drop-off service is subject to geographic and other restrictions. Void where prohibited. Pick-up is subject to geographic and other restrictions. ©2011 Enterprise Rent-A-Car. B07234 06/11 JM

Tropicana Bar  Poolside hot spot at the Roosevelt Hotel.  7000 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 323.466.7000  Map H13 TROUBADOUR  Historic spot books up-and-coming alt-rock and local bands.  9081 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.276.6168  Map H12 trousdale  Sumptuous club from nightlife guru Brent Bolthouse.  9229 W. Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.274.7500  Map H11 vampire lounge & TASTING ROOM  New. Gothic wine bar with Vampire Vineyards wines, small plates and cheeses.  9865 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.826.7473  Map I11 the varnish  The mixing of Prohibition-era cocktails is an art form at this bar in the back of Cole’s diner.  118 E. 6th St., downtown, 213.622.9999  Map I17 villains tavern  Stylish haunt in the Arts District. Indoor bar for cocktails, outdoor bar for craft beers

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Beaches and flavor-paired shots. 1356 Palmetto St., downtown, 213.613.0766 Map east of I17 vOyEuR Provocative, Eyes Wide Shut-inspired lounge; burlesque shows. 7969 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood, 310.255.1111 Map I13 wuRSTKÜchE Exotic sausage and beer hall is a popular, boisterous neighborhood hangout. Try the duckbacon-jalapeño frank. 800 E. Third St., downtown, 213.687.4444 Map I17 X bAR Indoor-outdoor playpen for CAA and ICM talent agents. Hyatt Regency Century Plaza, 2025 Avenue of the Stars, Century City, 310.228.1234 Map J11

Beaches bElMONT ShORE Along Ocean Boulevard, from 54th Place to Belmont Pier, Long Beach. Wide and sandy; onsite dog beach. Map O17 cAbRIllO bEAch 40th Street and Stephen M. White Drive, San Pedro. Inside the breakwater it’s a stillwater beach and on the ocean it’s a surf beach. Public boat launching ramp on harbor side. Beach wheelchairs available. Map O15 dAN blOcKER bEAch 26000 block of Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu. Sandy, narrow beach draws surfers and divers. Great spot for scuba enthusiasts. Limited free roadside parking. Map northwest of K9 dOcKwEIlER STATE bEAch 12501 Vista del Mar, Playa del Rey. Near LAX. Wide expanse of beach: 3.7 miles of ocean frontage and 255 acres of beach. Bonfires permitted. Beach wheelchairs available. Map C1 El MATAdOR STATE bEAch 32350 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu. One of the prettiest beaches in L.A. County. Steep stairs lead to 18 acres of narrow, sandy beach with scenic rock formations. Map northwest of K9 hERMOSA bEAch Hermosa Avenue and 33rd Street, Hermosa. Two-mile stretch of beach that runs along Santa Monica Bay before running into the Palos Verdes Peninsula. Metered street parking. Map L13 lEO cARRIllO STATE bEAch 36000 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu. One-and-a-half miles of beach for swimming, surfing, windsurfing, surf fishing and beachcombing. Tide pools, coastal caves and reefs for exploring. There are two sections of beach along a loop road of a campground. Map northwest of K9

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MAlIbu bEAch 23050 and 23200 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu. 167-acre beach includes Malibu Pier and Malibu Lagoon with museum. Map northwest of K9 MAlIbu SuRFRIdER bEAch 23050 Pacific Coast Hwy., Malibu. World-renowned surfing area. Swimming areas exist but are limited. Map northwest of K9 MANhATTAN bEAch 400–4500 The Strand, Manhattan Beach. Beach is bisected by a 900-foot pier. Classic sand volleyball beach nets extend to Hermosa Beach. Metered street and lot parking. Beach wheelchairs available. Map L13

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MARINA/MOThER’S bEAch 4135 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey. Non-ocean–facing beach best suited for children and windsurfers. Beach wheelchairs available. Map N9 pENINSulA bEAch Along Ocean Boulevard, 54th Place to 72nd Place, Long Beach. Moderate width, sandy. Map O17 pOINT duME bEAch 7103 Westward Beach Road, Malibu. Beach is bordered by cliffs and is one of the most beautiful along the L.A. coastline. Map northwest of K9

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Tours +Transport POINT VICENTE  Palos Verdes Drive, Palos Verdes. Located on the southwestern corner of the peninsula, the small Point Vicente Park offers a whale-watching deck and displays of local history and ecology.  Map O13 REDONDO BEACH  400-1700 Esplanade, Redondo Beach. A 1.5-mile beach that runs south of the pier to Torrance Beach.  Map M13 SANTA MONICA STATE BEACH  100–2900 Ocean Avenue, Santa Monica. Wide, sandy expanses divided by Santa Monica Pier.  Map M8 TOPANGA BEACH  18700 Pacific Coast Hwy., Topanga. The first real beach in Malibu is rocky and narrow. A popular surfing spot, but too rocky for safe swimming. Beach wheelchairs available.  Map northwest of K9 VENICE CITY BEACH  2700–3100 Ocean Front Walk, Venice. Boardwalk with street performers and shops is one of SoCal’s biggest attractions. The north end is home to “Muscle Beach.” Beach wheelchairs available.  Map N9 WHITE POINT BEACH/ROYAL PALMS  1799 Paseo del Mar, San Pedro. Rugged, rocky shoreline is popular with divers, shell collectors and surf casters. Tide pools.  Map O14 WILL ROGERS STATE BEACH  17700 Pacific Coast Hwy., Pacific Palisades. Sandy three-mile beach is starting point for the Marvin Braude Bicycle Trail. Beach wheelchairs available.  Map K7 ZUMA BEACH  30050 block of Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu. The ultimate SoCal beach. Food stands at each end of its four-mile expanse along PCH. Beach wheelchairs available.  Map northwest of K7

Tours + Transport another side OF LOS ANGELES tours  A wide variety of focused tours, organized by interest—i.e. whale watching, shopping, celebrity homes—or mode of transportation (kayak, Segway, horseback, helicopter).  1102 S. La Cienega Blvd., L.A., 800.311.8987 Amtrak  Train and bus service within the county, along the coast and to major California locations. Nationwide connections, multiple-day rail passes. Stations in Burbank, downtown (Union Station), Long Beach, Pasadena and Van Nuys. The Coast Starlight connects L.A. to Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle.  800.872.7245, amtrak.com Beverly Hills Rent-a-Car  Luxury and exotic rentals with pickup service.  Hollywood, 323.822.0969; Beverly Hills, 310.274.6969; LAX, 310.670.2020; Marina del Rey, 310.862.1900 CityPass  Hollywood CityPass offers discounted admission to Starline Movie Stars Homes Tour, Behindthe-Scenes Hollywood walking tour with Red Line Tours, Hollywood Wax Museum and either the Kodak Theatre tour or Hollywood Museum access. $59, ages 3–11 $39, under 3 free. Purchase pass at attractions. Southern California CityPass ($259) includes admission to theme parks from L.A. to San Diego.  888.330.5008, citypass.com Eagle Rider  Motorcycle rentals from top brands such as Harley-Davidson, Honda, BMW; tours offered. ATVs, watercrafts also available.  4110 Lincoln Blvd., Marina del Rey, 310.302.1239; 11860 S. La Cienega Blvd., Hawthorne, 310.536.6777; 2125 E. Spring St., Long Beach, 562.426.1106  Map N9, C1 and N16 glitterati tours  Private tours at locations across the county and beyond include Coastal Access (beach communities), Underbelly L.A. (local scandals and infamous crime scenes) and Just the Hills (celebrity homes). Reservation required.  310.720.3809, glitteratitours.com

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Tours +Transport

4 WALk OF FAMe ATTrACTiONS

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DOWNTOWN ART WALK Pedestrians fill the streets of downtown for this self-guided gallery tour. Art Walk Shuttle available from 6–10 p.m. Second Thursday of every month, noon–9 p.m. Free. 213.624.6212, downtownartwalk.com MALIBU GRAPES Six-hour tasting tour of the Malibu Wine Trail by fully equipped van. Includes three tastingroom stops and lunch. Complimentary pick-up from major hotels in Santa Monica, Malibu, Westlake Village and Agoura. $149. 310.393.6555, malibugrapes.com MELTING POT FOOD TOURS Tasting tours of foodie destinations such as Farmers Market or a selection of restaurants. Private tours available. Reservation required. $49–$59. 424.247.9666; tickets, 800.979.3370, meltingpottours.com METRO City bus, light rail and subway. Rail lines connect downtown, Hollywood, Pasadena, Long Beach. Underground Red Line from Union Station through Hollywood to San Fernando Valley; Gold Line from Union Station to Pasadena; Blue Line from Union Station to Long Beach; Green Line from Norwalk to Redondo Beach. $6 day pass. 800.266.6883, metro.net

Starline Movie Stars’ Homes Tour

METROLINK Regional train system connects Los Angeles County with Ventura, Orange and San Diego counties. Six of seven Metrolink rail lines (including the Orange County lines, San Bernardino lines and Ventura County lines) begin at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles. 800.371.5465, metrolinktrains.com OLYMPIC RENT-A-CAR Luxury sedans and exotics outfitted with Sirius and XM satellite radio service. Cars on offer include those by Maserati, Ferrari, Audi, Bentley and Porsche. 9244 W. Olympic Blvd., Beverly Hills, 310.757.6501 Map K12 PERRY’S BEACH CLUB Rent bikes or skates for the boardwalk. Legends Bike Tour ($35) explores Venice and its hidden canals; guided tour includes architecture and celebrity lore. Eight rental locations along the beach from Santa Monica to Venice. 310.939.0000

Madame Tussauds Hollywood

RED LINE WALKING TOURS Insider look at landmarks new and old, as well as film studios in Hollywood and downtown. $15–$24.95. 6773 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood; 304 S. Broadway, downtown, 323.402.1074 Map H13, I16

Your choice of Kodak Theatre Guided Tour or The Hollywood Museum in the Historic Max Factor Building

Red Line Tours' Hollywood Behind-the-Scenes

BuY CiTYPASS AT THeSe HOLLYWOOD ATTrACTiONS

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STARLINE TOURS Movie Stars’ Home Tour, Trolley Fun Tour, Grand Tour of L.A. New TMZ Hollywood Tour is a multimedia experience highlighting scenes of celebrity scandals. Prices vary. Tours begin at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, 6925 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 800.959.3131 Map H13 TAKE MY MOTHER PLEASE Enthusiastic, “curly headed” Arkansas native packs up to five of your visiting relatives (or other VIPs) in a new hybrid SUV for customized tour of “gloriously unusual” sights. 323.737.2200 TOURIFIC ESCAPES Husband-and-wife team offer sightseeing and food tours such as Hollywood Sites and Bites and Chocolate Indulgence. Prices vary. 424.248.8687, tourificescapes.com URBAN SHOPPING ADVENTURES Group tours of Melrose Heights, downtown Fashion District. Transportation, shopping tips, maps, goody bags. $36– $54. 213.683.9715 Map I1

New York City

888-330-5008

Pricing and programs are subject to change.

where?

Log on anywhere. WhereLA.com WHERE LOS ANGELES 121

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GO METRO Despite what you may have heard, you can get to many Los Angeles attractions without a car. Metro is the nation’s second-largest public transportation agency, operating 2,200 buses and five rail lines, including a subway that can take you from downtown to Hollywood in about 15 minutes. Whether you’re interested in seeing stars along the legendary Hollywood Walk of Fame, catching rays at Santa Monica Beach or touring any number of L.A. landmarks, Metro can take you there.

Where to Start

Use the Trip Planner at metro.net or call 323.GO.METRO for customized travel itineraries. Note that some popular attractions served by Metro Rail are listed to the right.

Fares

Metro’s base fare is $1.50. Pay each time you board a Metro bus (drivers don’t carry change, so you’ll need exact fare) or at a self-service ticket vending machine when entering Metro Rail stations. For complete information, check metro.net. Two children under the age of 5 may travel free with each fare-paying adult. Eating and drinking is not permitted on any Metro bus or train. Note: Metro has installed turnstiles at many Metro Rail stations; others simply operate on the honor system. However, fare inspectors randomly check passengers for valid tickets or passes. You may never be checked, but if you are and you don’t have proof of valid fare, the inspector may issue a citation and you may be fined.

Hours

Most bus and rail lines start around 4 a.m. and keep running past midnight. But they’re less frequent in the late evening, so check the timetables at metro.net regarding your return trip.

Metro Rail Destinations

Here’s a sampling of attractions that are within easy walking distance of Metro Rail stations: METRO RED/PURPLE LINE Union Station • Olvera Street

Civic Center • Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels • Museum of Contemporary Art • Music Center • Walt Disney Concert Hall 7th Street/Metro Center • Macy’s Plaza (dining, shops) Hollywood/Vine • Capitol Records Tower • Hollywood Walk of Fame • Pantages Theatre Hollywood/Highland • Grauman’s Chinese Theatre • Hollywood & Highland (dining, shops) • Kodak Theatre Universal City • Gibson Amphitheater • Universal CityWalk (dining, shops) • Universal Studios Hollywood North Hollywood • El Portal Center for the Arts • NoHo Arts District (dining, shops, theatres)

METRO BLUE LINE

Pico • Los Angeles Convention Center • STAPLES Center/L.A. LIVE 103rd Street • Watts Towers Transit Mall • Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific • Pine Avenue (dining, shops) • Queen Mary

METRO GOLD LINE

Little Tokyo/Arts District • Japanese American National Museum Memorial Park • Norton Simon Museum Lake Avenue • Pasadena Playhouse SEE THE METRO ROUTE MAP ON PAGE 127

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things we love Los Angeles 5

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The Cucumber-Clementine Skinny Margarita from True Food Kitchen in Santa Monica. p. 76 Cinespia film screenings on the lawn of Hollywood Forever Cemetary. cinespia.org Elegant art deco architecture in the Fairfax District. p. 44

The late-night menu at Public Kitchen & Bar at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. p. 76 The diorama halls at the Natural History Museum of L.A. County in Exposition Park. p. 109

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The new Ocean Science Center at Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach. p. 104

Dinners in the private “Vault” room at Drago Centro downtown. p. 81

Shakespeare plays at Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum in Topanga. 310.455.3723

Facialist-to-the-stars Kate Somerville Skin Health Experts in West Hollywood. 323.655.7546

Weekend brunch on the patio at Dominick’s on Beverly Boulevard. 310.652.2335

Alfresco performing arts from Grand Performances at California Plaza downtown. 213.687.2159

Ballet-infused fitness classes from The Bar Method in Hermosa Beach. 310.376.3444

Playing paparazzi for a day on the Starline Tours TMZ Hollywood Tour. p. 121

Sipping cocktails in speakeasy style at Next Door Lounge in Hollywood. 323.465.5505

Jewelry from Intermix on Robertson Boulevard. 310.860.0113

Brightly colored Mango Bangles from Cusp at Westfield Century City. p. 112

The palm tree-lined campus of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. p. 109

Tuna-topped crispy rice cakes from Koi on La Cienega Boulevard. p. 82

Taking the Metro from Union Station downtown. p. 53

Flatbreads and tabbouleh at Mezze in West Hollywood. p. 84

Soaking up the Hollywood scene at Lexington Social House. 323.461.1700

Authentic German currywurst from Berlin Currywurst in Silver Lake. 323.663.1989

Della hobo bags from Zero Minus Plus at Fred Segal in Santa Monica. p. 110 Couturelike swimwear from the new Zimmerman boutique in Robertson Boulevard. 310.285.9680 One-dollar bench seats at the Hollywood Bowl in Hollywood Hills. p. 103

where in the world

Where is an international network of magazines first published in 1936 and distributed in 4,000 leading hotels in more than 50 places around the world. Look for us when you visit any of the following cities, or plan ahead for your next trip by visiting us online at wheretraveler.com UNITED STATES Alaska & Yukon, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Charleston, Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Georgia, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Maui, Miami, Minneapolis/

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Passport holders from accessories mecca Henri Bendel at the Beverly Center. p. 110 The Seaweed Birch Wrap from Le Posh Salon/Spa/ Lounge on Sunset Boulevard. 323.851.5558 Perfect tees and tanks from The Lady & the Sailor in Beverly Hills. 310.276.1015 Watching the eclectic performance artists at Supperclub in Hollywood. p. 78 This year, we expand our list! For the complete rundown of 75 things we love, go to wherela.com/75-things

The Walk of Style on Rodeo Drive. p. 34

St. Paul, New Orleans, New York, Northern Virginia, Oahu, Orange County (CA), Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix/Scottsdale, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Washington, D.C. ASIA Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore CANADA Calgary, Canadian Rockies, Edmonton, Halifax, Mississauga, Muskoka/Parry Sound, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, Whistler, Winnipeg EUROPE Budapest, London, Milan, Moscow, Paris, Rome, St. Petersburg

PHILIPP SCHOLZ RITTERMANN

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